WeRead Powered by ReaderPub
Sweated industry and the minimum wage cover

Sweated industry and the minimum wage

Open in WeRead

Explore more books like this:

About This Book

The author examines the causes, scale, and effects of sweated labour, documenting how extreme underpayment in factories, workshops, shops, street trades, and among wage-earning children reduces human life to a cheap commodity, depresses industrial standards, burdens public welfare, and perpetuates intergenerational poverty. Drawing on case studies and statistical observation, the work explains how underpayment arises and how labour functions as a marketable commodity. It then evaluates existing checks and proposed remedies, surveys lessons from particular trades and foreign competition, and sets out practical arguments and mechanisms for a statutory minimum wage as a means to protect vulnerable workers and improve the health of industry.

About the Author

Black, Clementina portrait

Clementina Black

Clementina Black was a prominent British social reformer and writer known for her advocacy on labor rights and women's issues in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Her notable work, "Sweated Industry and the Minimum Wage," highlights the harsh conditions faced by workers in low-wage industries, particularly women and children. Black's contributions to literature and social reform have played a significant role in raising awareness about labor exploitation and the need for fair wages. Through her writings, she sought to inspire change and improve the lives of the working class, making her an important figure in the history of social justice.

You May Also Like