
eBook - ePub
Problems of Poverty (Routledge Revivals)
An Inquiry into the Industrial Condition of the Poor
- 232 pages
- English
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eBook - ePub
Problems of Poverty (Routledge Revivals)
An Inquiry into the Industrial Condition of the Poor
About this book
First published in 1891, this seminal work examines the primary causes of poverty during the industrial age. Through considering how poverty is measured, the growth of urbanisation and the supply of low-skilled labour in the workforce, Hobson arrives at possible solutions to the problem of poverty and explores the ethical issues surrounding it.
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Yes, you can access Problems of Poverty (Routledge Revivals) by J. Hobson in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Business & Business General. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
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PROBLEMS OF POVERTY
CHAPTER I.
THE MEASURE OF POVERTY
§ 1. The National Income, and the Share of the Wage- earners.āTo give a clear meaning and a measure of poverty is the first requisite. Who are the poor? The āpoor law,ā on the one hand, assigns a meaning too narrow for our purpose, confining the application of the name to āthe destitute,ā who alone are recognized as fit subjects of legal relief. The common speech of the comfortable classes, on the other hand, not infrequently includes the whole of the wageearning class under the title of āthe poor.ā As it is out purpose to deal with the pressure of poverty as a painful social disease, it is evident that the latter meaning is unduly wide. The āpoor,ā whose condition is forcingā the social problemā upon the reluctant minds of the āeducatedā classes, include only the lower strata of the vast wage-earning class.
But since dependence upon wages for the support of life will be found closely related to the question of poverty, it is convenient to throw some preliminary light on the measure of poverty, by figures bearing on the general industrial condition of the wage-earning class. To measure poverty we must first measure wealth. What is the national income, and how is it divided? will naturally arise as the first questions. Now although the data for accurate measurement of the national income are somewhat slender, there is no very wide discrepancy in the results reached by the most skilful statisticians. For practical purposes we may regard the sum of Ā£1,800,000,000 as fairly representing the national income. But when we put the further question, āHow is this income divided among the various classes of the community?ā we have to face wider discrepancies of judgment. The difficulties which beset a fair calculation of interest and profits, have introduced unconsciously a partisan element into the discussion. Certain authorities, evidently swayed by a desire to make the best of the present condition of the working-classes, have reached a low estimate of interest and profits, and a high estimate of wages; while others, actuated by a desire to emphasize the power of the capitalist classes, have minimized the share which goes as wages. At the outset of our inquiry, it might seem well to avoid such debatable ground. But the importance of the subject will not permit it to be thus shirked. The following calculation presents what is, in fact, a compromise of various views, and can only claim to be a rough approximation to the truth.
Taking the four ordinary divisions: Rent, as payment for the use of land, for agriculture, housing, mines, etc.; Interest for the use of business capital; Profit as wages of management and superintendence; and Wages, the weekly earnings of the working-classes, we find that the national income can be thus fairly apportionedā
| Rent⦠| ⦠| ⦠| ⦠| ⦠| £200,000,000. |
| Interest | ⦠| ⦠| ⦠| ⦠| £450,000,000. |
| Profits | ⦠| ⦠| ⦠| ⦠| £450,000,000. |
| Wages | ⦠| ⦠| ⦠| ⦠| £650,000,000. 1 |
| Total £1750,000,000. | |||||
Professor Leone Levi reckoned the number of workingclass families as 5,600,000, and their total income £470,000,000 in the year 1884. 2 If we now divide the larger money, minus £650,000,000, among a number of families proportionate to the increase of the population, viz. 6,900,000, we shall find that the average yearly income of a working-class family comes to about £94, or a weekly earnings of about 36s. This figure is of necessity a speculative one, and is probably in excess of the actual average income of a working family.
This, then, we may regard as the first halting-place in oui inquiry. But in looking at the average money income of a wage-earning family, there are several further considerations which vitally affect the measurement of the pressure of poverty.
First, there is the fact, that out of an estimated population of some 42,000,000, only 12,000,000, or about three out of every ten persons in the richest country of Europe, belong to a class which is able to live in decent comfort, free from the pressing cares of a close economy. The other seven are of necessity confined to a standard of life little, if at all, above the line of bare necessaries.
Secondly, the careful figures collected by these statisticians show that the national income equally divided throughout the community would yield an average income, per family, of about £182 per annum. A comparison of this sum with the average working-class income of £94, brings home the extent of inequality in the distribution of the national income. While it indicates that any approximation towards equality of incomes would not bring affluence, at anyrate on the present scale of national productivity, it serves also to refute the frequent assertions that poverty is unavoidable because Great Britain is not rich enough to furnish a comfortable livelihood for everyone.
§ 2. Gradations of Working-class Incomes.āBut though it is true that an income of 36s. a week for an ordinary family leaves but a small margin for āsuperfluities,ā it will be evident that if every family possessed this sum, we should have little of the worst evils of poverty. If we would understand the extent of the disease, we must seek it in the inequality of incomes among the labouring classes themselves. No family need be reduced to suffering on 36s. a week. But unfortunately the differences of income among the working-classes are proportionately nearly as great as among the well-to-do classes. It is not merely the difference between the wages of skilled and unskilled labour; the 50s. per week of the high-class engineer, or typographer, and the 1s. 2d. per diem of the sandwichman, or the difference between the wages of men and women workers. There is a more important cause of difference than these. When the average income of a working family is named, it must not be supposed that this represents the wage of the father of the family alone. Each family contains about 2¼ workers on an average. This is a fact, the significance of which is obvious. In some families, the father and mother, and one or two of the children, will be contributors to the weekly income; in other cases, the burden of maintaining a large family may be thrown entirely on the shoulders of a single worker, perhaps the widowed mother. If we reckon that the average wage of a working man is about 24s., that of a working woman 15s., we realize the strain which the loss of the male bread-winner throws on the survivor.
In looking at the gradations of income among the workingclasses, it must be borne in mind that as you go lower down in the standard of living, each drop in money income represents a far more than proportionate increase of the pressure of poverty. Halve the income of a rich man, you oblige him to retrench; he must give up his yacht, his carriage, or other luxuries; but such retrenchment, though it may wound his pride, will not cause him great personal discomfort. But halve the income of a well-paid mechanic, and you reduce him and his family at once to the verge of starvation. A drop from 25s. to 12s. 6d. a week involves a vastly greater sacrifice than a drop from £500 to £250 a year. A working-class family, however comfortably it may live with a full contingent of regular workers, is almost always liable, by sickness, death, or loss of employment, to be reduced in a few weeks to a position of penury.
§ 3. Measurement of East London Poverty.āThis brief account of the inequality of incomes has brought us by successive steps down to the real object of our inquiry, the amount and the intensity of poverty. For it is not inequality of income, but actual suffering, which moves the heart of humanity. What do we know of the numbers and the life of those who lie below the average, and form the lower orders of the working-classes?
Some years ago the civilized world was startled by the Bitter Cry of Outcast London, and much trouble has been taken of late to gauge the poverty of London. A host of active missionaries are now at work, engaged in religious, moral, and sanitary teaching, in charitable relief, or in industrial organization. But perhaps the most valuable work has been that which has had no such directly practical object in view, but has engaged itself in the collection of trustworthy information. Mr Charles Boothās book, The Labour and Life of the People, has an importance far in advance of that considerable attention which it has received. Its essential value is not merely that it supplies, for the first time, a large and carefully collected fund of facts for the formation of sound opinions and the explosion of fallacies, but that it lays down lines of a new branch of social study, in the pursuit of which the most delicate intellectual interests will be identified with a close and absorbing devotion to the practical issues of life.
In the study of poverty, the work of Mr. Booth and his collaborators may truly rank as an epoch-making work.
For the purpose we have immediately before us, the measurement of poverty, the figures supplied in this book are invaluable. Considerations of space will compel us to confine our attention to such figures as will serve to mark the extent and meaning of city poverty in London. But though, as will be seen, the industrial causes of London poverty are in some respects peculiar, there is every reason to believe that the extent and nature of poverty does not widely differ in all large centres of population.
The area which Mr, Booth places under microscopic observation covers Shoreditch, Bethnal Green, Whitechapel, St. Georgeās in the East, Stepney, Mile End, Old Town, Poplar, Hackney, and comprises a population of 891,539. Of these no less than 316,000, or 35 per cent, belong to families whose weekly earnings amount to less than 21s. This 35 per cent, compose the āpoor,ā according to the estimate of Mr. Booth, and it will be worth while to note the social elements which constitute this class. The āpoorā are divided into four classes or strata, marked A, B, C, D. At the bottom comes A, a body of some 11,000, or percent, of hopeless, helpless city savages, who can only be said by courtesy to belong to the āworking-classes.ā āTheir life is the life of savages, with vicissitudes of extreme hardship and occasional excess. Their food is of the coarsest description, and their only luxury is drink. It is not easy to say how they live; the living is picked up, and what is got is frequently shared; when they cannot find 3d. for their nightās lodging, unless favourably known to the deputy, they are turned out at night into the street, to return to the common kitchen in the morning. From these come the battered figures who slouch through the Ćtreets, and play the beggar or the bully, or help to foul the record of the unemployed; these are the worst class of corner-men, who hang round the doors of public-houses, the young men who spring forward on any chance to earn a copper, the ready materials for disorder when occasion serves. They render no useful service; they create no wealth ; more often they destroy it.ā 1
Next comes B, a thicker stratum of some 100,000, or 11½ per cent, largely composed of shiftless, broken-down men, widows, deserted women, and their families, dependent upon casual earnings, less than 18s. per week, and most of them incapable of regular, effective work. Most of the social wreckage of city life is deposited in this stratum, which presents the problem of poverty in its most perplexed and darkest form. For this class hangs as a burden on the shoulders of the more capable classes which stand just above it. Mr, Booth writes of itā
āIt may not be too much to say that if the whole of class B were swept out of existence, all the work they do could be done, together with their own work, by the men, women, and children of classes C and D; that all they earn and spend might be earned, and could very easily be spent, by the classes above them; that these classes, and especially class C, would be immensely better off, while no class, nor any industry, would suffer in the least.ā Class C consists of 75,000, or 8 per cent., subsisting on intermittent earnings of from 18s. to 21s. for a moderate-sized family. Lowskilled labourers, poorer artizans, street-sellers, small shopkeepers, largely constitute this class, the curse of whose life is not so much low wages as irregularity of employment, and the moral and physical degradation caused thereby. Above these, forming the top stratum of āpoor,ā comes a large class, numbering 129,000, or 14½ per cent., dependent upon small regular earnings of from 18s. to 21s., including many dockand water-side labourers, factory and warehouse hands, carmen, messengers, porters, &c. āWhat they have comes in regularly, and except in times of sickness in the family, actual want rarely presses, unless the wife drinks.ā
āAs a general rule these men have a hard struggle, but they are, as a body, decent, steady men, paying their way and bringing up their children respectablyā (p. 50).
Mr Booth, in confining the title āpoorā to this 35 per cent, of the population of East London, takes, perhaps for sufficient reasons, a som...
Table of contents
- Coverpage
- Halftitle Page
- Titlepage
- Copyright
- Preface
- Table of Contents
- I. THE MEASURE OF POVERTY
- II. THE EFFECTS OF MACHINERY ON THE CONDITION OF THE WORKING-CLASSES
- III. THE INFLUX OF POPULATION INTO LARGE TOWNS
- IV. āTHE SWEATING SYSTEM.ā
- V. THE CAUSES OF SWEATING
- VI. REMEDIES FOR SWEATING
- VII. OVER-SUPPLY OF LOW-SKILLED LABOUR
- VIII. THE INDUSTRIAL CONDITION OF WOMEN-WORKERS
- IX. MORAL ASPECTS OF POVERTY
- X. āSOCIALISTIC LEGISLATION.ā
- XI. THE INDUSTRIAL OUTLOOK OF LOW-SKILLED LABOUR
- LIST OF AUTHORITIES