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+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #64616 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/64616)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Riches and Poverty, by Leo George Chiozza
-Money
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Riches and Poverty
- (1910)
-
-Author: Leo George Chiozza Money
-
-Release Date: February 23, 2021 [eBook #64616]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-Produced by: Turgut Dincer, Chris Pinfield and the Online Distributed
- Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was
- produced from images generously made available by The Internet
- Archive)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK RICHES AND POVERTY ***
-
-
-Transcriber's Note:
-
-Obvious printer errors have been corrected. Hyphenation has been
-rationalised.
-
-Small capitals have been replaced by full capitals. Italics are
-indicated by _underscores_.
-
-Very wide tables have been split into two.
-
-
-
-
-RICHES AND POVERTY
-
-
-
-
-BRITISH INCOMES IN 1908-9
-
- +--------------+------------------------------------------+
- | RICH | |
- | 1,400,000 | COMFORTABLE |
- | persons | 4,100,000 persons |
- | £634,000,000 | £275,000,000 |
- +--------------+------------------------------------------+
- | |
- | |
- | |
- | |
- | |
- | |
- | |
- | POOR |
- | |
- | |
- | 39,000,000 persons |
- | |
- | |
- | £935,000,000 |
- | |
- | |
- | |
- | |
- | |
- | |
- | |
- | |
- | |
- | |
- +---------------------------------------------------------+
-
-_The Aggregate Income of the 44,600,000 people of the United Kingdom in
-1908-9 was approximately £1,844,000,000. 1,400,000 persons took
-£634,000,000; 4,100,000 persons took £275,000,000; 39,000,000 persons
-took £935,000,000. (See Chapters 2 and 3.)_
-
-
-
-
- RICHES AND POVERTY
-
- (1910)
-
- BY
-
- L. G. CHIOZZA MONEY, M.P.
-
- ELEVENTH EDITION
-
- METHUEN & CO. LTD.
- 36 ESSEX STREET W.C.
- LONDON
-
-
- _First Published_ (_5s. net_) _October 1905_
- _Second Edition_ _December 1905_
- _Third Edition_ _July 1906_
- _Fourth and Cheaper Edition_ (_1s. net_) _January 1908_
- _Fifth Edition_ (_1s. net_) _February 1908_
- _Sixth and Seventh Editions_ (_1s. net_) _March 1908_
- _Eighth Edition_ (_1s. net_) _May 1908_
- _Ninth Edition_ (_1s. net_) _December 1909_
- _Tenth Edition, Revised_ (_5s. net_) _March 1911_
- _New and Cheaper Issue_ (_1s. net_) _June 1913_
- _Eleventh Edition_ (_5s. net_) _March 1914_
-
-
-
-
-TO MY WIFE
-
-
-
-
- PREFACE TO THE TENTH (REVISED)
- EDITION, 1910
-
-
-The present edition of "Riches and Poverty" revises my estimates of the
-distribution of the wealth of the United Kingdom down to the year 1908.
-The effect of the revision is to show that in the five years that have
-elapsed since this work was first published, the distribution of wealth
-has grown even more unequal. The comparative stationariness of money
-wages of late years is a fact upon which the labourers themselves, and
-not less the nation of which they form by far the greater part, are to
-be commiserated. I write at a time when a great deal of discontent is
-becoming evident amongst large masses of the population; it may be well
-for those, and they are many, who have written in condemnation of that
-discontent, to ponder the following pages, and in particular to compare
-the profits recorded by the Inland Revenue Commissioners with the
-evidence as to wages collected by the Labour Department of the Board of
-Trade.
-
-My own view of the subject is, that the massing of capital in large
-units has so considerably strengthened the hand of capital in its
-dealings with labour that in recent years Trade Unions have
-comparatively lost much ground. To-day the masters in many of our
-industries can exercise collective powers much more effectively than
-Trade Unions. Combination amongst employers in some trades has reached a
-point at which it has become possible to rule alike the price of
-products and the price of labour.
-
-While since 1900 nominal or money wages have been at a standstill, the
-cost of living has continued to rise. The retail cost of food in London
-rose 9 per cent. in 1900-1908. Therefore British real or commodity wages
-have fallen heavily since 1900. A London platelayer, when he has the
-privilege of working seven days a week, can earn 21s. a week in 1910 as
-in 1900, but the real value of the 21s. has fallen by about 9 per cent.;
-in effect, that is, he earns 1s. 10d. a week less than in 1900. Now 19s.
-2d. is not a just wage for a London platelayer.
-
-The statements which were made in the 1905 edition of "Riches and
-Poverty" proved to be uncomfortable reading for many, and I have now a
-great many books on my shelves in which they have been discussed. The
-attempts to refute them have entirely failed. It is now generally
-accepted that the number of Income Tax payers is approximately what I
-stated it to be, and the increase of Income Tax assessments indicates
-that my estimates of the income of the rich did not err on the side of
-liberality.
-
-Work such as is attempted in these pages ought, of course, to be
-entrusted to the hands of a permanent Census Department, empowered to
-collect information, and instructed to analyse and diffuse it. In the
-absence of such a Department, and in the lamentable condition of our
-national statistical records, the conclusions of a private investigator
-are only too likely to be called in question by those who do not stomach
-what he has to say. It may be said that the disagreeable estimates I
-have presented in the frontispiece of this volume rest upon private
-authority, and that they cannot be accepted without great reservation. I
-should like to direct attention, therefore, to a series of facts which
-_are_ official, which _cannot_ be denied, and which rest upon the basis
-that they _represent masses of property actually taxed_.
-
-I refer to the estates which pass at death in the United Kingdom year by
-year, and which are valued for the purposes of the death duties. The
-following facts, to which I called attention for the first time in
-"Riches and Poverty," can be easily memorized, and every one ought to
-know them.
-
-Year by year, as regularly as the seasons, properties pass at death in
-the United Kingdom, free of all debts, absolutely net, to the value of,
-in round figures, £300,000,000. Of this £300,000,000, the aggregate of
-approximately 80,000 separate estates, as much as £200,000,000, or
-thereabouts, is left by about FOUR THOUSAND (4000) PERSONS.
-
-I repeat that these figures are not my estimates, but the official
-figures ascertained and published by the Inland Revenue Commissioners.
-They can be verified by any reader of this book by reference to the
-latest Official Report of the Commissioners of His Majesty's Inland
-Revenue (Cd. 4868. Price 1s. 7d.).
-
-Those who are acquainted with the facts know, as Mr Balfour recognized
-in reply to me in a debate in the House of Commons on September 13th,
-1909, that the official figures I have quoted would be larger but for
-the passing of property _inter vivos_ in avoidance of the death duties.
-But, to take the figures as they are, an under statement of the wealth
-of the rich, I put this question to those who come to consider the
-estimates I have made:
-
-_If, in the United Kingdom, out of £300,000,000 a year passing at death,
-as much as £200,000,000, or two-thirds of the whole, is left by only
-4000 persons, does it not follow, as the night the day, that the
-distribution of the national income must necessarily proceed on some
-such lines as those estimated in the frontispiece to this volume?_
-
-And with that question I once more issue these pages to the public.
-
- L. G. CHIOZZA MONEY
-
- CHALDON, SURREY
- _October 1910_
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
- PAGE
- BOOK I
- THE ERROR OF DISTRIBUTION
-
- CHAPTER I
- THOUGHTS ARISING OUT OF A GREAT CONTROVERSY
-
- The false assumption that customs duties can determine prosperity 3
- Evidences of riches and poverty as "arguments" 4
- "Thirty per cent. of our population underfed" 5
- A question of distribution 7
-
-
- CHAPTER II
- THE NATIONAL INCOME
-
- The total product consists of goods and services 8
- The exchanged product can be measured 9
- Income Tax assessments; my 1905 estimate confirmed 11
- The income eluding taxation 13
- Income from abroad 15
- Aggregate of incomes exceeding £160 per annum 16
- Growth of Income Tax income in five years 17
- Aggregate of small incomes lying between Income Tax payers
- and wage-earning classes 20
- Aggregate of incomes of manual workers 29
- Aggregate of the national income 31
- The Income Tax exemption limit bisects the total product 31
-
-
- CHAPTER III
- DISTRIBUTION OF THE NATIONAL INCOME
-
- The average family income 32
- Investigation of number of Income Tax payers 33
- Number of incomes under £700 39
- Number of incomes over £700 measured by number of large houses 43
- Approximate number of Income Tax payers 44
- Persons with respectively more and less than £160 per annum 47
- One-half of entire product taken by 12 per cent. of the population 47
- One-third of entire product taken by one-thirtieth of population 48
- A poor people thinly veneered by the well-to-do 49
- The movement in 1903-1908 50
-
-
- CHAPTER IV
- THE ESTATES OF RICH AND POOR
-
- The graduated Estate Duty of Sir William Harcourt 51
- Deaths per annum in the United Kingdom 54
- Numbers and values of estates passing at death in recent years 55
- Savings of the poor 57
- Rich and poor estates in an average year 59
-
-
- CHAPTER V
- THE NATIONAL ACCUMULATION
-
- Estimate of the accumulated wealth of the United Kingdom 62
- Public property, Imperial and local 65
- The national and local debts private mortgages upon public
- assets 67
- British wealth in private hands 68
- Foreign wealth in British hands 71
- Average wealth per head 71
-
-
- CHAPTER VI
- THE MONOPOLY OF CAPITAL
-
- Living property owners estimated from Death Duty records 73
- Growing avoidance of Death Duties 77
- 120,000 persons own two-thirds of the national capital 79
- The alleged "capital" of the working classes 80
- Those rule who own 80
-
-
- CHAPTER VII
- THE AREA OF THE UNITED KINGDOM
-
- Area the fundamental attribute of land 81
- Almost the entire area in private hands 82
- One-half the area owned by 2,500 persons 83
- The number of landlords 84
- Estimate of land rents 86
- Why the aggregate of land rents is relatively small 87
- The cheapening of food 87
- The small areas of the town 88
- The rent-charge formed by local rates 90
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII
- THOSE WHO WORK AND WHOSE WHO WAIT
-
- Effect of congestion of capital upon distribution 93
- Practical examples of the distributive process 94
- Capital largely divorced from business ability 99
- Schedule D profits compared with paid-up capitals 100
- Effect of appreciation of securities upon position of the
- wage-earners 101
- Railway profits and railway wages 102
- Calculating the labour factor 103
- Capital takes the lion's share 106
-
-
- CHAPTER IX
- PROFITS, BAD TRADE AND UNEMPLOYMENT
-
- Growth of profits in recent years 107
- Rise and fall of wages in recent years 108
- Growth of profits compared with rise and fall in wages 110
- Labour bears the brunt of depression 115
- Records of unemployment of Trade Union members 116
- The Trade Union unemployment rate probably representative 119
- How Trade Unions keep the tools sharpened 121
- The great majority of the British people lack security of tenure
- of employment 122
- "Remedies" for unemployment 123
- Insurance against unemployment 123
- Labour Exchanges no remedy 124
-
-
- CHAPTER X
- PART OF THEIR WAGES
-
- Accident and disease concomitants of wages 125
- Laxity of factory inspection 127
- Accidents in factories and workshops 127
- Diseases of occupations in factories and workshops 129
- Accidents in mines and quarries 130
- Accidents on railways 136
- Accidents on ships 137
- Accidents in certain engineering works 137
- Aggregate of reported accidents and cases of industrial
- disease 138
- Phthisis as an industrial disease 139
- Physical deterioration not an accident 140
-
-
- CHAPTER XI
- CONSEQUENCES
-
- The governance of the rich 141
- The direction of life and labour through expenditure 143
- The cotton trade and the fate of its products 144
- The demand for woollens 145
- The call for boots 147
- The waste of labour of nominally useful workmen 149
- The parable of the temporary supper-room 149
- The parable of the Ascot frock 151
- Mr Rowntree's primary poverty line 153
- The possible call for commodities by the poor 154
- The agricultural labourer's call 155
- The boot employee as a customer for the textile employee 156
- The Error of Distribution connotes the misdirection and
- degradation of labour 156
-
-
- CHAPTER XII
- THE WASTE OF CAPITAL
-
- The national accumulations small in relation to the national
- income 159
- More evidences of poverty than of wealth 159
- The moral of oversea investments 160
- Six thousand millions of capital wasted in forty years 163
- The demand for luxuries misdirects capital 164
- The waste of capital in the game of competition 166
- The waste of capital in weak and bogus company promotion 166
-
-
- BOOK II
- TOWARDS ORGANIZATION
-
- CHAPTER XIII
- THE GOLDEN KEY
-
- More trade and a better distribution 171
- The social problem must be discussed with reference to the
- Error of Distribution 172
-
-
- CHAPTER XIV
- THE NATION'S CHILDREN
-
- The renewal of the race 173
- The verdict of anthropology 173
- Injustice before birth and after 176
- The innocence of the Factory Act 178
- The Physical Deterioration Committee on reasonable care of
- the infant 180
- The mothers of the future 181
- The mothers of the present 181
- Women health inspectors 182
- The public medical service 183
- The small cost of a public maternity fund 184
- A Jewish example 185
- The birth of a child a matter of national moment 187
- Neglectful parents must be punished 187
- The segregation of the unfit 187
- Twenty-five million births in twenty years 189
-
-
- CHAPTER XV
- THE SCHOOL
-
- The Error of Distribution and the heritage of the child 191
- The nation loses the bulk of its intelligence and genius 191
- The school must be a preparation for life 192
- The doctor in the school 193
- The school children of Bradford 194
- "The child has got to be fed" 196
- Observation and expression 199
- The study of systematized knowledge 202
- The teaching of hygiene and temperance 204
- Compulsory continuation schools for both boys and girls 204
- Can we afford to make our schools what we desire them to be? 207
-
-
- CHAPTER XVI
- THE HOME
-
- An increasing population in a diminishing number of centres 209
- Our many poorhouses 210
- The years taken from the lives of the poor 211
- Crowding and overcrowding 212
- Tenement statistics 212
- Overcrowding on area has increased 213
- Not only death and disease but ugliness to be fought 215
- Where further building should be prevented 217
- The housing question as a land question and as a capital
- question 218
- The community should be landlord 218
- The taxation of land on its selling value would assist
- in municipalizing area 219
- The small area needed to rehouse our city populations 220
- The municipality must plan its extensions in advance 221
- Some examples from Germany 222
- An example in the United Kingdom 223
- How land and capital enter into the housing problem 229
- National housing loans needed 231
-
-
- CHAPTER XVII
- THE EMPTY COUNTRY
-
- The migration from the country to the towns 234
- The decrease in agricultural employment and its causes 240
- Agriculture must be an increasingly limited field
- for employment 240
- The cheap land outside the towns 243
- Is control of area worth half a year's income? 243
- The community can acquire cheap land and make it valuable 244
- Rising food prices 247
- Neglected afforestation 248
- Imperial questions must be treated on an Imperial scale 249
-
-
- CHAPTER XVIII
- ORGANIZATION
-
- An insufficient production of ponderable commodities 250
- The small stream of ponderable things is made the subject of
- unnecessary services 251
- Present production is wasteful 252
- The waste of labour in competition 252
- The waste of labour in distribution, etc 253
- So called "natural" monopolies 255
- Monopoly necessary if labour is to be fully economized 256
- Power distribution and public control 256
- The problem of monopoly illustrated by the milk trade 259
- The milk trade typical of many other services 262
- Municipal and joint-stock direction contrasted 263
- The management of our railway companies 263
- The prevalence of nepotism in private enterprise 264
- The Belgian State railways 265
- Coal production and distribution 267
- The private trust the only alternative to public ownership 269
- Public ownership of capital the only remedy for unemployment 270
- Those govern who employ 271
-
-
- CHAPTER XIX
- THE AGED POOR
-
- Two million persons over 65 years of age and most of them poor 272
- Mr Thomas Burt's return of aged paupers 273
- Mr Ritchie's return of number of paupers relieved during a year 275
- Of the population aged 65 and over, one in three is a pauper 277
- Probable number of aged paupers 278
- Length of the working life 280
- The Charity Organization Society and cost 283
- Mr Asquith's Old Age Pension Act 284
- First year's working of Old Age Pensions 285
- Old Age Pensions at 65 286
- Invalidity Insurance 286
-
-
- CHAPTER XX
- ADAM SMITH'S FIRST MAXIM OF TAXATION
-
- The famous first maxim self-contradictory 287
- Taxation in relation to the Error of Distribution 288
- The doctrine of equality of sacrifice 288
- An unanswerable case for repeal of all food duties 289
- The duties on liquors and tobacco should remain 289
-
-
- CHAPTER XXI
- THE MAIN INSTRUMENT OF TAXATION
-
- Through an Income Tax taxation can be applied according to
- "ability" 291
- The British Income Tax an ancient impost 291
- The so-called "Land" Tax of 1692 was an income tax 292
- The "Land" Tax of 1692 and the present Income Tax compared 295
- A graduated Income Tax taxes unearned increment 296
- The Income Tax in 1905 described 297
- The "Abatements" 297
- Schedule A described 298
- Schedule B " 299
- Schedule C " 300
- Schedule D " 300
- Schedule E " 302
- The Inhabited House Duty a second Income Tax 302
- The Finance Act of 1907 introduced differentiation between
- earned and unearned income 303
- The Finance Act of 1909. Mr Lloyd George's reform of the
- Income Tax 303
- Mr Asquith's differentiation illustrated 304
- The Super-Tax 305
- The Super-Tax as it really is 305
- The Income Tax summarized 306
- The Income Tax in effect 307
- The Inhabited House Duty should be abolished 308
- Simplification needed 308
- Without a Census of Income the Income Tax cannot be properly
- enforced 310
- Masters compelled to reveal employees' incomes 311
- Taxation at the source might remain 312
- The family man's allowance 314
- Is an annual Budget debate necessary? 315
- Mill and Bentham on Ethics of Taxation 317
- A Plain Bill for the citizens' subscription to the
- National Club 318
-
-
- CHAPTER XXII
- THE DEATH DUTIES
-
- The Death Duty Reforms of 1907-9 320
- My suggestions of 1905 now law 321
- The plain justice of the Lloyd George Scale 322
- The alleged burden of the Death Duties 323
- Do our Death Duties waste the national capital? 323
- Gifts _inter vivos_ 324
- President Taft on the dangers of wealth monopoly 324
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIII
- OF REVENUE WITHOUT TAXATION
-
- A source of revenue not necessarily a source of taxation 326
- A State without revenue 327
- Socialism and revenue and taxation 327
- The German Governments rich are Governments 328
- Half the revenue of Prussia is derived from Socialism 328
- Yield of Prussian State Railways 329
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIV
- CONCLUSION
-
- Progress in 40 years 330
- Some items in material progress, 1867-1903 332
- What Dudley Baxter wrote in 1867 333
- The poor within our borders to-day are as large in number as
- the entire population in 1867 338
- The employer the effective schoolmaster 340
- A poor government is a weak government 341
- Sir Robert Giffen on taxation 341
- We must have regard to both palliatives and remedies 342
- Public ownership of capital must replace private ownership 343
- The substitution of the public shareholder for the private
- shareholder not difficult 344
- The uplifting of work through the reduction of toil 345
- The statesman must take up the tools of the scientist 346
- The appeal to the few 348
- The appeal to the people 348
-
-
- INDEX 351
-
-
-
-
- RICHES AND POVERTY
-
-
-
-
- BOOK I
- THE ERROR OF DISTRIBUTION
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I
- THOUGHTS ARISING OUT OF A GREAT CONTROVERSY
-
-
-During recent years a considerable share of the thoughts of men has been
-devoted to the consideration of one part of our fiscal policy,—that part
-which is concerned with Customs duties. In public and in private, on
-hundreds of platforms and in thousands of homes, the ancient issue has
-been debated between those who hold that Customs duties should be
-imposed for revenue purposes only and those who contend that Customs
-duties may be used as instruments with which to direct wisely the
-agricultural, industrial and commercial development of a nation. In the
-arguments which have been adduced by both sides in this controversy a
-large part has been taken by evidence of the prosperity or want of
-prosperity of the United Kingdom, as though Customs policy were the sole
-factor in determining the wealth and progress of a people. Blind to the
-fact that a wise Customs policy can at best enable a nation to make the
-most of its natural advantages, extreme disputants have been engaged on
-the one side in piling up incontestable evidences of British wealth and
-on the other side in producing equally incontestable evidences of
-British poverty. The Free Trader has revelled in import and export,
-shipping, banking and revenue statistics, while the Protectionist has
-reminded us of the existence of millions on the verge of hunger, of
-hundreds of thousands of paupers, and of tens if not hundreds of
-thousands of unemployed. The Free Trader has demonstrated that, as a
-whole, we are a wealthy and a prosperous people. The Protectionist has
-been able to throw doubt upon that wealth and prosperity chiefly because
-it is an indisputable fact that, whatever may be true of our accumulated
-wealth and total income, every British city has its slums, its paupers
-and its out-of-works. The Protectionist has been unable to resist the
-Free Trade evidence as to the magnificence of our commerce and shipping
-and the increasing national income recorded by the Inland Revenue
-Commissioners. The Free Trader has had reluctantly to admit the
-existence, in our wealthy country, of social disorders and masses of
-extreme poverty which are terrible blots upon our prosperity. If one
-side has dwelt almost exclusively upon signs of wealth and the other
-side almost exclusively upon evidences of poverty, what else could be
-expected when a highly complicated problem became the shuttlecock of
-faction? Even honest politicians become afraid to make statements which
-may be treated as "admissions" when party feeling runs high. The more
-should we welcome the notable utterance of Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman
-at Perth on June 5th, 1903:
-
-"But I take it (the Chamberlain policy of 'Preference') as confined to
-food, and it amounts to this, that the cost of the necessaries of daily
-life is to be raised to the people of this country in order that the
-Colonial producer may do more business, make larger profit, and the
-landowner get better rents. Now the pinch of this does not fall upon the
-well-to-do. It may be an inconvenience to a great number of people, but
-the real pinch of it falls upon a needier class altogether, who are
-sadly large among us. What is the population of the Colonies which I
-have named? About thirteen millions. This is the population who will
-share more or less the benefit of this new arrangement. In this country
-we know, thanks to the patience and accurate scientific investigations
-of Mr Rowntree and Mr Charles Booth, that there is about 30 per cent. of
-our population underfed, on the verge of hunger. Thirty per cent. of 41
-millions comes to something over 12 millions—almost identical as you see
-with the whole population of the Colonies. So that it comes to this,
-that for every man in the Colonies who is benefited, one head is shoved
-under water in this country. I think I might set down that fact as
-almost enough of itself to condemn any scheme, however plausible. Surely
-the fact that about 30 per cent. of the population is living in the grip
-of perpetual poverty is, or ought to be, a sufficient answer to the
-Prime Minister's complacent suggestion that we can now afford to try
-experiments which fifty years ago were not to be thought of."
-
-These words have been widely used as a reply to the assertion that we
-are a prosperous people. Their true meaning is, that while we have
-acquired great wealth, and enjoy a considerable national income, that
-wealth and that income are not so distributed as to give a sufficiency
-of material things to all our population. As for their use as an
-"argument" for Protection, we have but to turn to that land favoured of
-nature, the United States of America, to find records of poverty fully
-as distressing as our own.
-
-Mr Robert Hunter, the American sociologist, thus summarises the poverty
-of the United States of America: "There are probably in fairly
-prosperous years no less than 10,000,000 persons in poverty; that is to
-say, underfed, underclothed, and poorly housed. Of these about 4,000,000
-persons are public paupers. Over 2,000,000 working men are unemployed
-from four to six months in the year. About 500,000 male immigrants
-arrive yearly and seek work in the very districts where unemployment is
-greatest. Nearly half of the families in the country are propertyless.
-Over 1,700,000 little children are forced to become wage-earners when
-they should still be in school. About 5,000,000 women find it necessary
-to work, and about 2,000,000 are employed in factories, mills, etc.
-Probably no less than 1,000,000 workers are injured or killed each year
-while doing their work, and about 10,000,000 of the persons now living
-will, if the present ratio is kept up, die of the preventable disease,
-tuberculosis."
-
-We have, then, to thank the fiscal controversy for this: In the belief
-that evidence of prosperity, or the reverse of prosperity, is a proof or
-disproof, as the case may be, of the wisdom of a particular Customs
-policy, we have been reminded at once of our riches and of our poverty.
-Through the controversy over that absurd phrase the "balance of trade,"
-worthy landsmen have been reminded that the United Kingdom possesses
-half the world's seagoing ships, and poor clerks have learned with
-astonishment that our oversea investments produce over £100,000,000 of
-profits per annum. The unemployed workman, drawing from his beneficent
-trade union the small allowance with which his own thrift has provided
-him, and which barely keeps the wolf from his door, has learned that our
-imports of food—"chiefly from foreign countries"—are worth £200,000,000
-per annum. Millions—other people's millions—have become common objects
-of the newspaper column, and it is probable that a great part of our
-population is now acquainted with the fact that the gross income brought
-under the review of the Income Tax Commissioners is about £1,000,000,000
-per annum. It has also, alas, become familiar that our Poor Law
-expenditure reaches £17,000,000 a year, and that, even in our best years
-of trade, many of our skilled workmen are denied the means of earning
-their livelihood. While demonstrating our prosperity the good Free
-Trader has paused to write a cheque for a West Ham Distress Fund, or
-subscribed some shillings for a children's slum party.
-
-The object of these pages is to help the reader to form an accurate idea
-of the distribution of the wealth which results from our industries and
-commerce. 44,000,000 people in the United Kingdom work to produce
-certain commodities, and a part of this output is exchanged for
-commodities produced in other lands. We produce, we export, and we
-import, and our home production increased by our imports and decreased
-by our exports constitutes a great income which is divided up amongst us
-in such manner that some of us are rich and some of us are poor. Let us
-endeavour to make concrete our ideas on the subject of riches and
-poverty, that we make quite sure what we mean when we speak of the
-wealth and prosperity of the United Kingdom.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II
- THE NATIONAL INCOME
-
-
-In considering and estimating the national income it is necessary to
-remind ourselves, in the first place, that our production, our exports
-and our imports, alike consist of both goods and services. The processes
-of thought and action result in the conception, production, distribution
-and use of ponderable and imponderable commodities. In an advanced
-community the greater part of the material and immaterial productions
-which are the expressions of its various activities becomes the subject
-of exchange. The many exchanges are made by reference to a common
-standard, and thus we are enabled to measure, in terms of money, the
-greater part of the national income. There remains a not inconsiderable
-production of ponderable and imponderable things which it is difficult
-or impossible to measure in terms of money, but upon which largely
-depends the happiness of a people. The material produce which does not
-become the subject of exchange, includes several very important items,
-amongst which may be mentioned the produce of the gardens or allotments
-of many agricultural labourers, and the production of clothing and the
-cooking of food by the women of the middle and lower classes. The
-immaterial things which do not come into the market are exceedingly
-important, especially to the poor. The household work of a poor woman
-with a husband and several children, if it could be measured in terms of
-money, would be worth a considerable sum. The imponderable part, the
-managing, the careful buying, the arranging, the cleaning, the serving,
-added to the manufacturing part, the cooking and the stitching, go often
-to make a sixteen-hours' working day, and who shall place a market price
-upon each of the sixteen hours? In the well-to-do household we also find
-the woman active for some fourteen or sixteen hours a day, but the
-product of the hours is more often immaterial than in the poor man's
-home. Thus the care of servants has been known to cause the expenditure
-of much time and anxiety by women of large income. A rich woman who has
-studied under Marchesi may exercise in private, to solace her father or
-lover, a soprano worth one shilling per note in the public concert-room.
-It is worth no less in the drawing-room, but in estimating the national
-income we have to neglect its market value just as we must neglect that
-of the poor woman's apple-pie.
-
-With this reminder as to the production of unexchanged commodities,
-which, while important, are yet but an exceedingly small part of the
-product of the entire activities of our people, I proceed to an
-examination of the money value of that greater part of the product which
-is bought and sold.
-
-The collection of the Income Tax makes a more or less complete
-inquisition into the profits or salaries received or earned by those
-whose incomes exceed £160 per annum. Below that limit income tax is not
-payable, but a small amount of the income of persons with less than this
-£3 per week does actually come under the review of the Commissioners.
-
-If we take the figures of the latest period of which we have record, we
-find that in the financial year 1908-9 (_i.e._ the twelve months ended
-March 31st, 1909) the following particulars of gross incomes were
-ascertained by the Inland Revenue Officials (fifty-third Report of the
-Commissioners of Inland Revenue, Cd. 5308, p. 105):—
-
- GROSS AMOUNT OF INCOME BROUGHT UNDER REVIEW IN 1908-9
-
- Schedule A. Profits from the ownership of
- lands, houses, railways, mines, etc. £269,900,000
-
- Schedule B. Profits from the occupation
- of lands (Farmers' Tax) 17,400,000
-
- Schedule C. Profits from British, Indian,
- Colonial and Foreign Government
- Securities 47,500,000
-
- Schedule D. Profits from Businesses, Concerns,
- Professions, Employments, etc.,
- including certain profits from places
- abroad 565,600,000
-
- Schedule E. Salaries of Government,
- Corporation, and Public Company
- Officials 109,600,000
- --------------
- £1,010,000,000
- --------------
-
-The following table shows the growth of the aggregate during the past
-fifteen years:—
-
- GROSS PROFITS ASSESSED TO INCOME TAX
- (_From Inland Revenue Report_)
-
- 1893-4 £673,700,000
- 1894-5 657,100,000
- 1895-6 677,800,000
- 1896-7 704,700,000
- 1897-8 734,500,000
- 1898-9 762,700,000
- 1899-1900 791,700,000
- 1900-1 833,300,000
- 1901-2 867,000,000
- 1902-3 879,600,000[1]
- 1903-4 902,800,000[2]
- 1904-5 912,100,000
- 1905-6 925,200,000
- 1906-7 943,700,000
- 1907-8 980,100,000
- 1908-9 1,010,000,000
-
-It should be observed that these figures are for gross income, and some
-adjustments have to be made before we can arrive at the total income of
-that part of the nation which has the mingled pleasure and pain of
-paying Income Tax.
-
-From the £1,010,000,000 brought under review in 1908-9, the Inland
-Revenue authorities allowed the following deductions before arriving at
-taxable incomes:—
-
- (_a_) Exemptions in respect of incomes
- under £160 per annum £58,400,000
-
- (_b_) Abatements on incomes ranging from
- £160 per annum to £700 per annum 120,300,000
-
- (_c_) Life Insurance Premiums 10,500,000
-
- (_d_) Charities, Hospitals, Friendly
- Societies, etc. 11,800,000
-
- (_e_) Repairs to Lands and Houses 40,100,000
-
- (_f_) Wear and tear of Machinery and Plant 22,900,000
-
- (_g_) Other Allowances 52,700,000
- ------------
- Total Deductions £316,700,000
- ============
-
-So that Income Tax in 1908-9 was actually collected not upon
-£1,010,000,000 but upon £693,300,000.
-
-But we have not to make all the above deductions in arriving at the
-actual income of the income tax paying class. We have only to deduct
-those items which are not the real income of that class, viz.:—
-
- (_a_) Exemptions in respect of incomes
- under £160 £58,400,000
- (_d_) Charities, Hospitals, etc. 11,800,000
- (_e_) Repairs to Lands and Houses 40,100,000
- (_f_) Wear and tear of Machinery 22,900,000
- (_g_) Other Allowances 52,700,000
- ------------
- £185,900,000
- ============
-
-Deducting these items we get:—
-
- GROSS ASSESSMENTS TO INCOME TAX
- CORRECTED[3]
-
- Gross Assessments 1908-9 £1,010,000,000
- Less Deductions as above 185,900,000
- --------------
- £824,100,000
- ==============
-
-This figure may be compared with the £719,500,000 given on page 11 of
-"Riches and Poverty" (1905) for the fiscal year 1902-3. The increase is
-no less than £104,600,000 in five years, and this increase is especially
-commended to the notice of those critics who have worked so hard to
-whittle away a little from my estimates of 1903-4. The onward sweep of
-the figures has been magnificent; and accomplished facts now provide the
-apologists of the rich with the task of explaining away another
-£100,000,000 or so per annum.
-
-To resume, the £824,100,000 arrived at above, handsome figure as it is,
-is certainly not complete. There is unquestionably still a considerable
-amount of evasion under Schedule D of the Income Tax. The landlords of
-Schedule A cannot escape assessment because the tax is paid by occupiers
-and deducted from rent, but there is a certain amount of
-under-assessment. Under Schedules B, C and E evasion is, for the most
-part, difficult or impossible. Under Schedule D,[4] however, a large
-number of incomes are understated and many which ought to be assessed
-escape altogether. It is almost as true to-day as it was in 1861 that,
-in the words of Mr Lowe's Draft Report to the Income Tax Committee of
-that year, "Schedule D depends on the conscience of the tax-payer who
-often, it is to be feared, returns hundreds instead of thousands, and
-who is certain to decide any question that he can persuade himself to
-think doubtful, in his own favour." It is recorded by the Income Tax
-Commissioners in their Twenty-Eighth Annual Report that when, in 1803,
-taxation at source was substituted for self-assessment in the case of
-all income but business profits, the effect was to make the produce of
-the tax at 5 per cent. in 1803 almost equal to that of 10 per cent. in
-1799, showing that in the earlier year those who assessed themselves
-unaccountably overlooked one-half of their incomes. Dudley Baxter
-reminds us in his classical paper on the National Income[5] that in his
-Budget Speech in 1853 Mr Gladstone quoted a remarkable instance of
-evasion. When Cannon Street Station was constructed, twenty-eight
-persons claimed compensation for the loss of annual profits which they
-estimated at £48,000. The jury, after considering their case, awarded
-them £27,000. They had returned their profits to the Income Tax
-Commissioners at £9,000! In recent years the formation of limited
-liability companies has frequently revealed profits far in excess of
-those previously stated under Schedule D. Whatever figure we allow for
-such evasion must, in the nature of the case, be conjectural. In "Riches
-and Poverty" (1905), p. 13, I estimated evasion and avoidance as 20 per
-cent. of the declared profits. Twenty per cent. of £365,000,000 (the
-profits of "Businesses, Professions, etc," assessed under Schedule D) in
-1902-3 was £73,000,000. We have since had remarkable proof of the
-reasonableness of this estimate. In 1907-8 the gross assessments to
-Income Tax rose by £36,000,000 (see p. 11). There is little doubt that
-part of the rise was due to Mr Asquith's enactment (Finance Act, 1907,
-Clause 19) differentiating between earned and unearned incomes _on the
-condition that earned or partly earned incomes up to £2,000 a year were
-declared by their owners_. For the financial year 1907-8 does not
-include the profits of the good year 1907 which (see Chap. 21) were not
-assessed under our averaging system until 1908-9. It was the new
-personal declarations which led to the revelation of income hitherto
-escaping tax, and part of the £36,000,000 rise in assessments in 1907-8
-is undoubtedly part also of the estimate of £73,000,000 escaping tax
-which I made in "Riches and Poverty" (1905). For 1908-9, therefore, I
-reduce my estimate of income escaping tax accordingly. I now take it as
-£60,000,000 in 1908-9.
-
-Another point for consideration is the amount of profit received by
-persons in this country from places abroad. It is exceedingly difficult
-to tax the whole of such profits. In 1908-9, £88,800,000, made up as
-follows, was ear-marked by the Commissioners as profit received from
-abroad:—
-
- ASSESSED PROFITS EAR-MARKED AS
- RECEIVED FROM ABROAD, 1908-9
-
- (1) India Government Stocks, Loans }
- and Guaranteed Railways } £9,000,000
- (2) Colonial or Foreign Government }
- Securities } 23,200,000
- (3) Colonial or Foreign Securities,
- other than Government, Coupons,
- and Oversea Railways other
- than those in (1) 56,600,000
- -----------
- £88,800,000
- ===========
-
-The total profit received or receivable yearly in this country from
-oversea investments it is impossible to estimate precisely, but there is
-good reason to believe that it is not less than £140,000,000. It should
-not be imagined, however, that the whole of the difference between this
-sum and that ear-marked by the Commissioners escapes assessment.
-Undoubtedly some of it eludes taxation, but a considerable sum, it
-should be remembered, is included with ordinary business profits under
-Schedule D. A few illustrations will make this clear. Messrs Armstrong,
-Whitworth & Co. have a shipyard in Italy the profits of which are
-received in this country, but are not distinguished from the ordinary
-profits of the company in the income-tax assessment. The same is true of
-such a firm as Lipton Ld. which owns extensive tea plantations in
-Ceylon. The profits made in Ceylon and remitted to this country are
-included in and assessed with the general profits of the business. There
-are a large number of firms which similarly own foreign or colonial
-property or branches which are organic parts of their businesses and are
-often the sources of their materials. When allowance is made for these
-facts it is probable that some £115,000,000 of oversea profits
-(including the nearly £90,000,000 or so actually ear-marked) are
-assessed to income tax, leaving but about £25,000,000 unassessed.
-
-Accepting these figures, we arrive at the following estimate of the
-total income enjoyed by those persons who have over £3 per week:—
-
- INCOME OF PERSONS ENJOYING OVER £160
- PER ANNUM, 1908-9
-
- Gross Assessments to Income Tax Schedules
- A, B, C, D, and E £1,010,000,000
- _Deduct_
- Items not representing real income, etc.
- (see page 12) 185,900,000
- --------------
- £824,100,000
- _Add_
- (_a_) For under-assessment under
- Schedule D 60,000,000
- (_b_) Foreign profits escaping tax 25,000,000
- ------------
- £909,100,000
- ============
-
-The foregoing figures relate to the fiscal year ended March 31st, 1909,
-the latest period for which detailed figures are available.
-
-It is necessary to point out again that while this fiscal year 1908-9
-covered the assessment of the calendar year 1907, which was a year of
-great profit-making, it did not fully assess the profits of that boom
-year. Under Schedule D of the Income Tax the profits assessed in 1908-9
-were the profits of the three years 1905, 1906, and 1907. That is to
-say, the figures just arrived at, £909,100,000, _are an understatement
-of the true aggregate incomes of those having upwards of £160 a year in
-1907_. The actual income of the income tax payers in 1907 greatly
-exceeded £909,000,000.
-
-In "Riches and Poverty" (1905) my equally conservative estimate of the
-income tax payers' aggregate income for 1903-4 was £830,000,000. We
-therefore get the following comparison:—
-
- GROWTH OF AGGREGATE INCOME OF PERSONS
- ENJOYING OVER £160 A YEAR
-
- 1903-4. Estimate of "Riches and }
- Poverty" (1905) } £830,000,000
- 1908-9. Estimate of this Edition }
- (1910) } 909,000,000
- ------------
- Increase £79,000,000
- ============
-
-And this remarkable growth in five years is shown in spite of the fact
-that I have allowed for £13,000,000 of income tax assessment as being
-due to increased severity of collection, for I have assumed that
-£13,000,000 more of existing home profits were revealed in 1908-9 than
-in 1903-4.
-
-Now let us turn to the incomes which do not exceed £160 a year, and
-which, therefore, are not assessable to income tax.
-
-First of all, we have the class of small incomes which lie between the
-manual workers and the income tax payers. We cannot hope, in view of the
-poverty of the information which our present Census methods place at our
-disposal, to estimate this part of the national income with any degree
-of confidence, and we can at best arrive at a rough approximation. I
-estimate that in 1908, of our "occupied" population, about 3,100,000
-were neither income tax payers on the one hand nor manual labourers on
-the other hand. That is to say, they were petty tradesmen, civil
-servants, clerks, shopmen, travellers, canvassers, agents, teachers,
-farmers, inn-keepers, lodging-house-keepers, pensioners, and so forth,
-whose profits or salaries are below £3 per week. At what rate can we
-estimate their average income?
-
-The total includes a very considerable number of young persons between
-10 and 20 years of age. The teachers, some 250,000 in number, include
-pupil teachers of both sexes whose remuneration begins at a few
-shillings per week, and as a whole the teaching profession is wretchedly
-paid. The commercial and law clerks, some 500,000 in number, include
-juniors, office boys, and poorly paid girl typists. As to shopkeepers,
-there is an exceedingly large number of these distributing agents whose
-incomes are of the slenderest dimensions. Unfortunately we do not know
-how many shops in the United Kingdom have an annual value of less than
-£20, but their number must be very great, and the petty tradesmen who
-keep them have to work hard for poor returns. We have also to remember
-the quite considerable number of shops which are branches of great
-distributive firms and managed by shopmen with small salaries. As to
-shop assistants in general, their salaries are exceedingly small. I am
-informed by the National Amalgamated Union of Shop Assistants,
-Warehousemen and Clerks that the average male assistant "living in" gets
-from £25 to £30 per annum plus "premiums" and board and lodging, while
-"living out" the average is about £74. Grocery and boot salesmen in the
-shops of big distributing companies, who often are not required to "live
-in," get from 20s. to 30s. per week. The wages of the "managers" of
-shops are sometimes as low as 25s. per week. As for the value of the
-"living in," this may be illustrated by the fact that in a certain West
-of London house, where "living in" is the rule, a man applied for
-permission to "live out." He was told that he could do so, but that only
-£5 per annum extra could be allowed him. In a return to the Board of
-Trade for the purpose of statistics, the same employer would doubtless
-value the same "truck" at £30 or £40 per annum. I have before me the
-wages paid to the young women who work for a great multiple shop firm
-with 200 shops; they range from 3s. to 11s. per week!
-
-Passing to the class of commercial travellers and canvassers, there is
-perhaps no calling in which earnings vary so greatly. While there are a
-number in the income-tax class, there are thousands of men included in
-the class we are now considering who live on "commission only," and
-thousands more who are paid by generous employers 15s. to 25s. per week
-plus a small commission. Advertisement and book canvassers are engaged
-upon widely varying terms, and many of them have a very precarious
-livelihood.
-
-In "Riches and Poverty," edition 1905, I wrote: "Nearly the whole of the
-farmers of the United Kingdom earn less than £160 per annum. Out of a
-total profit of £17,500,000 as much as £11,000,000 is excused on the
-ground that income is below £160. This £17,500,000 is the annual income
-of an uncertain number of the larger farmers, probably as many as
-300,000, which gives an average income of about £60 per annum! In
-1902-3, 302 farmers elected to have their actual profits assessed under
-Schedule D. They were assessed at £10,974, which gives an average of
-only £37 per annum. These 302 farmers paid an aggregate rental of
-£116,259!"
-
-These remarks did not take sufficient account of the under-assessment of
-farmers' profits under Schedule B. It would probably have been nearer
-the mark to take one-half of the rental paid rather than the official
-one-third as representing farmers' profits. If we did so, the profits of
-300,000 farmers would come out at say £26,000,000 instead of
-£17,500,000, and the average profit would run to £87 per annum. Even
-this correction, however, would leave the great majority of our farmers
-under the £160 income tax line.
-
-These notes on some of the largest classes of persons which go to make
-up the order of incomes immediately under consideration will serve to
-show that we are dealing with working men and working women whose
-earnings are exceedingly small. It should also be remembered that many
-of them are subject to losses from terms of unemployment. Clerks and the
-poorer travellers have little security of tenure, and at any given time
-there are many out of work. Hundreds of applications are commonly
-received in reply to single advertisements for clerks and travellers. To
-the petty tradesman bad trade does not spell "unemployment," but it
-often spells keeping a shop which does not keep its proprietor for many
-months.
-
-Taking everything into consideration, and remembering that no large
-incomes are introduced to weight the average, the upper limit being as
-low as £160 per annum, I do not think we can estimate the average income
-of the 3,100,000 persons at more than £75 per annum, and I should put
-the figure lower if I did not assume that a certain amount of interest
-is drawn by some members of the group. This estimate gives £232,000,000
-as the annual income of those who are not "manual" workers, but whose
-incomes are not assessed to income tax because they are less than £3 per
-week.
-
-I have thus assigned to these members of the lower middle classes no
-greater earning power than they possessed in 1903. I think I am well
-advised in this. As will be seen later, wages have been almost
-stationary of late, and there is no reason to believe that clerks,
-commission men, etc., have fared better. Even as I write there comes to
-me a letter from a man whom I employed when editing a newspaper some
-years ago. He says (August 1910), "My present wage is 25s. per week,
-with no allowance for lodging out when doing country work. It is easily
-understood that this is not a sum which allows of luxuries for the
-present or provision for the future." He is now a directory canvasser,
-one of thousands in the employ of a large firm of publishers.
-
-Since these pages went to the printer, a Committee of the British
-Association has issued a Report (1910) on the group of incomes just
-referred to which largely confirms the conclusions I presented in 1905.
-The Committee arrive at an average earned income of £71 against the £75
-which I consider to cover both earned and unearned incomes. They treat
-of 4,000,000 people where I treat of 3,100,000, but that is because,
-while I exclude manual labourers as a class, the Committee include many
-manual labourers. Thus the Committee include sweeps in this intermediate
-class, while I include them with the manual workers whose earnings we
-shall next consider.
-
-We now come to the largest class of the working population, the "manual
-workers" commonly so called.
-
-Including persons of both sexes and all ages, I estimate from the census
-returns the number of manual workers in our population of 44,500,000 at
-15,500,000. This number includes, in addition to all those engaged in
-industrial, agricultural, and domestic service, soldiers, sailors,
-policemen, and postmen.
-
-In 1886 the Board of Trade conducted the only Census of Wages made in
-the United Kingdom prior to 1907. (We have not yet had a report on the
-later Census.) Sir Robert Giffen, who in his then capacity as Assistant
-Secretary of the Board of Trade in charge of the Commercial Department,
-directed the Census, describes in his General Report issued in 1893 (C.
-6889) the method adopted. Schedules were sent out to employers, after
-careful consideration of the circumstances of each industry, specifying
-the various occupations of each trade and asking for details as to rates
-of wages, the numbers employed at each rate, the hours of labour, and so
-forth.
-
-As to industrial employment generally the following trades were
-investigated: Cotton, woollen, worsted, linen, jute, hemp, silk, carpet,
-hosiery and lace manufacture, smallwares, flock and shoddy manufacture,
-coal and iron mines, metalliferous mines, paraffin oil works, slate
-mines and quarries, granite quarries and works, stone quarries, china
-clay works, police, construction and care of roads, pavements and
-sewers, gasworks, waterworks, pig-iron manufacture, general engineering,
-iron and brass foundries, iron and steel, shipbuilding (iron and wood),
-tin plate manufacture, saw mills, brass and metal wares, cooperage
-works, coach and carriage building, boot and shoe making, breweries,
-distilleries, brick and tile making, chemical manure manufacture, and
-railway carriage and wagon building.
-
-The details obtained related to 355,838 men, 80,253 boys, 151,263 women
-and 48,772 girls, and were considered by Sir Robert Giffen to be
-"representative of, perhaps, three-fourths of the manual labour classes
-of the United Kingdom." He also expressed the opinion that the "broad
-results shown by the census summary would not be sensibly modified by
-including the great mass of other employments not comprised in that
-summary."
-
-In the following table the Board of Trade summarised the proportion of
-men, women, boys and girls working at various rates of wages, in 1886,
-in the industries which I have mentioned:—
-
- WAGES IN 1886. THE BOARD OF TRADE SUMMARY OF RATES OF WAGES (NOT ACTUAL
- EARNINGS) DERIVED FROM THE DETAILED EXAMINATION OF 38 SELECTED
- INDUSTRIAL OCCUPATIONS
-
- Men. Women. Boys. Girls.
- Per Cent. Per Cent. Per Cent. Per Cent.
-
- Half Timers -- -- 11.9 27.2
- Under 10s. per week 0.1 26.0 49.7 62.5
- 10s. to 15s. " 2.4 50.0 32.5 8.9
- 15s. to 20s. " 21.5 18.5 5.8 1.4
- 20s. to 25s. " 33.6 5.4 0.1 --
- 25s. to 30s. " 24.2 0.1 -- --
- 30s. to 35s. " 11.6 -- -- --
- 35s. to 40s. " 4.2 -- -- --
- Above 40s. " 2.4 -- -- --
- ----- ----- ----- -----
- Total 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0
- ----- ----- ----- -----
- Average Rate of _s._ _d._ _s._ _d._ _s._ _d._ _s._ _d._
- wages 24 9 12 11 9 2 6 5
-
-It will be seen that the average rate of men's wages came out at 24s.
-9d. per week or, say, £64 per annum in a year of constant occupation.
-The weighted average rate for both sexes and all ages comes out at 17s.
-6d. per week or, counting 52 weeks' work in the year, £45. 10s. per
-annum.
-
-The Board of Trade also investigated the rates of wages in other
-occupations, and the following table compares the £64 of the adult males
-in general industries with the rates of wages paid to adult males in (1)
-railway service, (2) building, (3) mercantile marine, (4) Royal Navy,
-(5) Army, (6) domestic service, (7) asylums, (8) hospitals (in 1886
-unless another date is given):—
-
- AVERAGE RATES OF WAGES (NOT ACTUAL
- EARNINGS) FOR MEN IN 1886
-
- Per Annum
- Average of Wage Census (38 Industrial occupations) £64
- Railways (for 1891) 60
- Building Trades (for 1891) 73
- Seamen: Mercantile Marine, including estimated }
- value of food and berths } 65
- Royal Navy, including value of food, etc. 65
- Army (Non-Coms, and men). Including value }
- of food, etc. } 48
- Domestic Servants (large households). Including }
- value of food, etc. } 68
- Employees in Lunatic Asylums. Including value }
- of food, etc. } 60
- Employees in Hospitals and Infirmaries. Including }
- value of food, etc. } 61
- ---
- Unweighted Average £62
- ---
-
-In his report already referred to, Sir Robert Giffen, after detailing
-the average rates of the above table, says (p. xxxiii): "Thus in nearly
-all these trades the average rates are about the same as the average
-rate in the Census of Wages Summary." But the table does not include the
-badly paid agricultural labourer, the largest group of all, and the
-figures for seamen, etc., are, it should be observed, swollen by
-estimates of the value of board and lodging.
-
-Finally, Sir Robert Giffen arrived at the general conclusion that "the
-broad results shown by the census summary would not be sensibly modified
-by including the great mass of other employments not comprised in that
-summary."
-
-In January 1893 Sir Robert Giffen gave evidence before the Labour
-Commission and submitted the facts I have detailed. He prepared a
-general estimate of the proportion of the national income then taken by
-the wage-earning classes, and his evidence on this point (questions 6909
-to 6914) is summarized in the following table:—
-
- EARNINGS OF MANUAL LABOURERS IN 1886
- (Sir Robert Giffen's estimate for the Labour Commission)
-
- Number. Annual Average Aggregate Earnings.
- per Wage-Earner.
- Men 7,300,000 £60 0 0 £439,000,000
- Women 2,900,000 40 0 0 118,000,000
- Boys 1,700,000 23 8 0 46,000,000
- Girls 1,260,000 23 0 0 29,000,000
- ---------- --------- ------------
- 13,200,000 £48 0 0 £633,000,000
- ---------- --------- ------------
-
-There can be no question that this estimate of Sir Robert Giffen's
-somewhat exaggerated the actual earnings of manual labourers as a whole.
-In the first place, it was too much to assume that the 24s. 9d. per week
-or £64 per annum was representative of the whole of adult male labour.
-Without introducing agricultural labourers (the largest group in the
-country), general labourers, postmen, and other ill-paid workers, the
-unweighted average of the table on page 24 is £62. If £60 per annum had
-been given as the average _rate of wages_ of all the adult male workers
-in 1886 it would probably have been an exaggeration. It was not given as
-a rate of wages, however, but as the actual earnings of the men after
-all allowance made for short time, unemployment, sickness, accidents,
-strikes, lockouts, stress of weather, etc. Sir Robert Giffen appears to
-have assumed that all the adult male workers of the United Kingdom were
-employed on the average about 50 weeks out of 52, and were paid at the
-average rate of £64 per annum!
-
-In 1866 Leone Levi, in estimating the manual workers' earnings, assumed
-that four weeks per annum were lost. Dudley Baxter in 1867 pointed out,
-in criticism of Leone Levi, that if four weeks' "play" were all that
-need be allowed "England would be a perfect Paradise for working
-men."[6] Dudley Baxter, in view of the circumstances of his day, allowed
-ten weeks for "play" in making his estimate, and there can be no
-question that he was nearer the truth than Levi. At the present day the
-level of employment is very much the same as it has been for the past
-forty years, while sickness, accidents, and the weather are still with
-us. We need not wonder, then, if Professor A. L. Bowley, who has given
-the subject of wages so much attention, bases his estimates upon the
-loss of six weeks' work per annum through sickness and holidays, and
-makes an additional allowance for unemployment, while also assuming that
-10 per cent. of the working population only get casual or irregular
-work, bringing them in about half the amount shown in the Wage Census.[7]
-
-If the estimate given to the Labour Commission had allowed for six
-weeks' "play," the average earnings of men, women, boys and girls would
-have come out at £40. 5s. per annum instead of £48, and the aggregate
-earnings, therefore, at much less than £633,000,000. Leone Levi's
-estimate for 1884, allowing for only four weeks' play in the year, was
-£521,000,000. This figure is too large, but it is over £100,000,000 less
-than that of Sir Robert Giffen.
-
-I now take the Wage Census figure of 1886 as a basis and correct it for
-the upward movement of wages since that date by the wage index numbers
-of the Board of Trade (Cd. 4954, which slightly corrects the index
-numbers of Cd. 1761, used in "Riches and Poverty," 1905 edition, p. 24),
-which are based on the mean of over 150 rates:—
-
- Average Wage
- (Men, Women, and Board of Trade
- Year. Children) per Index Number
- Week. 1900 = 100.*
- _s._ _d._
- 1886 (Wage Census figure) 17 6 82.86
- 1900 " " 21 1 100.00
- 1908 " " 21 3 101.02
-
-* The meaning of this column is that, if the average wage of 1900 be
-represented by 100, the average wage of 1886 is represented by 82·86 and
-that of 1908 by 101·02.
-
-We thus arrive at 21s. 3d. as the average weekly wage of the manual
-workers in 1908. There is much reason to believe that this estimate errs
-on the side of liberality. It is unfortunate that we have not a
-compulsory wage census, and the method of estimation used here can
-pretend to no more than approximation. It neglects the important fact
-that between 1886 and 1908 the ranks of women and child workers have
-swollen at the expense of adult male workers. The 15,500,000 (estimated)
-manual workers of 1908 consisted as to a larger proportion of women and
-children than the 13,200,000 (estimated) manual workers of 1886. I
-regard the 21s. 3d., therefore, as the most liberal figure that can be
-put forward as the average earnings of the men and women and child
-workers of the United Kingdom in 1908.
-
-We have now to decide what allowances should be made (1) for the great
-army of casual, incompetent, and aged or ageing workers who figure in
-the census returns as following definite occupations, and (2) for the
-loss of time through unemployment, sickness, accidents, stress of
-weather, strikes, lockouts, "bank" and other holidays, etc., in the case
-of the remaining workers.
-
-With regard to the first item, I do not think we are justified in
-estimating the incompetents and casuals at less than 1,000,000 out of
-the 15,500,000. For the purposes of the present estimate, I assume that
-these 1,000,000 workers earn, on the average, £25 per head per annum, or
-an aggregate of £25,000,000. My view is that this is a liberal estimate
-of the earnings of what may be termed the camp-followers of the
-industrial army.
-
-With regard to the remaining 14,500,000, we have to form an estimate of
-the amount of time lost per annum through voluntary or enforced leisure.
-No certain information exists, and the widest differences of opinion
-have been expressed on the subject. As I have said above, Dudley Baxter
-took ten weeks; Leone Levi took four weeks; Mr A. L. Bowley takes six
-weeks plus a further allowance for unemployment.
-
-The Board of Trade, in their recent examination of fluctuations in
-employment, made an analysis from the records of the Amalgamated Society
-of Engineers, combined with information supplied by employers, of the
-time lost in the engineering trade. They came to the conclusion that, in
-an average year, perhaps 8 per cent. of working time was lost from all
-causes, and expressed the opinion that in a good year the loss might
-fall to 4 per cent. and in a bad year rise to 15 per cent. or more (Cd.
-2337, p. 101). This would mean, for the engineering trade only, a loss
-of time varying from only two weeks in the year to as much as eight
-weeks or more.
-
-In other employments the widest variations exist. There are the quite
-regular employments, such as the army, the navy, the postal service, the
-police service, and, for the greater part, the railway service. There
-are violently fluctuating employments, such as the building trades and
-the shipbuilding trades. In all alike, sickness takes its toll, and
-unemployment arises from accidents, from disputes, from "drink," and
-from seasonal influences and depression, while, on the other hand,
-overtime occasionally goes to swell the aggregate earnings.
-
-I make the assumption that the average working year of the 14,500,000
-remaining wage-earners consists of 44 weeks. Applying the average wage
-already arrived at (21s. 3d. per week), we get an average annual earning
-of, say, £46. 15s., which gives us £678,000,000 as the probable
-aggregate earnings of the 14,500,000 workers. Adding the £25,000,000
-assumed to be earned by the remaining 1,000,000, we arrive at
-£703,000,000 as the total earnings of the manual labourers in 1908.
-
-It is probable that this calculation does not take sufficient account
-either of the changes of occupations since 1886, or, as has been already
-pointed out, of the changes in the respective proportions of men, women
-and children employed. The average wage of the 1886 Census, taken as the
-basis of the calculation, was, it is necessary to insist, exaggerated by
-the omission of the most ill-paid workmen, while the returns upon which
-it was based, framed as they were by employers, are only too likely in a
-proportion of cases to have put the wages paid in the most favourable
-light. The employers again, who filled in the forms, were only some 75
-per cent. of the firms applied to by the Board of Trade, and it is a
-fair inference that those who neglected to reply had no excessive pride
-in the records of their wage-sheets. I submit, therefore, that as the
-1886 average wage figure is a liberal estimate,[8] the figure which I
-have deduced from it does not, in all probability, err on the side of
-under-estimation.
-
-Professor Bowley estimates the total paid in wages in 1901 as
-£705,000,000,[9] and the Board of Trade in the Fiscal Blue Book of 1903
-(Cd. 1761) say:—
-
-"From investigations based on the Board of Trade Census of Wages (1886)
-combined with the recorded changes of wages since that date and the
-distribution of the working population among various industries as shown
-in the census returns, the total wages bill of the United Kingdom has
-been estimated at between £700,000,000 and £750,000,000, according to
-the state of employment."
-
-The estimate which I have given, therefore, differs but little from
-those of Professor Bowley and the Board of Trade.[10] I prefer to use
-the smaller figures on several grounds. In the first place, the
-allowance for "play" is a conservative one. In the second place, I have
-the gravest doubts as to the propriety of including in the estimates of
-the wages of domestic servants, sailors, and others, an allowance for
-the value of "lodging," as is done in the figures used. To include so
-many shillings a week for the accommodation afforded by a seaman's bunk
-or a general servant's fraction of an attic is to flatter "earnings" out
-of all resemblance to the truth. The free cottages and other allowances
-to agricultural labourers are often of a scarcely marketable character.
-We may be justified in valuing an unhealthy hovel at 1s. 6d. per week,
-in view of the fact that the labourer, if he had it not, would need to
-pay rent elsewhere, but in too many cases the "cottage" is fit not for
-inhabitation but for demolition. In the third place, no allowance is
-made for the excessive rents paid by workmen in London and other large
-towns. These rents are really part of the working expenses of the wage
-earners, and there is as good ground for making deductions on account of
-them as there is for deducting wear and tear of machinery in the case of
-income-tax incomes.
-
-We can now arrive at an approximate estimate of the National Income as a
-whole in 1908-9 (say 1908).
-
- THE NATIONAL INCOME IN 1908
-
- (1) Persons with incomes which exceed
- £160 per annum £909,000,000
- (2) Persons with incomes below £160 per
- annum:—
- (_a_) Persons earning small salaries,
- petty tradesmen, etc. 232,000,000
- (_b_) The wage-earning classes 703,000,000
- --------------
- £1,844,000,000
- ==============
-
-It will be seen that _the income tax exemption limit of £160 per annum
-splits the national income into two almost equal parts_. Of a total
-income amounting to £1,844,000,000 in 1908, those with over £160 per
-annum took £909,000,000, while those with less than £160 per annum took
-£935,000,000.
-
-[Footnote 1: Figures examined in "Riches and Poverty" (1905), Chapter 2.]
-
-[Footnote 2: In "Riches and Poverty" (1905), Chapter 2, I estimated this
-figure at £900,600,000.]
-
-[Footnote 3: It has been too freely assumed in calculating the national
-income that the gross assessments represent actual income.]
-
-[Footnote 4: As Schedule D is an exceedingly important gauge of national
-prosperity, it may be well to remind the reader of its precise
-application. It is a tax upon all income derived from trades, industries
-and professions, and from all sources not specified under the other four
-Schedules. Profits from businesses established in places abroad are
-assessable under it. The assessments are made annually, and are
-generally based upon the mean of the income received during the
-preceding three years. Fuller particulars will be found in Chapter 21.]
-
-[Footnote 5: "National Income." R. Dudley Baxter. Macmillan & Co. 1868.]
-
-[Footnote 6: "The National Income," Dudley Baxter.]
-
-[Footnote 7: "Economic Journal," Sept. 1904. Page 458.]
-
-[Footnote 8: Take, for example, the boot and shoe trade. The Wage Census
-for 1886 (Cd. 6889, p. xiii.) gives the average earnings in boot and
-shoe factories (both sexes and all ages) as £48 per annum. In 1908, more
-than twenty years after, the Board of Trade "Labour Gazette" shows, from
-employers' returns, that (in a July week) 60,337 boot workers took only
-£58,147 in wages, which is about 19s. per week or £49, 8s. in a year of
-52 such weeks. With regard to this trade, it is clear that either the
-1886 estimate was too liberal, or that earnings have been practically
-stationary in the twenty years.]
-
-[Footnote 9: "Economic Journal," September 1904.]
-
-[Footnote 10: If, however, the reader prefers to rely upon the larger
-estimates he will find that the general conclusions of this and the
-following chapter remain practically unaltered.]
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III
- DISTRIBUTION OF THE NATIONAL INCOME
-
-
-Taking the population of the United Kingdom, 1908, at 44,500,000, and
-the total income at £1,844,000,000, we get an average income per head of
-about £40.
-
-Thus, if the income of the nation were equally distributed amongst its
-inhabitants, a family of five persons would enjoy an income of about
-£200 per annum.
-
-But how is the £1,840,000,000 actually divided amongst our people?
-Contrasts between great riches and extreme poverty are every day
-presented to our eyes. Can we do anything to reduce to a definite shape
-our vague conceptions of riches and poverty?
-
-Investigation of the material at our disposal has convinced me that it
-is hopeless to do very much in the way of detailed classification of
-incomes. Our census methods are ridiculously inadequate, and our
-inquisition into individual incomes is but partial. It is possible,
-however, to depict the subject of distribution in broad outlines with
-considerable accuracy.
-
-As we have already noticed, the £160 line at which assessment to income
-tax begins, divides the national income into two almost equal parts.
-Those persons who have more than £160 per annum enjoy an aggregate
-income of £909,000,000. Those persons who have less than £160 per annum
-enjoy an aggregate income of £935,000,000.
-
-Let us endeavour to discover how many persons have an income of £160 and
-upwards.
-
-A certain amount of confused light is thrown on the subject by the
-returns of the Inland Revenue Department. Under Schedules D and E, which
-relate to profits from "Businesses, Concerns, Professions, Employment,
-etc.," to use the official language,[11] the commissioners give us a
-record of the number of individual assessments which are made. A summary
-of these is as follows:—
-
- INCOME TAX. SCHEDULES D AND E.
- PROFITS FROM BUSINESSES, CONCERNS, EMPLOYMENTS, ETC.
-
- Number of Gross Income
- Assessments. Assessed.
- (_a_) Persons not employees 416,661 £109,900,000
- (_b_) Firms (number of partners
- not known) 53,663 80,500,000
- (_c_) Public Companies (number
- of shareholders unknown) 37,937 291,000,000
- (_d_) Local Authorities 11,985 24,000,000
- (_e_) Bankers, Coupon dealers,
- etc., deducting tax on
- behalf of the Revenue not available 33,100,000
- (_f_) Employees (Schedule D) 114,074 27,100,000
- (_g_) Employees (Schedule E) 471,564 109,600,000
- --------- ------------
- 1,105,884 £675,200,000
- ========= ============
-
-We have thus a record of 1,100,000 _assessments_, but these assessments
-do not always correspond to individual tax-payers.
-
-Item _a_, "Persons not employees," gives us the fact that 416,661
-individuals are taxed in respect of trading or professional profits.
-Item _b_ reveals the existence of 53,663 firms with an unknown number of
-partners. Item _c_ covers a great many large and small shareholders.
-Item _d_ covers a large number of investors who have lent money to local
-bodies. Item _e_ similarly covers many persons of property deriving
-interest from various securities which are taxed "at the source." In
-items _f_ and _g_ each assessment refers to an individual.
-
-Further, these 1,100,000 assessments are made under Schedules D and E
-only, which cover but £675,000,000 out of a total gross assessment to
-income tax of £1,010,000,000 in 1908-9. There remain to consider
-Schedules A, B, and C.
-
-A moment's reflection will show that from these three schedules, which
-deal respectively with realty, farmers' profits, and government
-securities, we can expect little assistance. The assessments under
-Schedule A are made upon tenants, who in the majority of cases are not
-the actual and ultimate tax-payers. The number of assessments is
-enormous; we do not know it, but it would not help us if we did, for it
-has no relation whatever to the number of property owners. Under
-Schedule B, as is explained elsewhere,[12] there are few income tax
-payers. Under Schedule C certain interest from home and foreign
-government securities is taxed, but not by assessment on the actual
-tax-payers.
-
-To sum up, the number of assessments to income tax is not known, and, if
-it were known, it would be very much greater than the number of
-individual tax-payers. Two-thirds of the income tax is collected, not
-directly from the persons who owe the tax, but indirectly or "at the
-source." It is possible for an individual tax-payer to appear more than
-once in each schedule. With delightful humour the Inland Revenue
-Commissioners give a hypothetical case of a composite income of £5000
-per annum, made up as follows:—
-
- HYPOTHETICAL COMPOSITE INCOME
-
- Schedule. Amount.
- A Profits from the Ownership of Lands, Houses, etc. £500
- B " from the Occupation of Lands 200
- C " from Government Securities 200
- D " as an Author 100
- D " as a Solicitor (partner in a firm the
- total profits of which are £5000) 2,500
- D " from Investments in a Public Company
- (total profits of the Company,
- £55,000) 500
- D " Investment in Municipal Stock 100
- D " from Investments in Foreign Bonds
- (payable by coupons cashed in the
- United Kingdom) 100
- D " Salary as a Land-Agent 500
- E " Salary as a Borough Auditor 300
- ------
- £5,000
- ======
-
-This hypothetical gentleman, who is at once a landlord, a farmer, a
-fundholder, a man of letters, a lawyer, a shareholder, an investor in
-foreign bonds, a land-agent, and a borough auditor, does great credit to
-the sense of humour of the Inland Revenue authorities, and may be called
-an extreme case. There are, however, tens of thousands of fortunate or
-unfortunate persons who are at once business men, investors, and
-landlords or houselords, and it is clear that if we are to arrive at the
-actual number of individuals who earn or receive incomes of £160 per
-annum or upwards we must proceed by other methods.
-
-Before leaving the table on page 33, however, the reader should take
-note of the low range of incomes it reveals, so far as individuals can
-be detected in the list:
-
- Per Annum.
- (_a_) The 416,661 persons not employees have an
- average income of £260
- (_f_) The 114,074 employees taxed under
- Schedule D have an average income of 230
- (_g_) The 471,564 employees taxed under
- Schedule E have an average income of 230
-
-Many of these individuals have other sources of income beside their
-earnings, but the low mean income of each class remains remarkable when
-that fact is taken into account. Classes _f_ and _g_ cannot possibly
-deceive the Income Tax Commissioners as to their incomes, for the law
-compels employers to tell the authorities exactly what their employees
-earn. With an average as low as £230 it is clear that the majority of
-salaries lie between the exemption limit of £160 and £200 a year. The
-under payment of the middle class stands revealed.
-
-If the reader takes note of these facts he will be less surprised by the
-results of the analysis to which we will now proceed.
-
-We now turn to what information is available upon the subject of
-individual incomes. So far as the poorer classes of income tax payers
-are concerned, some clear light is afforded by the Income Tax
-Commissioners in a table showing the number of persons claiming
-abatements. This table, which is of great importance, is given on page
-37.
-
-These abatements are claimed by certain individuals who satisfy the
-Commissioners that their entire incomes, _from every source_, lie
-between £160 and £700 per annum. Thus we get definite information that
-in 1908-9, 779,552 individuals declared their incomes to be within these
-limits.
-
-The record of the number of abatements is worth particular attention. In
-1893-4 the limit of exemption was £150. In the following year the
-exemption limit was raised £10 to £160, and for the first time an
-abatement was allowed upon incomes up to £500. In 1898-9 abatements were
-introduced on incomes up to £700.
-
- INDIVIDUAL INCOMES BETWEEN £160 AND £700
- Defined by claims for abatements
-
- ----------+--------------------------------------------------------------+
- | ABATEMENTS. |
- +----------+---------+-----------+---------+---------+---------+
- | | £160 on | £100 on | £150 on | £120 on | £70 on |
- | £120 on | incomes | incomes | incomes | incomes | incomes |
- |incomes of|exceeding| exceeding |exceeding|exceeding|exceeding|
- Year. | £150 and |£160 but | £400 but |£400 but |£500 but |£600 but |
- | under | not | not | not | not | not |
- | £400. |exceeding| exceeding |exceeding|exceeding|exceeding|
- | | £400. | £500. | £500. | £600. | £700. |
- ----------+----------+---------+-----------+---------+---------+---------+
- 1893-4 | 509,397 | | | | | |
- 1894-5 |} | 436,325 | 13,010 | | | |
- 1895-6 |} | 449,003 | 20,375 | | | |
- 1896-7 |} | 464,017 | 23,492 | | | |
- 1897-8 |} | 481,306 | 26,056 | | | |
- 1898-9 |}Exemption| 495,791 |} | 31,669 | 11,115 | 3,940 |
- 1899-1900|}limit and| 515,680 |} | 38,055 | 16,861 | 6,714 |
- 1900-1 |}abatement| 530,014 |}Abatements| 42,123 | 20,520 | 8,647 |
- 1901-2 |}altered--| 554,727 |}extended--| 46,967 | 23,899 | 10,490 |
- 1902-3 |}see next | 575,444 |} see | 49,610 | 26,737 | 11,982 |
- 1903-4 |} column | 603,338 |}following | 51,922 | 27,777 | 12,879 |
- 1904-5 |} | 612,548 |} columns. | 53,384 | 29,227 | 13,483 |
- 1905-6 |} | 622,437 |} | 56,305 | 31,100 | 14,886 |
- 1906-7 |} | 628,818 |} | 58,704 | 33,150 | 16,607 |
- 1907-8 |} | 638,482 |} | 64,560 | 39,166 | 22,272 |
- 1908-9 |} | 648,310 |} | 66,523 | 40,721 | 23,998 |
- ----------+----------+---------+-----------+---------+---------+---------+
-
- ----------+---------+----------+--------
- | | |
- | | |
- | | Annual | Rate of
- | Total | Increase | Income
- |Abatement|in No. of | Tax.
- Year. |Granted. |Abatements|Pence in
- | | Granted. | the £.
- | | |
- | | |
- ----------+---------+----------+--------
- 1893-4 | 509,397 | | 7
- 1894-5 | 449,335 | | 8
- 1895-6 | 469,378 | 20,043 | 8
- 1896-7 | 487,509 | 18,131 | 8
- 1897-8 | 507,362 | 19,853 | 8
- 1898-9 | 542,515 | 35,153 | 8
- 1899-1900| 577,310 | 34,795 | 8
- 1900-1 | 601,304 | 23,994 | 12
- 1901-2 | 636,083 | 34,779 | 14
- 1902-3 | 663,773 | 27,690 | 15
- 1903-4 | 695,916 | 32,143 | 12
- 1904-5 | 708,642 | 12,726 | 12
- 1905-6 | 724,728 | 16,086 | 12
- 1906-7 | 737,279 | 12,551 | 12
- 1907-8 | 764,480 | 27,201 |9 to 12
- 1908-9 | 779,552 | 15,072 |9 to 12
- ----------+---------+----------+--------
-
-It will be seen that since 1897-8 there has been a rapid increase in the
-number of abated incomes. This has been caused not by the sudden growth
-of incomes of this class, but by (1) the abatements being better
-understood, and (2) heavier taxation making it better worth while for
-individuals to claim the abatements. With the income tax at 1s. and 1s.
-3d. it became worth while to fill up the form. We have, then, to thank
-the late war, and the increased taxation which followed it, for putting
-at our disposal a fairly complete record of the number of individual
-incomes between £160 and £700. Probably the record is still incomplete,
-and we must make an allowance for the fact. It is probable also that a
-certain number of persons of small income who ought to pay tax escape
-assessment. Both counts, however, are certainly well covered by adding a
-small percentage to the number of individual incomes revealed by the
-claimed abatements. In "Riches and Poverty," edition 1905, with the
-actual claims made standing at about 700,000, I suggested that 50,000
-would be a fair estimate of the number not claiming abatements or who
-escaped taxation. But in five years some 80,000 new claims have been
-made. Over 27,000 of these were made in 1907-8; this was probably due to
-the clause in the Finance Act of 1907 compelling all employers, and not
-companies alone, to divulge their employees' incomes, thus bringing to
-light non-assessed incomes and causing claims for abatements by their
-owners. My estimate of 50,000 I should, in view of this further
-information, raise to 90,000 or 100,000, and at the present time I am
-inclined to think that some 40,000 incomes between £160 and £700 must
-still be regarded as either escaping tax or as being not reviewed in the
-abatements table. We thus arrive at, in round figures, 820,000 as a near
-approximation to the number of individuals who possess between £160 and
-£700 per annum.
-
-The aggregate income of the 779,000 persons granted abatements in 1908-9
-is not given in the report. We can, however, estimate it closely, and
-this is done in the following table, figures being added for the 40,000
-persons whom we have assumed either to neglect to claim abatements or to
-escape taxation altogether:—
-
- INDIVIDUAL INCOMES BETWEEN £160 AND £700 (1908)
-
- Estimated
- Aggregates.
- 648,000 Incomes between £160 and £400.
- Average assumed to be £300 £194,400,000
- 67,000 Incomes between £400 and £500.
- Average assumed to be £450 30,150,000
- 41,000 Incomes between £500 and £600.
- Average assumed to be £550 22,550,000
- 24,000 Incomes between £600 and £700.
- Average assumed to be £650 15,600,000
- 40,000 (balance of estimated total of
- 820,000) Incomes of persons who
- either neglect to claim abatements or
- altogether escape taxation. Average
- assumed to be £300 12,000,000
- ------------
- 820,000 Incomes aggregate £274,700,000
-
-To proceed, we see that some 820,000 persons enjoy an estimated
-aggregate income of £274,700,000 per annum. But the total income of the
-income tax paying classes we have already seen to be £909,000,000. There
-remains therefore, to form an estimate of the number of persons who
-enjoy the balance of £634,000,000.
-
-Our best clue to these persons, who individually possess incomes
-exceeding £700 a year, is to be found in the number of rich men's houses
-in the United Kingdom.
-
-In Great Britain an Inhabited House Duty is levied upon the occupiers of
-all houses and residential business premises of an annual value
-exceeding £20. The duty being graduated, we obtain records of the houses
-of Great Britain classified according to their rentals. The duty is not
-levied in Ireland.
-
-The Inland Revenue report gives us the following interesting record.
-
- GREAT BRITAIN ONLY: PRIVATE DWELLING-HOUSES OF £20 AND UPWARDS:
- 1908-9
-
- Class of House. Number of Class of House. Number of
- Houses. Houses.
- £ 20 and under £25 384,583 | £ 20 and over 1,473,214
- 25 " 30 256,906 | 25 " 1,088,631
- 30 " 41 414,663 | 30 " 831,725
- 41 " 50 104,949 | 41 " 417,062
- 50 " 61 125,051 | 50 " 312,113
- 61 " 80 61,498 | 61 " 187,062
- 80 " 100 38,898 | 80 " 125,564
- 100 " 150 44,953 | 100 " 86,666
- 150 " 200 16,563 | 150 " 41,713
- 200 " 300 13,649 | 200 " 25,150
- 300 " 400 5,207 | 300 " 11,501
- 400 " 500 2,416 | 400 " 6,294
- 500 " 600 1,187 | 500 " 3,878
- 600 " 700 723 | 600 " 2,691
- 700 " 800 472 | 700 " 1,968
- 800 " 900 323 | 800 " 1,496
- 900 " 1000 176 | 900 " 1,173
- 1000 and over 997 | 1000 " 997
-
-The figures refer to Great Britain only, but the number of income tax
-payers in Ireland is small, the payment of income tax in that country,
-in 1908, being but £996,000 out of £31,860,000 paid by the United
-Kingdom as a whole.
-
-If there were a constant ratio between incomes and rentals, and if every
-private house contained but one family, the record of houses would be a
-sufficient clue to the number of income tax payers; but there is no such
-correspondence, and a considerable proportion of the houses are let in
-tenements.
-
-In London persons with an income over £160 a year rarely pay a rental
-less than £30. In the provinces a rental as low as £25 may sometimes
-represent an income tax payer. Many £25, £30, and even £40, and more
-houses in London and elsewhere are tenement dwellings. Some notorious
-London slums consist of houses of about £30 annual value. In West London
-6s. a week, £15, 12s. a year, commands two poor rooms.
-
-Some residential shops, etc., not included in the above list, house
-income tax payers, but usually the well-to-do shopkeeper lives away from
-his shop, the upper part of which is let to poorer persons.
-
-These considerations make it impossible to deduce the aggregate of
-income tax payers from the house record, but it is a suggestive fact
-that in Great Britain there were in 1908 only 1,088,631 private houses
-of £25 and over. It is clear that the number of persons with incomes
-exceeding £160 a year cannot much exceed that figure, even when
-allowance is made for the Irish houses not included in the record.
-
-As we have ascertained from the income tax abatement claims the
-approximate number of income tax payers between £160 and £700 a year, we
-are enabled to neglect the difficult relation of small rentals to
-incomes, and to concentrate our attention upon a simpler and more
-satisfactory problem, the number of houses likely to be in the
-occupation of persons with upwards of £700 a year.
-
-It is submitted that persons in the Metropolis possessing an income of
-over £700 per annum are unlikely to occupy private dwelling-houses of an
-annual value below £60. Indeed, London householders with incomes below
-£700 sometimes pay higher rentals than £60. Against this fact we must,
-however, place the existence of many blocks of flats of high rentals
-which pay Inhabited House Duty, not per flat, but per block. I think we
-may balance the one consideration against the other, and assume that the
-private dwelling-houses in London exceeding £60 in annual value roughly
-correspond to the number of persons with £700 per annum and upwards.
-
-In the provinces and Scotland rentals are lower, and I think we may
-safely draw the line at £50, in view of the fact that we are excluding,
-as in London, all residential shops, public houses, etc.
-
-The number of houses in Great Britain of the classes referred to is as
-follows:—
-
- PRIVATE DWELLING-HOUSES IN GREAT BRITAIN LIKELY TO BE IN THE OCCUPATION
- OF PERSONS WITH £700 PER ANNUM AND UPWARDS (1908-9)
-
- Annual Value. Metropolis. Rest of England. Scotland.
- £50 to £61 76,141 10,739
- 61 " 80 18,502 37,075 5,921
- 80 " 100 10,033 24,875 3,988
- 100 " 150 12,593 28,411 3,949
- 150 " 200 5,110 10,075 1,378
- 200 " 300 5,541 7,427 681
- 300 " 400 2,645 2,437 125
- 400 " 500 1,408 960 48
- 500 " 600 748 424 15
- 600 " 700 504 210 9
- 700 " 1000 746 212 13
- £1000 and over 826 145 26
- ------ ------- ------
- 58,656 188,392 26,892
- ====== ======= ======
-
-If the reader has not before examined the subject he will probably be
-exceedingly surprised to find that there are so few rich men's houses,
-and therefore so few rich men, in Great Britain. In England and Wales
-there are 247,048 houses and in Scotland only 26,892 houses likely to
-contain persons with incomes exceeding £700 per annum. There are nine
-times as many such houses in England as in Scotland. This corresponds
-closely to the income tax assessments. The yield of the income tax in
-Scotland is but one-ninth or one-tenth of the yield in England.
-
-We have to add an estimate for Ireland. The yield of the income tax in
-Ireland is very small, about one-third of the yield of Scotland. If,
-then, we add 9000 houses for Ireland, we shall probably be near the
-truth.
-
-We thus get the following figures for the whole of the United Kingdom,
-making our figures round:
-
- PRIVATE DWELLING-HOUSES IN THE UNITED KINGDOM PROBABLY CORRESPONDING
- TO INCOME TAX PAYERS WITH £700 AND UPWARDS PER ANNUM (1908-9)
-
- Number.
- London 58,700
- Rest of England and Wales 188,400
- Scotland 27,000
- Ireland 9,000
- -------
- Total 283,100
- =======
-
-We can now arrive at an estimate of the total number of income tax
-payers. It is as follows:
-
- INCOME TAX PAYERS OF THE UNITED KINGDOM (1908-9)
-
- Incomes. Number.
- Between £160 and £700 820,000
- Exceeding £700 280,000
- ---------
- Total 1,100,000
- =========
-
-I think that this estimate of 1,100,000 may be accepted with confidence
-as a near approximation to the actual number of individual incomes which
-exceeded £160 per annum in 1908-9.
-
-Taking 1,100,000 as a trustworthy figure, we are in a position to show
-how the population of the United Kingdom is divided by the line of
-income tax exemption. If we assume that each of the 1,100,000 persons is
-the head of a family of five persons, we get, by obvious
-calculation, the following result:
-
- THE EQUATOR of BRITISH INCOMES
-
- +----------------------------------+
- | |
- | £909,000,000 per annum |
- | taken by |
- | 5,500,000 people |
- |having Incomes of £160 and upwards|
- | per annum |
- | |
- +----------------------------------+
- | |
- | £935,000,000 per annum |
- | taken by |
- | 39,000,000 people |
- | having Incomes below £160 |
- | per annum |
- | |
- +----------------------------------+
-
-_In 1908 the Income Tax Exemption limit of £160 per annum divided the
-National Income into two almost equal parts._
-
- DISTRIBUTION OF THE NATIONAL INCOME AS BETWEEN THOSE WITH MORE AND
- THOSE WITH LESS THAN £160 PER ANNUM (1908-9)
-
- Number. Income.
- Persons with incomes of
- over £160 and their
- families (1,100,000 × 5) 5,500,000 £909,000,000
- Persons with incomes of less
- than £160 and their
- families (total population
- less 5,500,000) 39,000,000 935,000,000
- ---------- -----------
- 44,500,000 £1,844,000,000
- ========== ==============
-
-These striking facts are expressed in diagrammatic form on page 45.
-Broadly speaking, it is shown that _one-half of the entire income of the
-United Kingdom is enjoyed by about 12 per cent. of its population_.
-
-But a still more extraordinary conclusion emerges from the facts we have
-examined. Of the 1,100,000 income tax payers, 820,000 are persons with
-incomes over £160 and not exceeding £700. The aggregate income of these
-820,000 persons we estimated at £275,000,000 (page 39), and the estimate
-is a liberal one. By subtraction from the total income of the income tax
-classes (£909,000,000) we see that the 280,000 rich persons with over
-£700 per annum possess an aggregate income of £634,000,000 per annum.
-The facts are clearly shown in the following table and in the diagram
-which forms the frontispiece of this volume:
-
- RICHES, COMFORT, AND POVERTY, 1908
-
- Distribution of the National Income as between (1) those with £700 per
- annum and upwards; (2) those with £160 to £700 per annum; and (3) those
- with not more than £160 per annum.
-
- Number. Income.
- RICHES
-
- Persons with Incomes of
- £700 per annum and
- upwards and their
- families, 280,000 × 5 1,400,000 £634,000,000
-
- COMFORT
-
- Persons with Incomes
- between £160 and £700
- per annum and their
- families, 820,000 × 5
- 4,100,000 275,000,000
-
- POVERTY
-
- Persons with Incomes of
- less than £160 per
- annum and their
- families 39,100,000 935,000,000
- ---------- --------------
- 44,500,000 £1,844,000,000
- ========== ==============
-
-Thus, to the conclusion that one-half of the entire income of the nation
-is enjoyed by but about 12 per cent. of its population, we must add
-another even more remarkable, viz.: that _more than one-third of the
-entire income of the United Kingdom is enjoyed by less than
-one-thirtieth of its people_.
-
-The broad outlines thus drawn I shall not attempt to amplify, for, as
-will be gathered from the nature of the available material, such
-amplification would be of little value. Nor would any useful purpose be
-served by any arbitrary division of our population into "upper,"
-"middle," and "working" classes. The three divisions of population at
-which we have arrived, although arbitrary, have naturally arisen in the
-course of our inquiry, and with some propriety we may term them
-respectively the Rich Classes, the Comfortable Classes and the Poor
-Classes.
-
-The great fact emerges that the enormous annual income of the United
-Kingdom is so badly distributed amongst us that, out of a population of
-44,500,000, 39,000,000 are "poor" in the sense that their incomes do not
-exceed £160 a year. It is no longer incredible that in a population of
-44,500,000 people, enjoying an aggregate income of £1,844,000,000, there
-exist "30 per cent. living in the grip of perpetual poverty." When we
-realize that 39,000,000 out of our 44,500,000 are poor, measured by a
-very modest standard of income, the statistics of Booth and Rowntree
-cease to surprise us. In analysis, the United Kingdom is seen to contain
-a great multitude of poor people, veneered with a thin layer of the
-comfortable and the rich.
-
-It will be of interest to compare the above statistics with those which
-appeared in "Riches and Poverty," edition 1905. The statement then
-presented was based on the Inland Revenue figures of 1903-4, and the
-frontispiece bore the heading "British Incomes in 1904." For the
-purposes of comparison, the 1905 edition figures may be attributed to
-1903, since the fiscal year 1903-4 is as to nine months in 1903.
-Similarly, the figures arrived at in the above pages may be dated 1908,
-an interval of five years separating the two investigations.
-
-The following is the comparison arrived at, after adjustment of the
-earlier figures by raising the estimated number of income tax payers in
-1903 from 1,000,000 to 1,050,000, for the reasons given on page 38.
-
- DISTRIBUTION OF BRITISH INCOMES
-
- ---------------------------+-----------------------+---------------------
- | 1903 | 1908
- |Figures of "Riches |
- | and Poverty," 1905 |
- | edition, adjusted[13]|
- | by raising estimate |
- RANGE OF INCOME. | of Income |
- | Tax payers from |
- | 1,000,000 to |
- | 1,050,000. |
- +------------+----------+------------+--------
- | Number of | | Number of |
- | Persons. | Income. | Persons. | Income.
- ---------------------------+------------+----------+------------+--------
- Persons with over £700 | | Million£ | |Million£
- a year and their families| 1,250,000 | 570 | 1,400,000 | 634
- | | | |
- Persons with over £160, | | | |
- but not over £700, and | | | |
- their families | 4,000,000 | 260 | 4,100,000 | 275
- | | | |
- Persons with not more | | | |
- than £160 and their | | | |
- families | 37,250,000 | 880 | 39,000,000 | 935
- ---------------------------+------------+----------+------------+--------
- Totals | 42,500,000 | 1710 | 44,500,000 | 1844
- ---------------------------+------------+----------+------------+--------
-
-The result is to show that, in the five years, the wealthy classes have
-increased their share of the national dividend, both actually and
-relatively. We shall later find this conclusion confirmed by a
-comparison of the respective growths of taxed incomes and wage rates.
-
-The stationariness of wages is a fact which closely demands the
-attention of the nation.
-
-[Footnote 11: For a fuller explanation of these Schedules reference
-should be made to Chapter 21.]
-
-[Footnote 12: See Chapter 21.]
-
-[Footnote 13: The change in the proportions through the adjustment is
-insignificant and negligible, as will be seen by reference to the
-original estimate.]
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV
- THE ESTATES OF RICH AND POOR
-
-
-Our review of the extraordinary facts relating to what has been called
-with grim humour the "National" income, prepares us for an examination
-of the estates of rich and poor.
-
-Legal distribution of the property of deceased persons can only be made
-upon payment of certain taxes, commonly called death duties, and legally
-known as the Estate, Legacy and Succession duties. The nature and extent
-of these duties I shall discuss in a later chapter. At this point I am
-only concerned with the facts which are brought to light in the
-collection of the chief death duty, the Estate duty, as since varied, of
-the great 1894 Budget[14] of the late Sir William Harcourt.
-
-The principle of graduation was very properly applied to this duty, and
-accordingly we obtain, through the reports of the Inland Revenue
-Commissioners, an exceedingly valuable record, not only of the total
-value of the property which is "left"—it is a suggestive term—by the
-deceased, but of the classification of that property in large and small
-estates.[15]
-
-The Estate Duty is payable upon all estates which exceed £100 net (net,
-that is, after the discharge of all debts due by the deceased) and the
-Inland Revenue authorities undoubtedly pass under review the greater
-part of the property which is thus legally taxable. There must be a
-certain leakage, of course, for such heritages as household furniture,
-cash in money or notes, bearer bonds, and so forth, are sometimes
-divided up amongst the relatives of a departed property owner without
-account to the State, and it is difficult properly to assess unquoted
-securities, goodwills, trade stocks, furniture, etc. Moreover, large
-sums pass _inter vivos_. How much property thus escapes official
-observation we do not know, but it is probably a considerable amount.
-
- PROPERTY LEFT AT DEATH IN THE UNITED KINGDOM. NUMBERS AND VALUES OF
- ESTATES BROUGHT TO THE NOTICE OF THE INLAND REVENUE COMMISSIONERS IN THE
- FIVE YEARS 1904-5 TO 1908-9.
-
- ------------------------------------------+----------------+----------------+
- | | |
- CLASS OF ESTATE. | 1904-5. | 1905-6. |
- | | |
- ------------------------------------------+-------+--------+-------+--------+
- | | Value. | | Value. |
- |Number.|Mill. £.|Number.|Mill. £.|
- A. _Estates not Dutiable_: | | | | |
- Bankrupt Estates | 1,628| | 1,552| |
- Estates not exceeding £100 net | 15,931| 0.9 | 15,462| 0.9 |
- +-------+--------+-------+--------+
- Total A | 17,559| 0.9 | 17,014| 0.9 |
- +-------+--------+-------+--------+
- B. _Estates Liable to Duty_: | | | | |
- Small Estates:— | | | | |
- (1) Not exceeding £300 gross | 18,505| 3.5 | 18,262| 3.5 |
- (2) Between £300 and £500 gross | 8,846| 3.6 | 8,907| 3.6 |
- _Net Capital Values_:— | | | | |
- Exceeding £100 but not over £500 | 5,853| 2.5 | 5,728| 2.5 |
- " 500 " 1,000 | 10,098| 8.4 | 9,894| 8.1 |
- " 1,000 " 10,000 | 16,704| 60.4 | 16,130| 58.8 |
- " 10,000 " 25,000 | 2,295| 41.8 | 2,254| 40.4 |
- " 25,000 " 50,000 | 883| 34.6 | 931| 36.4 |
- " 50,000 " 75,000 | 288| 18.9 | 277| 19.5 |
- " 75,000 " 100,000 | 161| 15.0 | 139| 12.1 |
- " 100,000 " 150,000 | 128| 14.0 | 133| 18.2 |
- " 150,000 " 250,000 | 89| 21.6 | 91| 18.6 |
- " 250,000 " 500,000 | 44| 17.6 | 70| 23.9 |
- " 500,000 " 1,000,000 | 23| 17.2 | 21| 13.1 |
- " 1,000,000 " 2,000,000 |} | | | |
- " 2,000,000 " 3,000,000 |} 1| 5.9 | 8| 13.5 |
- " 3,000,000 |} | | | |
- +-------+--------+-------+--------+
- Total B | 63,918| 265.1 | 62,845| 272.2 |
- +-------+--------+-------+--------+
- _Total Estates_ | 81,477| 266.0 | 79,859| 273.1 |
- ------------------------------------------+-------+--------+-------+--------+
-
- +----------------+----------------+----------------+----------------
- | | | | Average of
- | 1906-7. | 1907-8. | 1908-9. | 1904-5 to
- | | | | 1908-9.
- +-------+--------+-------+--------+-------+--------+-------+--------
- | | Value. | | Value. | | Value. | | Value.
- |Number.|Mill. £.|Number.|Mill. £.|Number.|Mill. £.|Number.|Mill. £.
- | | | | | | | |
- | 1,704| | 1,663| | 1,802| | 1,670|
- | 16,039| 0.9 | 16,475| 0.9 | 15,875| 0.9 | 15,956| 0.9
- +-------+--------+-------+--------+-------+--------+-------+--------
- | 17,743| 0.9 | 18,138| 0.9 | 17,677| 0.9 | 17,626| 0.9
- +-------+--------+-------+--------+-------+--------+-------+--------
- | | | | | | | |
- | | | | | | | |
- | 18,995| 3.7 | 19,340| 3.7 | 19,481| 3.7 | 18,917| 3.6
- | 9,311| 3.7 | 9,736| 3.9 | 9,640| 3.8 | 9,288| 3.7
- | | | | | | | |
- | 5,990| 2.6 | 6,374| 3.0 | 6,422| 2.9 | 6,074| 2.7
- | 10,516| 8.6 | 10,782| 9.1 | 10,729| 9.1 | 10,404| 8.6
- | 17,098| 61.6 | 17,356| 65.4 | 17,266| 64.5 | 16,910| 62.1
- | 2,473| 42.5 | 2,341| 40.3 | 2,328| 40.4 | 2,338| 41.0
- | 909| 34.9 | 908| 35.5 | 918| 34.4 | 910| 35.1
- | 314| 19.6 | 278| 19.8 | 297| 19.5 | 291| 19.4
- | 127| 11.3 | 144| 14.0 | 155| 13.9 | 145| 13.2
- | 159| 19.2 | 109| 16.4 | 136| 16.8 | 133| 16.9
- | 104| 22.4 | 90| 18.7 | 78| 17.3 | 90| 19.7
- | 58| 21.3 | 51| 20.1 | 50| 20.1 | 54| 20.6
- | 18| 12.9 | 17| 16.6 | 15| 8.3 | 19| 13.6
- | | | { 4| 4.6 | 6| 9.2 | } |
- | 10| 34.1 | { 1| 2.6 | 1| 2.2 | } 7| 18.1
- | | | { 2| 8.6 | 2| 5.0 | } |
- +-------+--------+-------+--------+-------+--------+-------+--------
- | 66,082| 298.5 | 67,533| 282.3 | 67,524| 270.9 | 65,580| 278.3
- +-------+--------+-------+--------+-------+--------+-------+--------
- | 83,825| 299.4 | 85,671| 283.2 | 85,201| 271.8 | 83,206| 279.2
- +-------+--------+-------+--------+-------+--------+-------+--------
-
-Before setting out particulars of the numbers and values of the estates
-revealed through the operation of the Estate Duty, it will be well to
-remind the reader of the number of deaths per annum in the United
-Kingdom. In the years 1899 to 1903, the figures were as follows:—
-
- DEATHS IN UNITED KINGDOM
-
- Year. Deaths.
- 1904 707,000
- 1905 670,000
- 1906 681,000
- 1907 679,000
- 1908 677,000
-
- Average Deaths per annum 1904-1908 = 683,000.
-
-We see that the mean number of deaths in the five years 1904-8 was just
-over 680,000 per annum.
-
-We now inquire, as to these 680,000 persons who die in the United
-Kingdom in a year, how many leave property of sufficient value to be
-brought under the notice of the tax-gatherers, and what is the value of
-the property left by them.
-
-These questions are answered in considerable detail by the table on
-pages 52 and 53, which shows, for each of the last five financial years
-of which we have record, the numbers and values of the estates reviewed.
-
-It will be seen that, taking the average of these five years, we get the
-following summary facts:—
-
- Deaths per annum 683,000
- Sworn Estates per annum, number 83,206
- Estates of less value than £100 net each per annum 17,626
- Estates exceeding £100 net each per annum 65,580
- Net value of Dutiable Estates per annum £278,300,000
-
-The question now arises, what is the average value of the tiny estates
-which are not the subject of affidavits? What is the amount of property
-per head left by the poor people who form the great majority of the
-inhabitants of our rich country? There are the few humble sticks of
-furniture, and the small sums invested in savings banks, friendly
-societies, trade unions, building societies, etc., What are these worth?
-
-The Chief Registrar of Friendly Societies, Mr Stuart Sim, in his latest
-Report (No. 105 of 1909), p. 44, gives us the Summary of Registered
-Provident Societies and Thrift Institutions, which appears on page 56.
-
-The total funds, £439,000,000, represent the savings of some millions of
-people, but the total number of "members," nearly 34,000,000, must not
-be taken to stand for so many individuals. There is, of course, much
-duplication in the membership, one individual being sometimes member of
-two, three, four, or more societies or clubs. A carpenter, earning 30s.
-a week, may be a member of his trade union, member of two friendly
-societies, have a few pounds in the Post Office Savings Bank, and be a
-depositor in a building society, thus figuring as "five members" in the
-list.
-
-The list is not complete, for it does not cover the industrial insurance
-companies, which waste in costly management so large a part of the sums
-paid them, and unregistered friendly societies and slate clubs.
-
- THRIFT INSTITUTIONS: SUMMARY OF REGISTERED PROVIDENT SOCIETIES
- AND CERTIFIED AND POST OFFICE SAVINGS BANKS AT DEC. 31st, 1907.
-
- --------------------------------------+--------+-----------+-----------
- NATURE OF INSTITUTION. | No. of | No. of | Funds.
- |Returns.| Members. |
- --------------------------------------+--------+-----------+-----------
- Building Societies: | | | £
- Incorporated Societies | 1,852 | 565,047| 57,300,118
- Unincorporated Societies | 58 | 58,000| 15,989,111
- +--------+-----------+-----------
- | 1,910 | 623,047| 73,289,229
- +========+===========+===========
- Friendly Societies, etc.: | | |
- Ordinary Friendly Societies | 6,563 | 3,416,869| 19,346,567
- Societies having Branches | 20,640 | 2,710,437| 25,610,365
- Collecting Friendly Societies | 55 | 9,010,574| 9,946,447
- Benevolent Societies | 73 | 29,716| 337,393
- Working Men's Clubs | 1,036 | 272,847| 381,463
- Specially Authorised Societies | 162 | 70,980| 532,717
- Specially Authorised Loan Societies | 618 | 141,850| 897,784
- Medical Societies | 96 | 313,755| 65,513
- Cattle Insurance Societies | 60 | 4,029| 8,570
- Shop Clubs | 7 | 12,207| 1,349
- +--------+-----------+-----------
- | 29,310 | 15,983,264| 57,128,168
- +========+===========+===========
- Co-operative Societies: | | |
- Industries and Trades | 2,267 | 2,461,028| 53,788,917
- Businesses | 399 | 108,550| 984,680
- Land Societies | 146 | 18,631| 1,619,716
- +--------+-----------+-----------
- | 2,812 | 2,588,209| 56,393,313
- +========+===========+===========
- Trade Unions | 652 | 1,973,560| 6,424,176
- +--------+-----------+-----------
- Workmen's Compensation Schemes (1) | 59 | 99,371| 164,560
- +--------+-----------+-----------
- Friends of Labour Loan Societies | 248 | 33,576| 260,905
- +--------+-----------+-----------
- Total Registered Provident Societies| 34,991 | 21,301,027|193,660,351
- +========+===========+===========
- | Banks. |Depositors.| Deposits.
- Railway Savings Banks | 18 | 64,126| 5,865,072
- Trustee Savings Banks (including | | |
- Investments in Stock) | 222 | 1,780,214| 61,729,588
- Post Office Savings Bank (including | | |
- Investments in Stock) | 15,166 | 10,692,555|178,033,974
- +--------+-----------+-----------
- Total Certified and Post Office | | |
- Savings Banks | 15,406 | 12,536,895|245,628,634
- +========+===========+===========
- Grand Total | 50,397 | 33,837,922|439,288,985
- --------------------------------------+--------+-----------+-----------
-
- (1) The figures given include 64,700 members, and £105,475 funds
- undistributed, at 31st December 1907, in respect of Schemes whose
- Certificates had expired or were revoked at that date.
-
- _Note._—Where Returns are made to a date other than 31st December the
- particulars at the nearest date available are given.
-
-On the other hand, it would be a profound mistake to regard the sum
-shown—£439,000,000—as belonging entirely to manual workers. No small
-part of the funds of building societies, savings banks, etc., belong to
-the middle classes, and even professional men do not disdain to purchase
-houses through building societies.
-
-Additions must be made for the tiny stocks of little shopkeepers and the
-"furniture" in poor houses, but on the latter account those who know
-what the furniture of the poor usually consists of will make modest
-estimates of its value. Its exchange value is almost negligible, and its
-value in use is that it is a factor in the sordid discomfort of the poor
-home, being in that respect not unworthy of the ugly walls which enclose
-it.
-
-Altogether it is probable that we may estimate the total property of the
-poor at less than £500,000,000 in 1908, and regard this sum as belonging
-chiefly to a great mass of people, forming by far the greater part of
-the 39,000,000 persons under the line of Income Tax exemption. Probably
-about £15,000,000 of this sum passes at death per annum, and only a
-small part of it, chiefly the house property, comes under review by
-Somerset House.
-
-With the facts we have reviewed we are in a position to arrive at a just
-idea of the respective proportions of rich and poor estates. On page 59
-will be found a table which shows the nature of those proportions. I
-have taken the averages of the past five years arrived at in the tables
-on pages 52-53, and have made a rough division between rich and poor by
-drawing the line at the possession of property worth £1,000 net capital
-value.
-
-To give a true idea of the division of deaths in the two classes, it is
-necessary to make allowance in the rich class for the deaths of the
-children of the well-to-do. It may be taken that, in addition to the
-20,000 adults who die every year possessed of estates worth upwards of
-£1,000, 7,500 children and young persons die in well-to-do homes. I then
-place in the upper part of the table the number of deaths remaining
-after deduction from 683,000 of all the other figures in the table.
-
-In arriving at the amount of property left by the poor I have assumed
-that of the £15,000,000 of savings estimated as passing at death per
-annum, £5,000,000 does actually come under review in the first few lines
-of the table on pages 52-53. The balance, £10,000,000, I have brought
-into the account as corresponding to the 592,294 deaths in the first
-line of the table on p. 59.
-
-With these explanations the table will speak for itself, and its tale is
-a startling one. We see that, drawing the line between the rich and poor
-arbitrarily at the possession of £1,000, of the 683,000 persons who die
-in a year, 28,397 die rich or very rich, leaving £259,700,000, while
-654,603 die poor or very poor, leaving between them only £29,500,000.
-
-The figures over £10,000 are worth special attention:—
-
- FORTUNES OVER £10,000 EACH (NET)
-
- Year. Number. Value.
- 1904-5 3,912 £186,600,000
- 1905-6 3,924 195,700,000
- 1906-7 4,172 218,200,000
- 1907-8 3,945 197,200,000
- 1908-9 3,986 187,100,000
-
-_Year by year, with the regularity of the seasons, about four thousand
-persons die leaving between them about £200,000,000 out of total estates
-declared to be worth about £300,000,000._
-
- PROPERTY LEFT BY 683,000 PERSONS
- Average of 1904-5 to 1908-9
-
- _POOR AND VERY POOR_
- Deaths. Property Left.
- Died with so little property
- that no affidavit was sworn
- (Property estimated at
- £10,000,000, see p. 58) 592,294 £10,000,000
- Died Bankrupt 1,670
- Died leaving less than £100
- net 15,956 900,000
- Died leaving between £100
- and £500 net 34,279 10,000,000
- Died leaving between £500
- and £1,000 net 10,404 8,600,000
- ------- -----------
- Total Poor and Very Poor 654,603 £29,500,000
-
- _RICH AND VERY RICH_
-
- Died under age without
- property 7,500
- Died leaving between £1,000
- net and £10,000 net 16,910 62,100,000
- Died leaving between £10,000
- net and £1,000,000 net 3,980 179,500,000
- Died millionaires 7 18,100,000
- ------- ------------
- Total Rich and Very Rich 28,397 £259,700,000
- ------- ------------
- TOTAL RICH AND POOR 683,000 £292,500,000
- ======= ============
-
-170 persons per annum die worth £150,000 each; 80 die worth over
-£250,000 each; 26 die worth over £500,000 each; and 7 die worth about
-£2,500,000 each.
-
-Thus, in an average year, 26 persons die leaving between them far more
-than is possessed by 654,000 poor persons who die in one year. Again, in
-a single average year, the wealth left by the few rich people who die
-approaches in amount the aggregate property possessed by the whole of
-the living poor.
-
-[Footnote 14: Finance Act, 1894 (57 & 58 Vict. c. 30).]
-
-[Footnote 15: It was in the first edition of this work that attention
-was first drawn to this new source of information.]
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V
- THE NATIONAL ACCUMULATIONS
-
-
-We pass from the consideration of the property which is left at death in
-a single year to the estimation of the value of the total capital stock
-of the United Kingdom.
-
-We can proceed by two different methods. We can argue from the property
-left by those who die in a single year to the property possessed by the
-living, or we can capitalize that part of the national income which is
-derived from property. The former method was used as long ago as the
-'fifties by Porter in his "Progress of the Nation." The second method
-has been employed by many statisticians, notably by Sir Robert Giffen.
-
-In the following table I have formed an estimate of the accumulated
-wealth of the nation at the present time, dividing it into three
-categories:—
-
-(1) "National" property in the proper sense, i.e. property in the
-possession of the Imperial Government or Local Authorities.
-
-(2) Land and Capital Stock within the United Kingdom owned by private
-individuals, and
-
-(3) Property in foreign countries and British Possessions owned by
-persons in the United Kingdom.
-
- ACCUMULATED WEALTH OF THE UNITED KINGDOM: 1908
- [This table should not be quoted without the context]
-
- (1) PUBLIC PROPERTY (IMPERIAL AND LOCAL):—
-
- (_a_) Imperial Property £550,000,000
- (_b_) Local Property 1,370,000,000
- --------------
- £1,920,000,000
- Subtract (1) National Debt
- (£762,000,000) and (2) Local
- Loans (£600,000,000) 1,362,000,000
- --------------
- £558,000,000
- ==============
-
- (2) PROPERTY IN THE UNITED KINGDOM OWNED BY PRIVATE INDIVIDUALS:—
-
- (_c_) Agricultural Lands and the Farmhouses,
- Buildings, Fences, Roads,
- Ditches, etc., thereof. Profits
- under Schedule A of Income
- Tax (1908-9) £52,000,000
- capitalized at 20 years' purchase £1,040,000,000
-
- (_d_) Houses, Business Premises, etc.,
- and their Lands. Profits under
- Schedule A of Income Tax
- (1908-9) £217,000,000 capitalized
- at 15 years' purchase 3,255,000,000
-
- (_e_) Other Profits from Land under
- Schedule A of Income Tax
- (1908-9) £1,300,000 capitalized
- at 25 years' purchase 32,000,000
-
- (_f_) Farmers' Capital. Estimated at
- £6 per acre for 47,000,000 acres
- under cultivation 282,000,000
-
- (_g_) The National Debt (neglecting
- the small amount held abroad) 762,000,000
-
- (_h_) Local Debts 600,000,000
-
- (_i_) Capital of Miscellaneous Trades:—
-
- (1) Profits of Miscellaneous
- Businesses, Professions, etc.,
- taxed under Schedule D of
- Income Tax in 1908-9 (allowing
- for profits assumed to
- escape taxation £60,000,000,
- see p. 16), and deducting
- for profits from abroad
- (£25,000,000, see p. 16), were
- £444,000,000. One-half of
- this sum (£222,000,000)
- assumed to be from capital
- and capitalized at 10 years'
- purchase 2,220,000,000
-
- (2) Profits of small traders who
- are not Income Tax payers
- are in part derived from
- capital 100,000,000
-
- (_j_) Railways. Profits taxed under
- Schedule D 1908-9 =
- £43,000,000 capitalized at 25
- years' purchase 1,075,000,000
-
- (_k_) Mines and Quarries. Profits taxed
- under Schedule D 1908-9 =
- £18,000,000 capitalized at 5
- years' purchase 90,000,000
-
- (_l_) Gasworks. Profits taxed under
- Schedule D 1908-9 = £7,800,000
- capitalized at 20 years' purchase 156,000,000
-
- (_m_) Ironworks. Profits taxed under
- Schedule D 1908-9 = £5,100,000
- capitalized at 5 years' purchase 25,000,000
-
- (_n_) Waterworks. Profits taxed under
- Schedule D 1908-9 = £6,200,000
- capitalised at 20 years' purchase 124,000,000
-
- (_o_) Canals. Profits taxed under
- Schedule D 1908-9 = £4,200,000
- capitalized at 20 years' purchase 84,000,000
-
- (_p_) Markets, Tolls, Fishings, Cemeteries,
- etc. Profits taxed under
- Schedule D 1908-9 = £1,400,000
- capitalized at 20 years' purchase 28,000,000
-
- (_q_) Other Interests and Profits taxed
- under Schedule D 1908-9 =
- £7,700,000 capitalized at 20
- years' purchase 154,000,000
-
- (_r_) Furniture, Works of Art, etc., in
- Private Houses. Assumed to be
- one-sixth of the value of "Houses"
- in Schedule A (see item _d_) 540,000,000
- ---------------
- £10,567,000,000
-
- (3) PROPERTY IN PLACES ABROAD OWNED BY PERSONS IN THE UNITED KINGDOM
-
- (_s_) Interest from Indian, Colonial and
- Foreign Government Securities
- taxed under Schedule C 1908-9
- = £32,200,000 capitalized at
- 25 years' purchase £805,000,000
-
- (_t_) Interest from Indian, Colonial and
- Foreign Securities, including
- Railways, taxed under Schedule D
- 1908-9 = £56,600,000
- capitalized at 20 years' purchase 1,132,000,000
-
- (_u_) Other Profits from abroad derived
- from property assumed to have
- a capital value of about 700,000,000
- --------------
- £2,637,000,000
- ==============
- SUMMARY
-
- (1) Public Property £558,000,000
- (2) Property in the United Kingdom
- owned by Private Individuals 10,567,000,000
- (3) Property in places abroad owned by
- persons in the United Kingdom 2,637,000,000
- ---------------
- £13,762,000,000
- ===============
-
-To the explanations given in the table itself some further notes may be
-added. For the greater part, the estimates are based, it will be seen,
-upon Income Tax statistics. The items thus arrived at are near
-approximations to the truth. The table also contains some necessarily
-rough estimates of uncertain items.
-
-The matter of public property is an exceedingly difficult one to deal
-with. In item _a_ I have estimated that our warships and stores of naval
-and military material, Imperial shipyards, dockyards and arsenals,
-public offices, galleries, museums and their contents, government
-factories and workshops and their plant, post office, telegraph and
-telephone capital, etc., are worth £550,000,000 at a conservative
-estimate. The capital value of all our ships, allowing for depreciation,
-cannot be less than £150,000,000, and naval works and material must be
-worth fully £80,000,000. Army material and military works are of less
-value, but can scarcely be estimated at less than £120,000,000. The
-value of the post office, telegraph and telephone businesses at only 15
-years' purchase of the profits would be £60,000,000. The Suez Canal
-shares are worth £28,000,000. Thus £550,000,000 as an estimate of the
-total value of all Imperial property is not an excessive figure.[16]
-
-The public property in the care of local authorities, as trustees for
-the nation, is exceedingly great. It is convenient to consider common
-lands in this connexion. Probably there are some 2,000,000 acres of
-common lands in England and Wales—all that remains unfilched of full
-many times that area.[17] If we value these commons at an average of £25
-per acre—some of the commons, as in Surrey, are worth from £200 to
-£2,000 an acre, valued at present market rates—we get £50,000,000.
-
-Roads are an important item in the national valuation—they are almost
-all that is left to the nation of the nation's area. There are about
-22,000 miles of main roads and about 97,000 miles of minor roads. These
-have value as land and value as highways, but if we value land and
-construction together at an average of only £5,000 per mile we arrive at
-about £600,000,000 as a conservative estimate of the value of the roads
-of the United Kingdom.
-
-There remain to consider the values of the parks and other land,
-buildings (including offices, houses, schools, markets, asylums and
-workhouses), bridges, sewers, lighting systems, gasworks, electric light
-and power undertakings, tramways, waterworks, reservoirs, etc.
-
-The outstanding debts of the local authorities of the United Kingdom are
-now about £600,000,000. The whole of this amount has been spent upon the
-objects referred to and they are worth considerably more. I submit that
-it is a very conservative estimate to value local government property at
-20 per cent. more than the amount of the outstanding loans or say
-£720,000,000.
-
-We thus arrive at £1,370,000,000 as a rough but reasonable estimate of
-the value of the local property. Adding it to the £550,000,000 of
-Imperial property we get £1,920,000,000 as a valuation of that portion
-of the accumulated wealth of the United Kingdom which is in the
-collective ownership of the nation.[18]
-
-But, against the possession of these large amounts of property we have
-to set the mortgages upon the public assets which are represented by the
-National Debt and Local Debts. These, of course, are not directly
-secured upon Imperial and Local Government property, but upon the
-Imperial and local revenues. It is convenient, however, to regard them
-as mortgages, and to deduct them as I have done in the table. Making
-this deduction, I am able properly to include the amount of the national
-debt and local debts in my estimate of the value of private property
-(see items _g_ and _h_). This gives a true view of the subject. The
-people of the United Kingdom collectively own relatively little
-property. In the time to come this will be remedied, for local
-authorities are rapidly acquiring reproductive undertakings. Until they
-are paid for, however, by the discharge of the loans raised to acquire
-or equip them, we do well to remember that they are mortgaged to
-individuals. Therefore, in deducting the debts from the valuation of
-public property and in adding them to the private property I submit that
-I am presenting an accurate picture of the actual position.
-
-To sum up this part of the subject, the people of the United Kingdom
-collectively possess property worth £1,920,000,000 and are collectively
-indebted to a few of their number in the sum of £1,362,000,000. Thus,
-all that they may be said to own collectively is property worth the
-comparatively insignificant sum of £558,000,000.
-
-I pass to the private property which is commonly called "national"
-wealth.
-
-In item _c_ agricultural lands and the farmhouses and other buildings
-thereon are valued at £1,040,000,000. In 1898 the Royal Commission on
-Agriculture arrived at the value of lands by taking 18 years' purchase
-of the profits of 1893. The value of agricultural land is now rising
-with the appreciation in the price of food.[19]
-
-Item _d_ "Houses," it should be clearly understood, covers not only
-dwelling-houses, but factories, workshops, offices, and all other
-premises save farmhouses. It also includes, as is so often overlooked,
-both house value and land value. In capitalizing at 15 years' purchase,
-the market value of the property is certainly not overstated. The
-£3,255,000,000 so arrived at is a handsome sum and by far the most
-considerable item in the list. It includes, in the value of factories
-and other business premises, a considerable amount of trade capital.
-
-It should not be forgotten that we are speaking of economic valuation,
-not of intrinsic value. Houses which rank for no small part of the
-£3,255,000,000 are of small intrinsic value, their economic value being
-only produced by the sheer necessities of those whose needs must find a
-roof. London contains great areas of filthy brick-work which are worthy
-to be destroyed, but worth many millions to the houselords who draw
-rents from them.
-
-Item _f_ deals with farmers' capital. Here I have used the figure
-arrived at in 1905 by R. H. Inglis Palgrave.[20] After careful
-examination of the amounts of capital per acre employed in various parts
-of the country, Mr Palgrave considers £6 an acre an excessive estimate,
-but Major Craigie, who has given the subject much attention, is inclined
-to think it too low.
-
-Items _g_ and _h_ have been already referred to.
-
-Item _i_ (1) is an estimate of the amount of capital employed in the
-miscellaneous trades and professions taxed under Schedule D of the
-Income Tax. I have assumed that one-half of the estimated profits were
-derived from capital, and this half I have capitalized at 10 years'
-purchase. The amount so arrived at—£2,220,000,000—may be regarded as a
-reasonable estimate, not as an accurate one. In 1908, it may be pointed
-out, the nominal "paid up" capital of registered joint-stock companies
-amounted to £2,123,000,000.
-
-Under _i_ (2) £100,000,000 is put down as a rough estimate of the
-capital employed by small traders whose incomes are less than £160 per
-annum. I think that £100,000,000 is a liberal estimate, but it should be
-noted, against this opinion, that in 1885 Sir Robert Giffen's estimate
-was £335,000,000. In either case the figure is sheer guesswork; there is
-no proper statistical material.
-
-Items _j_ to _q_ need little comment. I point out, however, that the
-profits of mines, quarries and ironworks are capitalized at only 4
-years' purchase by some authorities in view of their exhaustible
-character.
-
-Item r relates to furniture, works of art and other movable property. I
-have estimated this to amount to one-sixth of the item "Houses" (_d_).
-It is right to point out, however, that this estimate is very much at
-variance with former ones. Sir Robert Giffen in 1885 took one-half of
-the value of "Houses," and Mulhall and other statisticians have commonly
-used this estimate. But is it reasonable? I think not. In the first
-place the item "Houses" covers a great number of business premises the
-contents of which are valuable but are already estimated for in item
-_i_. The item also covers the value of all the land connected with the
-premises. Deducting for land and for business premises, could we, even
-as to the balance, assert that the average private dwelling contains
-furniture and other effects worth 50 per cent. of the cost of the
-structures? Enquiry has shown me that such an estimate would be only
-warrantable in the case of rich houses. But rich houses, as we have
-seen, are comparatively few, and "comfortable" houses not many. Coming
-to the great bulk of the small dwelling houses of the United Kingdom the
-furniture and effects are so poor that their value, unfortunately, as
-compared even with that of the mean houses which shelter them, is small,
-and in many cases negligible.
-
-In taking one-sixth instead of one-half of item _d_ in arriving at item
-_r_ therefore, I feel that I am making the most liberal possible
-estimate. To make the figure about £1,600,000,000, as we should do by
-taking the traditional one-half of the value of "Houses," would, I
-submit, be very wide of the mark.
-
-The total value thus estimated of the property in the United Kingdom
-owned by individuals affords a striking contrast with that owned by the
-State. It amounts to £10,567,000,000.
-
-We have now to consider the third category: "Property in places abroad
-owned by persons in the United Kingdom." The items speak for themselves
-and are capitalized at very reasonable rates. We get the remarkable fact
-that certain persons in this country own about £2,600,000,000 of
-property in places abroad.
-
-The grand total of the whole estimate is £13,762,000,000—£300 per head
-of the population, or say £1,500 per family of five persons.
-
-[Footnote 16: There is also, of course, the value of the trained
-personnel of both army and navy, which could not be taken at less than
-£250 per soldier and £400 per sailor, but I confine this estimate to the
-value of "property" commonly so called.]
-
-[Footnote 17: There are no commons in Ireland and Scotland.]
-
-[Footnote 18: In 1885 Sir Robert Giffen estimated Government and local
-property at £500,000,000, but I do not know his reasons for naming that
-figure.]
-
-[Footnote 19: Lord Eversley seems to think that 25 years' purchase meets
-the conditions of 1905. See discussion in the Royal Statistical
-Society's Journal for March 1905.]
-
-[Footnote 20: "Estimates of Agricultural Losses." Paper read to the
-Royal Statistical Society in March 1905.]
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VI
- THE MONOPOLY OF CAPITAL
-
-
-In view of the facts as to rich and poor estates which we examined in
-Chapter 4, it is obvious that to state that the accumulated wealth of
-the United Kingdom probably amounts to £300 per head of the population,
-or £1,500 per family of five persons, is to mask in averages a great
-inequality of distribution.
-
-Reverting to the Death Duty records, it is possible, by means of them,
-to give a true idea of the manner of distribution amongst our people of
-the greater part of the nearly £14,000,000,000 of capital.
-
-I again direct attention to the tables on pages 52 and 53. Year after
-year, with extraordinary constancy, a certain amount of money passes in
-each class of estate. So small are the variations in relation to the
-magnitude of the totals that it is hardly necessary to average the five
-years in working at the figures.
-
-If about 65,000 persons die every year leaving about £279,000,000, what
-is the ratio to these figures of the numbers and property of the living?
-
-The question thus raised is an exceedingly interesting one. Porter in
-his "Progress of the Nation" seems to have assumed a ratio of 45 to 1,
-but I do not think that the true figure can be so high as this.
-
-The British Crown, since Queen Anne, has passed at the following dates:
-
- Anne, 1702
- George I., 1714
- George II., 1727
- George III., 1760
- George IV., 1820
- William IV., 1830
- Victoria, 1837
- Edward VII., 1901
- George V., 1910
-
-Thus, in 208 years, the Crown has passed eight times, or, on the
-average, once in about 26 years.
-
-I have investigated the dates at which a considerable number of
-well-known estates have passed at death during two centuries and have
-found the most remarkable variations in different families. The Earldom
-of Suffolk has passed at average intervals of 16.7 years between 1731
-and 1898. The Earldom of Coventry has passed at intervals of 22 years
-between 1712 and 1843. These are intervals which are well under the
-average, while above the mean are cases quite as remarkable. The Earldom
-of Essex, between 1709 and 1892, has passed only four times, giving an
-average of 45.7 years. The Earldom of Bathurst, again, between 1775 and
-1892, passed only five times, giving an average of 43.4 years.
-
-Taking the mean of a large number of actual cases, I get an average of
-29.2 years and I have decided to take 30 as a round figure which cannot
-be far from the truth. Assuming, then, that there are thirty living
-property owners for every dead one in the final column of the table on
-page 53, I have constructed the table entitled "The Division of
-Property: An Argument from the Dead to the Living," which appears on
-pages 74 and 75. The figures in columns 1 and 2, taken from the table in
-Chapter 4, are multiplied by 30 to form the figures in columns 3 and 4.
-The results are exceedingly interesting.
-
- THE DIVISION OF PROPERTY: AN ARGUMENT FROM THE DEAD TO THE LIVING
-
- +---------------------------+---------------------+
- | | THE DEAD. |
- | +---------------------+
- | |Averages of the Death|
- | |Duty Records in the |
- |CLASSES OF ESTATE. |five years 1904-5 |
- | |to 1908-9. |
- | +---------+-----------+
- | | (1) | (2) |
- | |PERSONS. | PROPERTY. |
- +---------------------------+---------+-----------+
- | | | £ |
- |Less than £100 net | 15,956 | 900,000|
- |Less than £300 gross | 18,917 | 3,600,000|
- |£300 to £500 gross | 9,288 | 3,700,000|
- |£100 to £500 net | 6,074 | 2,700,000|
- | +---------+-----------+
- |Total Estates not over £500| 50,235 | 10,900,000|
- | +---------+-----------+
- |£500 to £1,000 net | 10,404 | 8,600,000|
- |£1,000 to £10,000 net | 16,910 | 62,100,000|
- |£10,000 to £25,000 net | 2,338 | 41,000,000|
- |£25,000 to £50,000 net | 910 | 35,100,000|
- |£50,000 to £75,000 net | 291 | 19,400,000|
- |£75,000 to £100,000 net | 145 | 13,200,000|
- |£100,000 to £150,000 net | 133 | 16,900,000|
- |£150,000 to £250,000 net | 90 | 19,700,000|
- |£250,000 to £500,000 net | 54 | 20,600,000|
- |£500,000 to £1,000,000 net | 19 | 13,600,000|
- | Over £1,000,000 net | 7 | 18,100,000|
- | +---------+-----------+
- | Total Estates over £500 | 31,301 |268,300,000|
- | +---------+-----------+
- | Grand Total | 81,536 |279,200,000|
- +---------------------------+---------+-----------+
-
- +---------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------+
- | | THE LIVING. | |
- | +-------------------------------------+ |
- | |Figures of columns 1 and 2 multiplied| AVERAGE |
- | |by 30 upon the assumption that each |VALUE OF |
- |CLASSES OF ESTATE. |dead property owner in column 1 | ESTATES |
- | |corresponds to 30 living ones. |PER HEAD.|
- | +-----------------+-------------------+ |
- | | (3) | (4) | |
- | | PERSONS. | PROPERTY. | |
- +---------------------------+-----------------+-------------------+---------+
- | | | £ | £ |
- |Less than £100 net | 478,680 | 27,000,000 | 56|
- |Less than £300 gross | 567,510 | 108,000,000 | 190|
- |£300 to £500 gross | 278,640 | 111,000,000 | 398|
- |£100 to £500 net | 182,220 | 81,000,000 | 444|
- | +-----------------+-------------------+---------+
- |Total Estates not over £500| 1,507,050 | 327,000,000 | 216|
- | +-----------------+-------------------+---------+
- |£500 to £1,000 net | 312,120 | 258,000,000 | 826|
- |£1,000 to £10,000 net | 507,300 | 1,863,000,000 | 3,672|
- |£10,000 to £25,000 net | 70,140 | 1,230,000,000 | 17,536|
- |£25,000 to £50,000 net | 27,300 | 1,053,000,000 | 38,571|
- |£50,000 to £75,000 net | 8,730 | 582,000,000 | 66,600|
- |£75,000 to £100,000 net | 4,350 | 396,000,000 | 91,034|
- |£100,000 to £150,000 net | 3,990 | 507,000,000 | 127,067|
- |£150,000 to £250,000 net | 2,700 | 591,000,000 | 218,800|
- |£250,000 to £500,000 net | 1,620 | 618,000,000 | 381,481|
- |£500,000 to £1,000,000 net | 570 | 408,000,000 | 715,789|
- | Over £1,000,000 net | 210 | 543,000,000 |2,585,714|
- | +-----------------+-------------------+---------+
- | Total Estates over £500 | 939,030 | 8,049,000,000 | 8,571|
- | +-----------------+-------------------+---------+
- | Grand Total | 2,446,080 | 8,376,000,000 | 3,424|
- +---------------------------+-----------------+-------------------+---------+
-
-In the first place, the total property comes out at £8,376,000,000 which
-is about £5,400,000,000 less than the estimate of private property
-arrived at in Chapter 5. This is not surprising. There can be no
-question that a considerable amount of property evades the Death Duties.
-On page 78 will be found details, taken from the Reports of the Inland
-Revenue Commissioners, of the various descriptions of property which
-passed in the year 1908-9. Take the item "Household Goods, Apparel,
-etc." It amounts to but £6,000,000. Now, in Chapter 5, as the reader
-will remember, I formed an estimate of £550,000,000 as the value of such
-effects, this estimate being £400,000,000 lower than that made by Sir
-Robert Giffen twenty years ago. The £6,000,000 is officially described
-as relating to "household goods, pictures, china, linen, apparel, etc."
-Multiplied by 30 it gives but £180,000,000, which is certainly
-£300,000,000 less than it should be. It will be seen that "Book Debts,
-Stock, Goodwill, etc.," figure for only £17,000,000 in 1908-9, pointing
-to under-estimation. Similar undervaluation probably obtains in regard
-to other items of property, while bonds to bearer frequently escape
-taxation. Of investments in places overseas a very great part
-undoubtedly escapes death duty.
-
-Another and most important point is that a considerable amount of
-property eludes the Death Duties through gifts by the living. The
-following figures are significant:—
-
- COMPARISON OF (1) INCOME TAX ASSESSMENTS AND (2) ESTATE ASSESSMENTS
-
- Gross Assessments Net Estates
- to Reviewed for
- Income Tax. Death Duties.
- Million £ Million £
- 1895-6 677.8 213.2
- 1896-7 704.7 215.8
- 1897-8 734.5 247.3
- 1898-9 762.7 250.6
- 1899-1900 791.7 292.8
- 1900-1 833.3 264.5
- 1901-2 867.0 288.9
- 1902-3 879.6 270.5
- 1903-4 902.8 264.1
- 1904-5 912.1 265.1
- 1905-6 925.2 272.2
- 1906-7 943.7 298.5
- 1907-8 980.1 282.3
- 1908-9 1010.0 270.9
-
-It will be observed that there is a remarkable lack of correlation
-between the income tax and the death duty assessments. The former have
-grown most satisfactorily. The latter grew in the first few years of the
-operation of the Harcourt revised Death Duties and then became, for
-practical purposes, stationary. There can be no doubt that the
-explanation is to be found in the increase of gifts made _inter vivos_
-to avoid the payment of death duty, and that the estates reviewed in
-1908-9 should have been nearer £400,000,000 than £300,000,000.
-
-Parliament has tried to meet this avoidance by enacting (Finance Act of
-1909, which was passed into law in 1910 after rejection by the Peers in
-1909) that gifts _inter vivos_ shall not be exempted from death duty
-unless made more than three years prior to the death of the giver.
-
-The apparent discrepancy between the £8,376,000,000 arrived at on page
-75 and the £13,700,000,000 arrived at on page 65 is therefore not an
-inaccuracy, but an accurate consequence of the facts referred to.
-
-As it stands, then, the table on pages 74-75 represents the greater
-part, but not the whole, of the property of the persons to whom it
-relates. Nevertheless, it gives us as accurate an idea of the manner of
-distribution as though it dealt with the whole.
-
-CLASSIFICATION ACCORDING TO (1) SIZE OF ESTATE AND (2) DESCRIPTION OF
-PROPERTY, OF THE GROSS VALUE OF THE ESTATES WHICH PASSED AT DEATH
-IN THE FISCAL YEAR 1908-9
-
----------------------------+-----------+----------+-----------+-----------
- | Stocks, | | Money | Trade
- | Funds, | Cash in | lent on | Assets,
- Size of Estates. |Shares, and|the House |Mortgages, |_i.e._ Book
- |other like | and in | Bonds, | Debts,
- |Securities.| Bank. |Bills, etc.| Stock,
- | | | | Goodwill,
- | | | | etc.
----------------------------+-----------+----------+-----------+-----------
- | £ | £ | £ | £
-Not exceeding £300 gross | 239,910| 1,263,509| 119,186| 222,528
-Between £300 and £500 gross| 392,345| 974,686| 211,362| 262,508
-£100 to £500 | 265,873| 354,133| 110,053| 664,130
-£500 to £1000 | 1,586,521| 1,633,265| 760,018| 863,702
-£1000 to £10,000 | 21,247,265| 6,169,300| 7,281,737| 4,296,571
-£10,000 to £25,000 | 18,767,290| 2,345,310| 4,112,023| 2,184,906
-£25,000 to £50,000 | 17,675,813| 1,454,151| 3,111,506| 1,704,057
-£50,000 to £75,000 | 10,562,035| 726,051| 1,561,811| 1,334,990
-£75,000 to £100,000 | 7,534,683| 572,995| 1,354,405| 852,908
-£100,000 to £150,000 | 10,175,403| 567,701| 1,479,966| 668,643
-£150,000 to £250,000 | 9,738,895| 317,672| 888,356| 736,528
-£250,000 to £500,000 | 11,377,749| 860,505| 1,648,587| 1,244,988
-£500,000 to £1,000,000 | 3,370,659| 36,126| 280,636| 1,177,432
-Over £1,000,000 | 6,318,402| 616,113| 82,533| 1,059,061
----------------------------+-----------+----------+-----------+-----------
- Total |119,252,843|17,891,517| 23,002,179| 17,272,952
----------------------------+-----------+----------+-----------+-----------
-
----------------------------+----------+----------+------------+----------
- | | | |
- | |Household | | House
- Size of Estates. | Policies | Goods, |Agricultural| Property
- | of | Apparel | Land. | and
- |Insurance.| etc. | | Business
- | | | |Premises.
- | | | |
----------------------------+----------+----------+------------+----------
- | £ | £ | £ | £
-Not exceeding £300 gross | 562,756| 277,353| 100,014 | 598,220
-Between £300 and £500 gross| 353,865| 210,848| 94,088 | 967,152
-£100 to £500 | 507,869| 239,037| 329,362 | 2,862,200
-£500 to £1000 | 844,829| 404,730| 588,750 | 4,120,809
-£1000 to £10,000 | 3,553,234| 1,673,603| 4,102,764 |18,168,513
-£10,000 to £25,000 | 1,400,980| 849,525| 2,432,372 | 6,516,563
-£25,000 to £50,000 | 1,067,993| 633,560| 2,465,454 | 4,322,623
-£50,000 to £75,000 | 314,705| 360,607| 1,407,645 | 2,091,525
-£75,000 to £100,000 | 337,012| 208,217| 1,741,005 | 1,161,460
-£100,000 to £150,000 | 490,791| 364,077| 1,373,393 | 1,635,301
-£150,000 to £250,000 | 535,038| 336,487| 1,542,264 | 1,454,949
-£250,000 to £500,000 | 279,200| 448,789| 1,611,265 | 1,222,858
-£500,000 to £1,000,000 | 179,368|-[A]39,952| 1,649,580 | 614,244
-Over £1,000,000 | 282,723| 225,708| 1,253,498 | 307,871
----------------------------+----------+----------+------------+----------
- Total |10,710,363| 6,192,589| 20,691,454 |46,044,288
----------------------------+----------+----------+------------+----------
-
-[A: Capital transferred in the year to other classes exceeded that
-brought into these classes.]
-
----------------------------+---------+----------+-----------
- | | |
- | Ground | | Total
- Size of Estates. | Rents | Other | Gross
- | and |Property. | Capital
- | similar | | Values.
- |Burdens. | |
- | | |
----------------------------+---------+----------+-----------
- | £ | £ | £
-Not exceeding £300 gross | 1,505| 388,068| 3,773,049
-Between £300 and £500 gross| 5,811| 397,431| 3,870,096
-£100 to £500 | 13,008| 517,903| 5,863,568
-£500 to £1000 | 43,922| 1,226,606| 12,073,152
-£1000 to £10,000 | 571,404| 7,811,769| 74,876,160
-£10,000 to £25,000 | 790,506| 4,802,567| 44,202,042
-£25,000 to £50,000 | 724,520| 4,199,814| 37,359,491
-£50,000 to £75,000 | 371,867| 2,061,497| 20,792,733
-£75,000 to £100,000 | 271,003| 1,225,183| 15,258,871
-£100,000 to £150,000 | 354,061| 1,485,937| 18,595,273
-£150,000 to £250,000 | 561,046| 2,479,257| 18,590,492
-£250,000 to £500,000 | 411,398| 2,257,972| 21,363,311
-£500,000 to £1,000,000 | 105,066| 992,010| 8,365,169
-Over £1,000,000 | 188,350| 6,571,469| 16,905,728
----------------------------+---------+----------+-----------
- Total |4,413,467|36,471,483|301,889,135
----------------------------+---------+----------+-----------
-
-The table is full of striking contrasts. I have divided it into two
-parts, the lower of which consists almost entirely of the income tax
-paying classes. We should expect those with incomes exceeding £3 per
-week for the most part to be the property owners of the nation. It will
-be seen that the number of persons with £500 of property and upwards
-indicated by this table is 939,000. This number may be compared with our
-estimate of income tax payers, which was 1,100,000.
-
-Of the 939,030 persons with £8,049,000,000, as many as 312,120 own
-between them but about £258,000,000, leaving 626,910 persons with
-£7,791,000,000.
-
-Of the 626,910 persons with £7,791,000,000, as many as 507,300 have
-between them £1,863,000,000, leaving 119,610 persons with
-£5,928,000,000.
-
-And it is amongst the big estates that we must assuredly look for the
-bulk of the avoidance of Death Duties, which is clearly indicated by the
-table on pp. 76-77. Thus the closer we get to the facts the more amazing
-the monopoly of capital appears. It is literally true to say that a mere
-handful of people owns the nation. _It is probably true that a group of
-about 120,000 people who with their families form about one-seventieth
-part of the population, owns about two-thirds of the entire accumulated
-wealth of the United Kingdom._
-
-It is an inevitable consequence of the monopoly of capital by a few
-people that the distribution of the national income is as pictured in
-the frontispiece of this volume. If we were quite unable to investigate
-incomes, we should know without investigation that the facts as to
-capital must have as a corollary a grossly uneven distribution of
-income. If, again, we had merely the known facts as to incomes before
-us, and death duty statistics were not available, we should be able to
-deduce from them just such a monopoly of wealth as is examined in this
-chapter.
-
-As to the insignificant fraction of the national wealth owned by the
-working and lower middle classes, it is mockery to term it the "capital
-of the working classes," as is done not infrequently. It corresponds,
-for the most part, to the squirrel's store of nuts. It stands chiefly
-for sick pay, unemployment benefits, funeral moneys, bits of jerry-built
-houses, and so forth. It is rarely industrial capital used for the
-benefit of the savers.
-
-Those who have so little property cannot bargain fairly for the sale of
-their services with those who own the national undertaking. A small
-group of private owners exercises the effective government of the nation
-through the possession of the means of production, which are the means
-of life. As for the Government at Westminster, it is impotent because,
-like the mass of the people, it owns little or no property. It cannot
-even control the chief source of the national wealth—coal, or the prime
-factor in trade—railways. The investments of the State, like the
-investments of the masses, are a negligible quantity. And those rule who
-own.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-THE AREA OF THE UNITED KINGDOM
-
-
-Let us now consider the area of the United Kingdom. I use the word area
-with intention, for it is its area which differentiates land from all
-other commodities. Man can make soil by disintegrating rock. He can
-entirely strip the soil from a given superficies. He can change a fen
-into a farm. He can rob land of its fertility by careless cultivation.
-He can rear floors above land or sink shafts below it. Upon the base
-afforded by a small piece of land he can manufacture enough cloth to
-clothe a multitude. There is one thing, however, which he cannot do. He
-cannot change the geographical position of land. The element of area, of
-extension, is inherent and immobile, unchangeable and indestructible.[21]
-
-It follows that the manner of the control of land is an exceedingly
-important matter to a community. The immobile area is the base of all
-human activities. Upon it we needs must live, and the manner of our
-distribution upon it largely determines our happiness.
-
-In the United Kingdom, as we have already seen, the people collectively
-own but little property, and of the entire area of the country, the
-control of which so largely determines their relations with each other,
-but the roads, rivers, and a few insignificant commons and parks are
-public property. The whole area measures 77,000,000 acres and nearly
-77,000,000 acres are private property.
-
-As we might expect from the facts we have already examined, the greater
-part of the area is in a comparatively small number of hands. There are
-a large number of landowners, but great landowners are few.
-
-As in many other parts of these enquiries, we are faced with a plentiful
-lack of precise information as to the ownership of the soil. The more
-important the subject, the less trouble we take, as a people, to keep
-record of it. In 1910 it is impossible for any man to say precisely how
-many persons own British land. No Bluebook on the subject has been
-published for thirty-five years. The last return of landowners, known as
-the "New Domesday Book," was made in 1873, and is forgotten by the
-present generation, although it created much interest and controversy
-upon its publication.
-
-The contents of the New Domesday Book were carefully corrected and
-analysed by Mr John Bateman.[22] For England and Wales alone his summary
-of the figures, revised as to the great estates down to 1883, is as
-follows:—
-
- OWNERSHIP OF LAND IN ENGLAND AND WALES
-
- Number of Owners. Class of Owner. Acres.
-
- 400 Peers and Peeresses 5,729,979
- 1,288 Great Landowners 8,497,699
- 2,529 Squires[23] 4,319,271
- 9,585 Greater Yeomen[23] 4,782,627
- 24,412 Lesser Yeomen[23] 4,144,272
- 217,049 Small Proprietors 3,931,806
- 703,289 Cottagers 151,148
- 14,459 Public Bodies 1,443,548
- Waste 1,524,624
- ------- ----------
- 973,011 34,524,974
- ------- ----------
-
-While the number of owners came out at nearly 1,000,000, it will be seen
-that the ownership of the greater number is a very small thing indeed.
-For practical purposes, about 38,000 persons owned by far the greater
-part of England and Wales. The analysis shows:
-
- 38,214 people owned 27,473,848 acres:
- average 719 acres each.
- 934,797 people owned 5,526,502 acres:
- average 6 acres each.
-
-Again of the 934,797 small owners:
-
- 703,289 people owned 151,148 acres:
- average less than 1 rood.
-
-As to the United Kingdom, Mr Bateman's analysis showed:
-
- UNITED KINGDOM LAND OWNERSHIP: 1883
-
- Acres.
- Total Area 77,000,000
- Owned by 2,500 persons 40,426,000
-
-It has been quaintly observed in mitigation of these facts, and with a
-view to reconciling the British people to the humiliation and economic
-servitude involved in these facts, that some part of the 2,500 persons'
-40,000,000 acres consists of mountain and waste land. As a matter of
-fact, this plea is a further condemnation of the position, for very
-little indeed of our small British area ought to be "waste." British
-landowners are responsible to the nation for their wanton neglect of
-afforestation. Let the "waste" land of the rich be handed over to the
-nation if it is declared to be valueless to its few owners.
-
-Since 1883 the number of owners has doubtless increased, but not
-largely, for even those people who own little strips of land bearing
-houses chiefly do so on leasehold tenure, being in effect employed in
-the engaging process of nursing ground rents for a future generation of
-the few who own. It may be that in the United Kingdom at the present
-moment there are about 1,250,000 freeholders, but the substantial
-ownership of British land remains as it is faithfully pictured in the
-above figures.
-
-As need hardly be added, these facts about land ownership are a most
-striking confirmation of the conclusions arrived at in these pages as to
-the monopoly of capital.
-
-As we are land animals, we are compelled, such of us as cannot command
-the capital necessary to buy a base to live upon or work upon, to come
-to terms with the individuals who are in possession of the British area.
-The payment which is made for permission to use land is commonly called
-rent, and the total amount of the rent paid for the use of the
-77,000,000 acres is a considerable sum. We can form a very fair estimate
-of it from the Income Tax returns already examined.
-
-First, as to the landlords' revenue from agricultural land. This we
-obtain from Schedule A of the Income Tax. The income assessed in 1908-9
-was £52,000,000 gross, but as we have already noted, part of this was
-not real income. Between the cost of repairs (for which the
-Commissioners allowed £6,360,000), adjustments on appeal, etc., the net
-income from agricultural lands taxed in 1907-8 was about £44,000,000.
-But this is the rent, not of the land alone, but of the farms as going
-concerns, with all their buildings, fences, roads, ditches, etc. The
-actual rent of the land alone may perhaps be put at £35,000,000.
-
-Secondly, we come to the rents of all lands bearing houses, factories,
-business premises, etc. The gross income assessed under Schedule A of
-the Income Tax in 1908-9 was £217,000,000, of which £49,000,000 was for
-the Metropolis alone. From this figure considerable deductions have to
-be made to arrive at net income. The Commissioners allowed for repairs
-£33,700,000, for Charities, etc. £7,400,000, for empty property
-£8,000,000, for over-assessments, etc. £3,900,000. Thus the real income
-from houses and the land upon which they stand, accruing to private
-landlords is reduced to £164,000,000. Of this £164,000,000 how much is
-rent from land alone?
-
-In London about one-third of the gross assessment is land rent. In the
-Provinces the proportion is smaller; probably less than one-fourth. As
-to the former figure, the L.C.C. surveyor, after careful examination of
-the subject in detail, a few years ago estimated the land values of the
-Metropolis at £15,000,000, which was just over one-third the gross
-assessment of land and buildings together. I take, then, the
-Metropolitan land rents at £16,000,000 and those of the rest of the
-United Kingdom at one-fourth of the gross assessment (£164,000,000), or
-£41,000,000. Thus we arrive at £57,000,000 for the whole of the United
-Kingdom. To this we have to add £1,000,000 of miscellaneous sporting
-rents, tithes, etc.
-
-But Schedule A does not exhaust the profits derived from the ownership
-of land. Under Schedule D are assessed Railways, Mines, Quarries,
-Ironworks, etc., which are undertakings attached to land, and in the
-profits of which land rents form a part. The most important case is that
-of mines. In 1893 the Royal Commission on Mining Royalties carefully
-calculated all mining royalties, dead rents, etc., received by
-freeholders in 1889 at less than £5,000,000.[24] This sum has now
-probably increased to about £7,000,000, including mines and quarries of
-all descriptions. The rental value of the land employed in Railways,
-Canals, etc., can hardly be taken as more than £6,000,000 per annum.
-
-Collecting the figures we have estimated, we get:
-
- ESTIMATE OF LAND RENTS OF THE UNITED KINGDOM
-
- From Farm Lands £35,000,000
- From Lands bearing Dwelling-Houses,
- Factories, Business Premises, etc. 57,000,000
- From Sporting Rents, etc. 1,000,000
- From Mines, Quarries, etc. 7,000,000
- From Other Property 6,000,000
- ---------------
- [25]£106,000,000
- ===============
-
-Thus, in round figures, we get £106,000,000 as an estimate of the
-tribute which is paid to private owners for permission to use the area
-of the United Kingdom. As we have seen, 2,500 persons own one-half the
-whole area, while 38,200 persons own three-fourths of the area of
-England and Wales, so that the greater part of this income of
-£106,000,000 goes into few hands.
-
-In view of the fact that the total income of the United Kingdom has been
-estimated at £1,840,000,000, it is at first surprising that the amount
-of this land rent is not larger than £106,000,000, and it is of interest
-to ask why it is, in view of the monopolization of so much of the whole
-area by so few people, that the land rents are not greater than they
-are.
-
-The first explanation is the influence of free imports and cheap
-transport in putting at our disposal the harvests of the entire world.
-Cheap food for our people has spelt "loss" to the landowner. The
-landowners possess just as much land as before, neither more nor less,
-but as the produce which it yields is lower in price, they have been
-able to exact, for permission to produce the kindly fruits of the earth,
-a smaller rent. As our wealth has grown in the last generation the
-tribute paid to the owners of agricultural lands has grown less. Now
-that food is again appreciating in price the land tribute will on this
-account rise again.
-
-But, while the rent paid for farm lands has fallen since the seventies,
-the rent paid for urban sites has increased, and, of course, a further
-portion of the whole area has passed from the first category into the
-second. The country-side has been increasingly deserted, and our big
-towns have grown,[26] both by their own natural increase, and by a
-continual influx from the villages and small towns.
-
-How is it, then, that the landlords have not been able to exact a
-greater rent than about £57,000,000 for the use of urban sites? In the
-first place, while this sum may seem small in proportion to the total
-income of our people, it is very large in relation to the exceedingly
-small area for the use of which it is exacted. Almost the entire area of
-the United Kingdom is sparsely populated. It is an empty country dotted
-with small crowded spots called towns. When we reflect, then, that the
-land rent of the great empty country is £35,000,000, while the land rent
-of the crowded towns is £57,000,000, we see the latter item in its true
-light, as enormous in relation to the insignificant area for permission
-to use which it is paid.
-
-In this connexion it is important to observe that an exceedingly large
-manufacturing business can be carried on upon a small piece of the
-earth's surface, measuring 50 feet by 100 feet, or only an eighth part
-of an acre. The whole of the manufacturing plant of the United Kingdom
-stands upon a base which cannot possibly amount to more than a
-negligible fraction of the whole area of the country. Thus, while the
-industrial has to bid high for the use of land, he needs, as a rule, but
-a very small piece for his purposes. The area needed for a tennis court
-is often sufficient for the base of a business in which 100 or 200 hands
-are employed and which draws a huge profit from their labour.
-
-Or take the subject of housing. All the urban sites of the United
-Kingdom together occupy a negligible part of its area. If our 9,000,000
-houses occupied half an acre each, as unfortunately they do not, they
-would account for but 4,500,000 acres out of our 77,000,000 acres.
-
-But apart from the fact that the size of the area which yields urban
-land rents is exceedingly small, local rates are a perpetual charge upon
-land rents. The point is that, as the renter of fixed property is rated
-according to his rental, the size of the rental he is able to pay is in
-part determined by the amount of the rates. The higher the rates, the
-less rent he can afford, and therefore the less can the landowner obtain
-for the use of his land.
-
-For the reason just stated, it is often argued that the landowner
-actually pays local rates.[27] The fact that he is unable to exact as
-much rent as though no rates existed is said to be equivalent to an
-actual payment by the landowner of the difference between the rent which
-he receives and the rent which he might receive. This economic doctrine
-is worth examination.
-
-In the first place it is not only the rates which the occupier takes
-into consideration when he decides that he can afford to rent a certain
-property. He considers "rates and taxes." The Inhabited House Duty is
-taken into consideration fully as much as the poor rate. If it did not
-exist the tenant could afford to pay a higher rent.
-
-Let us carry this a little further. What is the Inhabited House Duty? It
-is an Income Tax roughly proportioned to the size of a man's income by
-the size of the house which he inhabits. But there is another Income
-Tax, the Income Tax commonly so-called, levied at so much in the £ on
-incomes over £160 per annum. Is the Income Tax taken into consideration
-by a family man looking out for a house? Not directly, perhaps, in the
-same way that he adds the "rates and taxes" to the rent before deciding
-that he can afford a certain eligible residence, but indirectly there
-can be no question whatever that the Income Tax has great influence in
-deciding a man's rental. Indeed, the raising of the Income Tax from 6d.
-to 1s. may directly cause a man to leave a £60 house for a £50 house. We
-see, then, that if the landowner pays the local rates, he most certainly
-pays the Inhabited House Duty, and further that if he pays the form of
-Income Tax called the House Duty, it is at least arguable that he pays
-the Income Tax proper.
-
-But that is not all. There is another determinant of the rent which a
-man can afford, and that is the price of gas. In and around London the
-variation in price is considerable, and the careful householder does not
-forget the fact when deciding whether to live North, South, East, or
-West. South of the Thames gas is cheaper than in the North. According to
-the doctrine under examination, therefore, the landowners North of the
-Thames must at least "pay" the difference between the two rates.
-
-Again, on the same lines it might be argued that, as a rise in the price
-of building materials checks building and therefore makes a landowner
-ready to accept a lower rent for his land, the landowner actually pays
-the increased cost of building when materials rise.
-
-And so we might proceed from one logical step to another until we
-arrived at the comfortable conclusion that, if the sole expense of a
-householder were his rent, he could pay his whole income as rent, and
-that, therefore, the real "loss" of the landowners is the difference
-between the entire income of the nation and the land rents which they
-now actually receive.
-
-The whole truth of the matter is: For long years rates have been levied
-upon the occupiers of fixed property. Contracts as to the use or sale of
-land and the property affixed thereto have been made between man and man
-with full knowledge of the existence of rates. While, therefore, it is
-perfectly true that, but for the existence of local levies, the owners
-of the soil would be receiving a higher tribute than is actually the
-case, it is straining the meaning of language to say that they pay the
-rates, or that the rates are an actual burden upon them. In so far as
-present-day landowners have inherited their land from men who were given
-it by a worthless Sovereign or in any other way came by it without
-proper consideration, to talk of the burden of rates upon real property
-can scarcely excite sympathy. In so far as present-day landowners
-acquired their property for proper consideration or inherited it from
-those who so acquired it, the rates were taken into account when the
-price was paid, and no burden can therefore truly be said to exist. If
-to-day A gives £1000 for a piece of land he does so with full knowledge
-of local rates, and the seller gets less for his land because of his
-knowledge. Therefore, when A, in his turn, leases his land and a house
-built upon it to another person, he cannot allege that he bears the
-burden of the rates. Yet it remains true that, if the burden did not
-exist, the land would yield A a higher rent. In a word the rates have
-become a rent-charge upon the property.
-
-To sum up the conclusions of this chapter, we have seen that while the
-total income of the nation is £1,840,000,000, the landowners take
-£106,000,000 as land rent, and that this amount would be much greater
-but for (1) the untaxed admission of competitive foodstuffs, (2) the
-very small area occupied by the towns, and (3) the levying of local
-taxation upon fixed property.
-
-[Footnote 21: _Cf._ Marshall, "The fundamental attribute of land is its
-extension."—"Principles of Economics," Book I, p. 221.]
-
-[Footnote 22: "Great Landowners." John Bateman (Harrison).]
-
-[Footnote 23: These classifications are purely arbitrary.]
-
-[Footnote 24: See C 6980, page 79.]
-
-[Footnote 25: It has been constantly stated that the land rents of the
-United Kingdom amount to £250,000,000. Such an estimate is unwarranted.]
-
-[Footnote 26: It is only in the large towns that land rents have risen.
-Many towns of less than 20,000 in population are decreasing in size and
-their rents consequently falling. In the ten years ended 1901 no less
-than 187 towns of from 2,000 to 50,000 inhabitants declined in
-population.]
-
-[Footnote 27: The point is of so much importance that it may be well to
-quote some expressions of opinion on the subject.
-
-"In practice there is little doubt that the majority of intending
-tenants, both in town and country, do take the precaution of enquiring
-what rates or taxes they will have to pay, and vary their estimates
-accordingly. In their case, then, it is the landlord, and not the
-tenant, who bears the burden of the rates." "Land Nationalisation" (p.
-86), by Harold Cox. (Methuen & Co.).
-
-"We have assumed with most economists, that in the end, on the average,
-the rates, however levied, fall upon the owner (inasmuch as they compel
-him to lower the rent which he demands for his property)." "Towards a
-Social Policy" (p. 49), by a Committee of Liberals. "The Speaker"
-Publishing Co. Ld.]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-THOSE WHO WORK AND THOSE WHO WAIT
-
-
-We have seen that, although the sum of the land rents taken by the
-owners of the British area is actually very great, it is small as
-compared with the total of the national income. We have also seen that
-there is a simple explanation of this. We have become a manufacturing
-and a town-dwelling people, and the area occupied by our factories and
-towns is very small. The chief demand for land is confined to the
-outskirts of such towns as are increasing in size. The landlords of the
-big towns have their pockets increasingly filled with unearned
-increment, while the landlords of the empty country are reminded in the
-most practical possible way of that inherent quality of immobile area to
-which we have referred as the distinguishing characteristic of land.
-When we speak of a town as growing rapidly we refer to the growth in
-relation to the area of the town, not in relation to the area of the
-country. I reiterate this point because, when it is once realised, we
-see our way as a community to an exceedingly simple solution of many
-important problems. We speak of the enormous size of London. As a matter
-of fact, the whole area administered by the London County Council is but
-75,000 acres. Again, "Greater London" contains but 443,000 acres, and
-yet is the dwelling-place of 7,000,000 people, or far more than the
-entire population of the 2,420,000,000 acres of the Dominion of Canada.
-
-We shall return to the foregoing considerations hereafter.
-
-As a result of the small amount of land required as a base for the
-establishment of industrial plant, or for the warehouse or stores of a
-distributive business, it is usually but a small part of the total
-product of an industrial or commercial organisation which is taken by
-the owner of its site. That this is usually true is obvious from the
-fact that of a total annual income of £1,840,000,000 the owners of area
-are able to exact but £106,000,000. Of this £106,000,000 again, as was
-pointed out in the last chapter, £35,000,000 is exacted from farmers who
-make the meagre profit of from £17,000,000 to £26,000,000 per annum over
-and above their rentals. Out of the teeming populations of the towns,
-with all their manufacturing and commercial activities, the owners of
-area are able to draw but about £57,000,000.
-
-Now let us revert to the extraordinary figures which are the basis of
-the frontispiece to this volume.
-
-We have shown that, of a total income of £1,840,000,000, as much as
-£634,000,000 is taken by a small group of persons numbering 280,000, or
-with their families 1,400,000. The great landowners are obviously
-amongst these 280,000 persons, and the greater part of British land
-rents are therefore included in their income. But, if the whole of it be
-included, there still remains £528,000,000 of income not derived from
-land rents, and taken by a very small number of persons.
-
-The explanation of this fact is to be found in the monopoly of capital
-which we examined in Chapter 6. In so few hands is the greater part of
-the accumulated capital of the country concentrated that, in spite of
-the fall in the rate of interest, the lion's share of the national
-income is secured by a few. Each "dose" of capital may produce a smaller
-return than of old, but there are more "doses" of capital in the
-possession of the few capitalists, and these, in relation to the whole
-population, add but very slowly to their numbers, so slowly that we get
-the extraordinary congestion of capital revealed by the Death Duty
-returns and pictured in the table in pages 74 and 75.
-
-Thus the monopoly of capital is a more far-reaching thing than the
-monopoly of land, and it secures for a number of people almost as
-limited as the great land-owning class, a gross profit compared with
-which the sum of British land rents is insignificant.
-
-It is of interest to show, from a number of concrete examples, how the
-joint product of mental and manual labour comes to be shared up between
-those who work and those who wait.[28]
-
-The following particulars are extracted from recent balance-sheets of
-ten well-known industrial joint-stock companies, each of which is
-representative of hundreds of others. I shall distinguish the concerns
-by a letter only, for I am not criticizing individuals, but seeking to
-illustrate the causes which produce inequalities of wealth.
-
-Company A owns a well-known proprietary article. The balance-sheet
-examined is dated 1904. Its issued capital is £1,000,000, and there are
-no Debentures. A Profit and Loss a/c shows that the year's sales
-amounted to £411,000. The total expenditure incurred in manufacturing
-the year's production was only £218,000. There was therefore a balance
-of profit amounting to £193,000. That is to say, after paying all
-outgoings, including wages, salaries, rent, advertising, and so forth,
-produce which cost £218,000 to manufacture was sold for nearly twice as
-much. A dividend of 20 per cent. was paid for the year, and £30,000
-carried to reserve. What, then, did those get who worked to produce the
-goods which were sold for £411,000? Obviously, a part only of the
-£218,000, probably not more than £100,000. If it be taken as £100,000,
-we see that those who worked to make the products of the Company
-(including the brain work of managers, foremen, etc.) obtained only
-£100,000, while the shareholders of the Company took £192,000. A great
-slice of the increment went into the pockets of individuals who
-certainly had not earned it.
-
-Company B is a restaurant company and the balance-sheet is for 1903. It
-does not publish a Profit and Loss a/c. The issued capital is £189,000,
-but a great deal of this is "water," for bonus shares have been issued
-year after year. In the year under review the profits amounted to
-£76,000, or over 40 per cent. of the amount of the watered capital. We
-do not know what the Company pays in wages, but I doubt if it reaches
-£30,000 per annum, or one-half the amount of the year's profits. The
-employees are chiefly young girls who are paid a few pence per hour.
-This case is an exceedingly instructive one to the student of "unearned
-increment," because the restaurants are many in number and situated on
-most valuable sites. After paying the ground landlord's unearned
-increment, the sleeping partners in this concern gain, as they sleep, a
-hundredfold more unearned increment than the ground landlords.
-
-Company C sells an article of food. The balance-sheet is dated 1903. Its
-issued capital is £2,000,000, and there are £500,000 of 4½ per cent.
-debentures. Much of the capital is represented by goodwill. The net
-profit for the year, after paying Directors' fees, amounted to £139,000.
-In spite of the enormous capital, the sleeping "ordinary" partners get 7
-per cent. Again we do not know the wages paid, but it is hardly likely
-to be as much as the net profit of £139,000. If the employees get that
-sum, which is doubtful, the sleeping partners gain as much as all the
-workers who make and sell the products of the Company and manage and
-direct it.
-
-Company D is an engineering firm. The balance-sheet is dated 1904. The
-issued capital is £3,500,000 and there are £1,500,000 of 4 per cent.
-debentures. The net profits for the year were £636,000, which sufficed,
-after paying debenture interest, preference dividend, directors' fees,
-etc., to give the ordinary shareholders 15 per cent. It is not probable
-that the wages paid in a year are greater than the £636,000 of net
-profit, but if they amount to £1,000,000, which is unlikely, the workers
-of the Company gain little more than the shareholders.
-
-Company E is a restaurant company. Date of balance-sheet 1903. The
-issued capital is £325,000 and in addition there are £100,000 of
-debentures. The profits for the year amounted to £52,000. After paying
-debenture interest, and preference dividend, the ordinary shareholders
-got 16 per cent. The amount of wages paid is not known, but it is
-probably under £20,000. To take this liberal estimate, the workers get
-£20,000; the sleeping partners £52,000.
-
-Company F is an engineering concern; the balance-sheet is for 1903. The
-issued capital is £5,000,000 and there are debentures for £2,250,000.
-The net profits for the year amounted to £556,000. After paying
-debenture interest and preference dividend, 10 per cent. was paid to the
-ordinary shareholders. Again it is impossible to state with accuracy the
-amount of wages paid, but it is improbable that they exceed the amount
-of the net profit. 5,000 men at £80 per annum would come to £400,000.
-
-Company G is engaged in manufacturing cotton. Its capital is £10,000,000
-and there are debentures for over £1,000,000. The net profit (the
-balance-sheet is for 1903) amounted to £2,684,000, which is a return of
-25 per cent. on the entire capital. I do not know the wages bill, but if
-the company employed 5,000 people at £100 a year each, and 10,000 more
-at £50 a year each the total wages would be £1,000,000. Such employment
-would still leave the sleeping partners with nearly three times as much
-increment as the workpeople!
-
-Company H is a restaurant company, which fortunately gives us a profit
-and loss account. The balance-sheet is for 1904. The issued capital is
-£570,000 and in addition there are £300,000 of 4 per cent. debentures.
-The profit and loss account shows the following figures:
-
- Gross Profit on Trading £474,000
- Salaries, wages, _rents_, rates, repairs, horsekeep,
- maintenance and other expenses 327,000
- --------
- Profit £147,000
- ========
-
-Here we have the statement that included in the £327,000 of total
-expenses is a certain sum which was paid in salaries and wages. What was
-it? We do not know, but the company had 90 restaurants at each of which
-about 10 persons were engaged. That means 900 employees. If they were
-paid £40 a year each (as a matter of fact they were paid less than that)
-the wages would amount to £36,000. If, in addition, at headquarters,
-etc., 100 more people were employed at £100 each, that would mean
-another £10,000 a year or a total wages bill of £46,000. The net profits
-were £147,000. Therefore the investors got at least four times as much
-as those who worked to make the profits! As for the landlord's share, a
-glance at the figures shows that it must have been very small in
-proportion to that taken by the sleeping partners. Yet again the
-business is done upon some of the most valuable sites in the whole
-country. The business, indeed, is only valuable because of the sites,
-yet the capitalist and not the landlord takes the lion's share of the
-unearned increment.
-
-Company I is a manufacturing firm in an important trade. The
-balance-sheet is for 1903 and the directors complain of "_depression of
-trade_." The issued capital is £500,000 and there are debentures for
-£300,000. The net profit made was £70,000 which, after paying debenture
-interest, sufficed to provide 10 per cent. for the shareholders. If the
-company "finds work" for 1,000 men at an average of £70 per man, the
-profits, even in depression, are more than is paid to the workmen who
-make the profits.
-
-Company J works a great monopoly service under licence from the
-State.[29] The issued capital amounts to £5,500,000 and in addition
-there is Debenture Stock amounting to £3,570,000. In 1904 the income
-amounted to over £2,019,000 and the outlay, including rents, wages,
-materials, management, etc., to £1,155,000, leaving a net profit of
-£864,000. Of this the State took £186,000 for royalties, leaving a
-balance of £678,000 for the share and debenture holders. Thus the
-sleeping partners took far more than the entire earnings of managers,
-clerks, operators, and workmen. The number of individuals employed by
-this concern in 1904 was 30,000. As illustration of a fact already
-referred to, viz. that a great business needs but a small base, it may
-be added that the year's rents (building _plus_ land rents), taxes and
-insurance came to only £77,000. Thus, while the landlords of most
-valuable sites took something much less than £77,000, the capitalists
-took £864,000 out of the business done upon the sites.
-
-I have thus described the earning and distribution of a very
-considerable amount of income by 10 large industrial joint-stock
-companies. It should be observed that the profits made were won in a
-period of trade depression and falling wages, when short time and
-unemployment slew their thousands.
-
-The consideration of such companies is exceedingly instructive for
-another reason. In them the functions of capital and of business ability
-are usually divorced. Their shares are, as to a great part, held by mere
-sleeping partners, while the business ability is supplied by managers or
-managing directors who, while they may have a certain proprietary
-interest in the company, rarely own more than a small part of the
-capital. In the cases quoted, after payment for both labour and skill in
-management, great and disproportionate sums remain over to reward those
-who "wait."
-
-The companies quoted cannot be regarded as exceptional cases. The reader
-has but to glance from day to day at the reports of company meetings
-published in the daily newspapers to note the steady manufacture of
-dividends by industrial and other joint-stock concerns. In 1908 the
-number of joint-stock companies registered in the United Kingdom and
-believed to be trading was 45,000 and the paid-up capital
-£2,100,000,000. In 1908-9, the corresponding financial year, 37,937
-"public companies" were assessed to income tax and declared their
-profits at £291,000,000. From this £291,000,000 we have to make certain
-deductions before we arrive at the profits of ordinary joint-stock
-companies, for the total includes railway companies and some banks,
-waterworks, etc., not registered with the Registrar of Joint-stock
-Companies. Allowing £65,000,000 on this score we have £226,000,000 left
-as the profit made by joint-stock companies having a nominal capital of
-£2,100,000,000. Many of these companies have debenture capital but, on
-the other hand, it is probable that, of the £2,100,000,000, fully
-one-third is "water"—exaggerated goodwills, promoters' profit,
-underwriters' commissions, bonus shares and the rest of it. Anyone who
-is interested in this point should examine the yearly return of
-companies registered which now shows not only the amount of capital
-"considered as paid up" but the actual amount subscribed in cash and the
-payments for underwriting. In a recent return I find such items as this:
-
- Capital considered as paid up £76,683
- Minimum Subscription required £7
- Amount allotted before beginning business £16,729
-
-and this:
-
- Capital considered as paid up £25,000
- Minimum Subscription required £8,000
- Commission for underwriting 25 per cent.
- Amount allotted before commencing business £8,010
-
-That is how a great part of the £2,100,000,000 of registered joint-stock
-"_paid up_" capital is made.
-
-Setting dummy capital against debentures, we see that, after payment of
-wages to the workmen and foremen, after the payment of salaries to
-clerks and officials, after the reward of business ability by the
-payment of managers or managing directors, after the payment of
-royalties to patentees where such were payable, after the payment of all
-rents exacted by the owners of area, there remained a profit of
-£226,000,000, being over 10 per cent. on the total paid-up capital,
-watered and unwatered, of all the joint-stock companies registered in
-the United Kingdom.
-
-We have also to remember that a large amount of unearned increment
-accrues to many of the sleeping partners who draw the £226,000,000
-through the appreciation of their securities on the stock markets. Thus
-the £1 shares of Company H referred to above were quoted in July 1905 at
-£6 each, which means that either the present or past holders of the
-shares gained not only handsome interest, but saw their capital
-increased sixfold without any exertion upon their part. This creation of
-a market in the profits of usury has terribly unfortunate results for
-the employees of joint-stock companies. To the original shareholders who
-sold at a huge premium the 30 per cent. dividend was 30 per cent. To the
-new shareholder who pays the price which has arisen from the usurious
-profits, the 30 per cent. dividend is only 4 per cent. or 5 per cent. He
-goes to the shareholders' meeting clamouring for his 5 per cent., and
-eager to resist any suggestion that the wages of those who make his
-profits should be increased. The very success of the company thus
-becomes an argument not for the increase of wage but for a reduction of
-expenses. The managing director knows that he has got to face a body of
-shareholders who, for the most part, rate a high dividend as a low one.
-This point was illustrated in my own experience recently in a very
-striking way. Writing in the "Daily News" I commented upon the small
-wages paid by a well-known company paying a dividend of 30 per cent. per
-annum. This roused the indignation of a shareholder in the company who
-wrote me a letter the chief point of which ran as follow:
-
- "Most of the shareholders have paid £6 or £7 per share, and so get a
- return of not more than 5 per cent."
-
-So one set of taskmasters passes out of the game with its tremendous
-gains, and is succeeded by another set. To the latter the poor
-workpeople are not churning out 30 per cent. but a mere 5 per cent. When
-the new shareholders enter their premises they see easy work done by
-overpaid people who make dividends of only 5 per cent. If, at a
-shareholders' meeting (it has happened at company meetings) a
-shareholder pleads for higher wages for the employees, he is howled
-down. They are earning only 5 per cent!
-
-Another illustration is to be found in railway stocks, many of which
-have (1) been deliberately watered, and (2) risen in price on the
-market, so that, while railway men are badly paid, the present holders
-of the stocks are apparently making small profits. Many railway
-companies have enlarged their ordinary capital by the delightfully
-simple process of multiplying by two. £100 of original stock has been
-changed into £100 of "preferred" and £100 of "deferred." This has not
-been done behind the scenes, but boldly and with the permission of our
-rich men's parliament. As a consequence it is made to appear that the
-net receipts of railways are only about 3½ per cent. of their "paid-up"
-capitals. But the nominal capitals have not been "paid-up"; and even in
-so far as the original capital is concerned much of it is unreal. Thus
-the magnitude of the injustice which they suffer is hidden from railway
-servants. They risk their lives for the public every day and what do
-they get for it? In 1908, the 27 leading railway companies paid in wages
-only £30,000,000, or only 25s. per employee per week! These 27 companies
-own nearly all the railway lines, employ nearly all the railway servants
-and make nearly all the profits assessed by the Inland Revenue
-Commissioners. And what do these profits amount to? As I have shown in
-Chapter 5, they amount to £43,000,000 per annum, or far more than is
-paid in wages in one of the most dangerous and most useful of all
-occupations.
-
-It is instructive to note how the joint-stock company promoter
-calculates the wages factor in forming his plans. I recently had sent to
-me the prospectus of a gas company, formed to take over and enlarge an
-existing concern. It began by picturing the fat dividend "earned" by
-other gas companies, thus:—
-
-The profitable nature of the Gas Companies, and the favour in which
-their Shares are held by Investors, is shown by the following
-particulars, which are obtained from the Stock Exchange Official List,
-Stock Exchange Year Book, and other Official sources:
-
-The Croydon Gas Company pay 14 per cent., and the £100 Ordinary Stock is
-quoted at £320.
-
-The Wakefield Gas Company pay 11½ per cent., and the £25 Ordinary Shares
-are quoted at £63.
-
-The Brentford Gas Company pay 12 per cent., and the £100 Consolidated
-Stock is quoted at £250.
-
-The Staines and Egham District Gas Company pay 13 per cent., and the £25
-Ordinary Shares are quoted at £60.
-
-While the Eastbourne Gas Company's A and C Stock pay dividends of 15 per
-cent. respectively, and the £10 Shares are now standing at 165 per cent.
-premium.
-
-What all men who live by work and not by dividends should note is, how
-such beautiful results are arrived at. Inquiry will show that common
-"gas" is extracted from certain suitable varieties of coal by the hard
-labour of individuals employed in the handling of the inventions of the
-dead. It is hard work and exhausting work. If the shareholders, who only
-stand and wait, receive such princely dividends, what is the share of
-those who make the gas?
-
-The company prospectus referred to is good enough to reveal the nature
-of the division of the spoils. Its own statement is as follows:—
-
-Taking the consumption of Gas at only 30,000,000 cubic feet per annum,
-and after allowing for the total cost of Coals, Labour, etc., and
-crediting the sales for Coke and Residuals, Rates, and Taxes, Materials,
-etc., the income of the Company should be as follows:
-
- By sale of 30,000,000 feet of Gas at 5s. 10d. per 1,000
- cubic feet (present price being 6s. 10d.) £8,750 0 0
-
- " sale of Coke, Tar, Breeze, and Residuals, including
- Meter Rentals 1,813 0 0
- -----------
- £10,563 0 0
-
- To purchases:
-
- " 3,000 Tons of Coal at 17s. 6d. per
- ton £2,650 0 0
-
- " Purification, 2d. per 1,000 feet 250 0 0
-
- " Repairs and Renewals to Works
- and Machinery, 4d. per 1,000
- feet of Gas made 500 0 0
-
- " Repairs, Services to Mains, Lamp
- Columns, and Meters, 2d. per
- 1,000 feet of Gas made 250 0 0
-
- " Directors' Remuneration, Secretary
- and Manager's Salary, Wages
- at works, Rates and Taxes, etc.,
- and Miscellaneous Expenses 1,353 0 0
- ---------
- 5,003 0 0
- ----------
- Net Profit £5,560 0 0
-
- To pay 6 per cent. on 15,000
- Preference shares at 6 per cent £900 0 0
-
- To pay 12 per cent. on 15,000 Ordinary
- shares at 12 per cent. 1,800 0 0
- --------- 2,700 0 0
- ---------
- Leaving a surplus, available for further dividends on
- the Ordinary Shares and for Reserve Fund £2,860 0 0
- ----------
-
-The company expects to sell its gas and by-products for £10,563. It
-further expects that its entire outlay in producing the £10,563 worth of
-gas, etc., will be only £5,003, leaving a net profit of £5,560! Now let
-us look for the estimated _remuneration of labour_.
-
-Here are the lines:—
-
- To directors' remuneration, secretary and manager's
- salary, wages at works, rates and taxes, etc.,
- and miscellaneous expenses £1,353
-
- And the repair and renewal items, which include
- some wages 750
- ------
- Total £2,103
- ======
-
-So that £2,103 per annum covers, not only wages at works, salaries,
-directors' fees, but repairs, rates and taxes, and miscellaneous
-expenses, which must include postages, stationery, etc. It is obvious,
-therefore, that the total reward of all bodily and mental labour, all
-furnace-feeding and more or less scientific management, all work
-whatsoever connected with the gas-making and repairs is calculated by
-the promoters to cost something less than £2,103. Therefore, it is
-actually promised to investors, in the light of day, that they can take
-out of the product of the company's labour profits amounting to £5,560,
-while all the workers, including managers, are to take only about
-£1,500. And nothing is more certain than that, in the present condition
-of what we prettily call the "labour market," thousands of men, with
-thousands of women and children dependent upon them, would clamour to
-have the chance to take a share of the £1,500 while working to make
-£5,560 for the investors. Nor is it that we are merely examining the
-extravagant promises of a prospectus. There is nothing impossible in
-this scheme; the company has a good thing, and it is bound to make fine
-profits. I have given above a few specimens of gas dividends. Here are
-some more:
-
- Nominal
- Value Price
- Name of Company. of Shares Dividend. of Shares
- or Stock. (1905).
- The British Gas Light Co., Ltd. £20 10 p.c. £41
- The Ipswich Gas L. Co. (A Stk.) 10 13½ p.c. 28
- Eastbourne Gas Co. (C Stock) 10 15 p.c. 28
- Harrogate Gas Co. (A Stock) 100 17 p.c. 340
- Aldershot Gas and Water Co. 10 11½ p.c. 23
- Portsea Is. Gas Lgt. Co. (B Shs.) 50 13 p.c. 127
- European Gas Co., Ltd. 10 11 p.c. 23
- Bournemouth Gas and Water Co. 10 14 p.c. 30
- Watford Gas and Coke Co. 100 13½ p.c. 276
-
-In each of these cases the remuneration of labour is much less than the
-remuneration of those who "wait."
-
-Thus the records of public companies place at our disposal a very fair
-picture of distribution as it is. We cease to wonder at the terrible
-error in the distribution of the nation's income. It is brought home to
-us that a few individuals, through a monopoly of capital, have a great
-economic advantage over the multitude of their fellows. That it is
-impossible to argue that the error of distribution accords, even
-roughly, with the intrinsic value of the various orders of services, is
-sufficiently shown in the case of these companies, for their gross
-profit is usually subject to deduction for the reward of brain-power
-before assessment by the Income Tax Commissioners. We see that it is not
-any form of ability, either in design or in organization (which is but
-design) or in manual effort which secures the largest rewards in
-industry. It is capital, as capital, which takes the lion's share of the
-product of the mental and manual labour exercised upon the small area of
-land which serves for the basis of our industries.[30] The landlord's
-share, although actually great, is relatively small. In agriculture the
-conditions are different. It is the landlord, as landlord, who takes the
-lion's share of the product of the cultivated acres of the United
-Kingdom.
-
-[Footnote 28: I use this phrase with intention. Interest, once defined
-as the reward of "abstinence," is now usually explained by the
-economists of the schools to be the reward of "waiting." "Abstinence"
-has been laughed out of court.]
-
-[Footnote 29: The State has now agreed to buy out this undertaking.]
-
-[Footnote 30: In view of the fact that the Single Tax doctrines of Henry
-George are still sedulously propagated in this country it is of interest
-to quote here the following passage from one of Mr George's latest
-works:
-
-"_We have no fear of capital, regarding it as the natural handmaiden of
-labour; we look on interest itself as natural and just; we would set no
-limit to accumulation, nor impose on the rich any burden that is not
-equally placed on the poor; we see no evil in competition, but deem
-unrestricted competition to be as necessary to the health of the
-industrial and social organisms as the free circulation of the blood is
-to the health of the bodily organism—to be the agency whereby the
-fullest co-operation is to be secured. We would simply take for the
-community what belongs to the community, the value that attaches to land
-by the growth of the community; leave sacredly to the individual all
-that belongs to the individual; and, treating necessary monopolies as
-functions of the State, abolish all restrictions and prohibitions
-save those required for public health, safety, morals, and
-convenience._"—From "The Condition of Labour" by Henry George. Published
-by Swan, Sonnenschein, 1891. Pages 91 and 92.
-
-This gospel of unrestricted competition (in the same volume Henry George
-chided Pope Leo XIII. for counselling the State to restrict the
-employment of women and children) is actually preached to the poor as a
-solution of the problem of poverty.]
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IX
- PROFITS, BAD TRADE AND UNEMPLOYMENT
-
-
-If we look at the amounts of profit assessed under the income tax during
-the last fifteen years we are struck with the steady growth of the
-figures:—
-
-GROSS PROFITS ASSESSED TO INCOME TAX
-
- 1893-4 £673,700,000
- 1894-5 657,100,000
- 1895-6 677,800,000
- 1896-7 704,700,000
- 1897-8 734,500,000
- 1898-9 762,700,000
- 1899-1900 791,700,000
- 1900-1 833,300,000
- 1901-2 867,000,000
- 1902-3 879,600,000
- 1903-4 902,800,000
- 1904-5 912,100,000
- 1905-6 925,200,000
- 1906-7 943,700,000
- 1907-8 980,100,000
- 1908-9 1,010,000,000
-
-These figures have been widely quoted, and with reason, as indicative of
-rapidly growing prosperity. We see that the gross assessment to income
-tax has actually grown by over £336,000,000 since 1894. We could have no
-better proof of the growth of the national product which is divided up
-amongst us.
-
-There is but one set-back in the table. It occurred in the year 1894,
-when the total gross assessment fell by £16,600,000, and the assessment
-under Schedule D (Trades and Professions) fell by £16,000,000. This
-fall, of course, was only an apparent one caused by an alteration in the
-limit of exemption. Since that date there has been remarkable growth.
-Since "Riches and Poverty" first appeared (1905) the growth has
-proceeded very rapidly indeed.
-
-It is of interest to inquire into the movement of wages and employment
-during these years of remarkable prosperity. Did wages rise and was
-employment constant?
-
-In "Riches and Poverty," edition 1905, pp. 99 _et seq._, I wrote:
-
-"Let us take some typical trades, and examine the rates of wages paid in
-these years of rapidly increasing profits.
-
-"The figures about to be quoted are those collected by the Labour
-Department of the Board of Trade.
-
-"London carpenters in 1894 were paid 9½d. per hour. In 1897 the rate
-rose to 10d. and in 1903 to 10½d. In Birmingham in 1894 the rate was 9d.
-and in 1903 9½d. In Belfast the rise between 1894 and 1903 was from 7¾d.
-to 8½d.
-
-"Bricklayers' labourers in London were paid 6½d. per hour in 1894 and
-7d. in 1903. In Manchester the rate remained constant at 6d. per hour.
-In Birmingham there was a rise from 6d. to 6½d. Masons' labourers in
-Glasgow have been paid since 1894 a constant rate of 5½d.
-
-"Turning to coal-hewers we get some considerable changes, which are best
-shown in tabular form:—
-
- NOMINAL DAILY EARNINGS OF COAL HEWERS
- 1894-1903
-
- || | | Sth. Staffs. |
- ||Northumberland.| Durham. | and East | West
- || | | Worcestershire.| Scotland.
- || _s._ _d._ |_s._ _d._| _s._ _d._ |_s._ _d._
- 1894|| 5 9 | 5 5 | 4 8 | 6 0
- 1897|| 5 0 | 4 11 | 4 4 | 4 6
- 1900|| 6 0 | 5 10 | 4 8 | 6 3
- 1901|| 7 9 | 7 5 | 5 0 | 8 0
- 1903|| 6 0 | 5 10 | 5 0 | 5 9
-
-"In the ten years there has been a considerable variation, but the high
-rates of 1901 were brief in duration. Coal-hewers' wages have now gone
-back almost to the level of 1894.
-
-"Engine fitters in London earned 38s. in 1894 and 39s. in 1903. In
-Birmingham and Manchester the rates rose from 34s. in 1894 to 36s. in
-1903. In Newcastle there was a greater rise in the same period, from
-31s. 6d. to 36s.
-
-"Ironfounders in London obtained 38s. in 1894, 40s. to 42s. in 1900 and
-40s. in 1903. In Manchester the rates were much the same. In Birmingham
-36s. was paid in 1894 and 38s. in 1903.
-
-"Compositors in London were paid 38s. in 1894 and 39s. in 1903. In
-Manchester the rate remained constant at 35s. In Glasgow the rate
-remained constant at 34s.
-
-"Agricultural labourers in the Eastern Counties obtained 11s. 1d. per
-week in 1894 and a gradual increase to 13s. 1d. in 1903. In the North
-near coal there was a rise from 17s. 5d. to 18s. 4d. In the Midlands
-13s. 5d. was paid in 1894 and 14s. 6d. in 1903.
-
-"Textile wages are best expressed by an index number. Taking the rate of
-1903 as 100 the rate paid in 1894 was nearly 95 per cent. of that of
-1903. This increase refers to cotton spinners and weavers and linen and
-jute operatives taken together.
-
-"A mere recital of the foregoing facts is sufficient to show that the
-rise in wages in 1894-1903 was at a much lower rate than the growth of
-profits in the same period."
-
-Revising this work for 1910, I regret to say that the changes in the
-above-quoted rates have been so few that it is not worth while to
-rewrite what I set down five years ago. Wage rates have been almost
-stationary in the interim, and the changes that have been made in the
-above figures are too insignificant to be worth recording.
-
-The matter is best dealt with by setting out the Board of Trade wages
-index numbers. In the important table on page 112 I have contrasted the
-representative wage index numbers prepared by the Board of Trade with
-index numbers representing the gross assessments to income tax. In a
-similar table in "Riches and Poverty," 1905 edition, I did not take into
-consideration the growth of the number of income tax payers. In the
-present calculation I have assumed a growth of income tax payers of
-10,000 a year throughout the period, which must be very near the truth.
-
-It will be seen that, representing the profits of 1900 by 100 and
-calculating the profits of other years as percentages of 100, the total
-profits index number rises from 86.8 in 1893 to 112.5 in 1908.
-
-The wages are treated in the same way, the rates of the years before and
-after 1900 being expressed as percentages of the rates of that year. It
-will be found that the index number expressing the unweighted average of
-the building, coal-mining, engineering and textile trades, and
-agriculture rose from 90.1 in 1893 to 101.0 in 1908.
-
-It is a striking contrast:—
-
-
- PROFITS AND WAGES CONTRASTED
- (From Table on page 112).
-
- Profits. Wages.
- Per cent. of those Per cent. of those
- of 1900. of 1900.
- 1893 86.8 90.1
- 1900 100.0 100.0
- 1908 112.5 101.0
-
-It should be remembered that the income tax assessments are largely made
-upon the average of the profits of the three years preceding the year of
-assessment (see Chapter 21), and that the income tax has been better
-collected in recent years, but even when allowance is made for this the
-figures remain remarkable.
-
-The table does much less than justice to the growth of profits, for this
-reason. As will be seen by the table on page 37, the growth of income
-tax payers has been chiefly in the region of small salaries, which (see
-p. 36) average about £200 a year. The addition of 10,000 income payers
-at £200 a year adds but £2,000,000 to a year's aggregate assessment. But
-the addition of 10,000 £200 income tax payers in a year, little as it
-adds to the aggregate, waters down the average income tax income (col.
-C, p. 112), and so lowers the Profits Index Number. If one could
-separate the small salary earners from the table, _profits would show a
-much more decided growth_, considerable as is the rise in the index
-number as modified by the small fry.
-
-On the other hand, the Wage Index Number deals with certain
-trades—mining, textile, engineering, building, agriculture—which have
-certainly gained more in wage rates in the period than a great mass of
-labour outside the groups named. Therefore, while the Profits Index
-Number minimizes the growth of profits, the Wage Index Number
-exaggerates the growth of wages as a whole. On the latter point, see
-Chapter 2.
-
- TAXED PROFITS AND WAGES CONTRASTED
-
- The Wage Index Numbers are those of the Board of Trade (Cd. 4954). The
- Profit Index Numbers are based upon the Inland Revenue Assessments. The
- Financial Year 1893-4 is taken to correspond with the Calendar Year
- 1893.
-
- _Note._—The wages and profits of 1900 are represented by 100. The wages
- and profits of the other years are expressed as percentages of those of
- 1900.
-
- ---------+-----------------------------------------------------+-----------
- | PROFITS. | WAGES.
- +---------------+-------------+-----------+-----------+-----------
- | A | B | C | D | E
- YEAR. | Gross | Probable | Average | Index No. |
- | Assessments | Number of | Gross | of | Wages
- | to | Income Tax | Income of | Incomes. | Index No.
- | Income Tax. | Payers. |Tax Payers.|1900 = 100.|1900 = 100.
- ---------+---------------+-------------+-----------+-----------+-----------
- | £ | NUMBER. | £ | PER CENT. | PER CENT.
- 1893 | 674,000,000 | 950,000 | 709 | 86.8 | 90.1
- 1894 | 657,000,000 | 960,000 | 684 | 83.8 | 89.5
- 1895 | 678,000,000 | 970,000 | 698 | 85.5 | 89.1
- 1896 | 705,000,000 | 980,000 | 719 | 88.1 | 89.9
- 1897 | 734,000,000 | 990,000 | 741 | 90.8 | 90.8
- 1898 | 763,000,000 | 1,000,000 | 763 | 93.5 | 93.2
- 1899 | 792,000,000 | 1,010,000 | 784 | 96.0 | 95.4
- 1900 | 833,000,000 | 1,020,000 | 816 | 100.0 | 100.0
- 1901 | 867,000,000 | 1,030,000 | 841 | 103.0 | 99.0
- 1902 | 880,000,000 | 1,040,000 | 846 | 103.6 | 97.8
- 1903 | 903,000,000 | 1,050,000 | 860 | 105.3 | 97.2
- 1904 | 912,000,000 | 1,060,000 | 860 | 105.3 | 96.7
- 1905 | 925,000,000 | 1,070,000 | 864 | 105.8 | 97.0
- 1906 | 944,000,000 | 1,080,000 | 874 | 107.1 | 98.3
- 1907 | 980,000,000 | 1,090,000 | 899 | 110.1 | 101.7
- 1908 | 1,010,000,000 | 1,100,000 | 918 | 112.5 | 101.0
- ---------+---------------+-------------+-----------+-----------+-----------
- Increase| 49.8 | 15.7 | 29.5 | 29.5 | 12.0
- 1893-1908| Per Cent. | Per Cent. | Per Cent.| Per Cent. | Per Cent.
- +---------------+-------------+-----------+-----------+-----------
- Increase| 21.2 | 7.8 | 12.5 | 12.5 | 1.0
- 1900-1908| Per Cent. | Per Cent. | Per Cent.| Per Cent. | Per Cent.
- ---------+---------------+-------------+-----------+-----------+-----------
-
-[Illustration: PROFITS AND WAGES, 1893-1908
-(see Table on p. 112)]
-
-Thus in recent years the proportion of the national income taken by
-labour made no gain upon the proportion taken by capital. On the
-contrary, labour took a diminished share of the increased product.
-
-Since the Boer War labour has barely retained the increase which it
-obtained between 1894 and 1900.
-
-The seriousness of the position is increased by the great rise in the
-cost of living, as the following figures testify:
-
- WAGES AND COST OF LIVING
-
- Board of Trade
- Board of Trade Index Number
- Wages Index No. Retail Price of
- Food in London.
-
- 1895 89.1 93.0
- 1900 100.0 100.0
- 1908 101.0 109.0
- ----- -----
- Increase per cent. 13.3 17.2
- ==== ====
-
-Thus, real wages have actually fallen since 1895.
-
-Again, as has been already remarked, the Board of Trade Wages Index
-Number deals with trades which on the whole have gained more than wages
-generally. Railway wages have been stationary for years, even while the
-cost of living has been going up. On the German and Swiss national lines
-the men have been granted higher wages in compensation for increased
-costs; here our railway companies abuse their monopolistic position to
-the uttermost in regard to wages as in regard to the public welfare.
-
-In addition to reduced rates of wages in slump years, the working
-classes are made to bear the brunt of depression through (1) "short
-time" or partial unemployment, and (2) dismissal.
-
- UNEMPLOYMENT.—TABLE SHOWING, FOR THE END OF EACH MONTH IN 1900-1910,
- THE NUMBER OF MEMBERS OUT-OF-WORK IN THE TRADE UNIONS WHICH PAY
- "UNEMPLOYMENT BENEFIT." THESE FIGURES DO NOT INCLUDE MEMBERS RECEIVING
- STRIKE OR SICK PAY
-
- ---------+-----------+------+-----++---------+-----------+------+-----
- Date. |Membership.|Number| Per || Date. |Membership.|Number| Per
- | |out of|Cent.|| | |out of|Cent.
- | |Work. | || | |Work. |
- ---------+-----------+------+-----++---------+-----------+------+-----
- 1900. | | | || 1902. | | |
- January | 521,833 |14,252| 2.7 ||July | 550,169 |21,859| 4.0
- February | 524,872 |15,114| 2.9 ||August | 551,565 |24,549| 4.5
- March | 524,199 |11,821| 2.3 ||September| 553,870 |27,522| 5.0
- April | 525,865 |13,075| 2.5 ||October | 548,442 |27,270| 5.0
- May | 531,608 |12,645| 2.4 ||November | 549,197 |26,454| 4.8
- June | 533,119 |13,992| 2.6 ||December | 552,415 |30,302| 5.5
- July | 533,499 |14,566| 2.7 || 1903. | | |
- August | 534,331 |15,971| 3.0 ||January | 547,671 |27,685| 5.1
- September| 536,242 |19,520| 3.6 ||February | 549,843 |26,471| 4.8
- October | 535,668 |17,750| 3.3 ||March | 559,129 |24,096| 4.3
- November | 539,175 |17,515| 3.2 ||April | 554,901 |22,665| 4.1
- December | 540,102 |21,496| 4.0 ||May | 554,524 |22,102| 4.0
- 1901. | | | ||June | 556,695 |24,804| 4.5
- January | 545,539 |21,682| 4.9 ||July | 555,743 |27,394| 4.9
- February | 543,487 |21,159| 3.6 ||August | 561,946 |30,751| 5.5
- March | 544,688 |19,618| 3.8 ||September| 558,508 |32,179| 5.8
- April | 547,197 |21,018| 3.6 ||October | 555,105 |32,358| 5.8
- May | 544,460 |19,487| 3.4 ||November | 562,954 |33,614| 6.0
- June | 541,651 |18,605| 3.4 ||December | 559,897 |37,501| 6.7
- July | 539,422 |18,164| 3.9 || 1904. | | |
- August | 543,971 |21,025| 3.7 ||January | 561,226 |36,767| 6.6
- September| 542,917 |20,180| 3.7 ||February | 563,824 |34,388| 6.1
- October | 544,827 |19,995| 3.8 ||March | 567,232 |33,950| 6.0
- November | 545,832 |20,614| 3.6 ||April | 561,611 |33,706| 6.0
- December | 554,018 |25,703| 4.6 ||May | 571,384 |36,002| 6.3
- 1902. | | | ||June | 573,373 |34,066| 5.9
- January | 553,218 |24,470| 4.4 ||July | 568,272 |34,494| 6.1
- February | 561,708 |24,072| 4.3 ||August | 575,061 |37,006| 6.4
- March | 551,270 |20,241| 3.7 ||September| 575,575 |39,005| 6.8
- April | 550,958 |21,349| 3.9 ||October | 576,642 |39,396| 6.8
- May | 549,023 |21,926| 4.0 ||November | 577,268 |40,244| 7.0
- June | 544,893 |22,832| 4.2 ||December | 573,726 |43,435| 7.6
-
- UNEMPLOYMENT—_continued_
-
- ---------+-----------+------+-----++---------+-----------+------+-----
- Date. |Membership.|Number| Per || Date. |Membership.|Number| Per
- | |out of|Cent.|| | |out of|Cent.
- | |Work. | || | | |Work.
- ---------+-----------+------+-----++---------+-----------+------+-----
- 1905. | | | || 1908. | | |
- January | 578,910 |39,315| 6.8 ||January | 649,789 |40,580| 6.2
- February | 578,708 |35,778| 6.2 ||February | 639,073 |40,900| 6.4
- March | 578,684 |32,558| 5.6 ||March | 639,716 |43,853| 6.9
- April | 575,968 |32,348| 5.6 ||April | 638,237 |48,035| 7.5
- May | 575,512 |29,487| 5.1 ||May | 627,613 |49,515| 7.9
- June | 576,346 |29,995| 5.2 ||June | 653,327 |53,766| 8.2
- July | 576,472 |29,845| 5.2 ||July | 646,511 |53,163| 8.2
- August | 578,444 |31,046| 5.4 ||August | 648,585 |57,912| 8.9
- September| 578,542 |30,696| 5.3 ||September| 593,444 |55,793| 9.4
- October | 584,288 |29,560| 5.0 ||October | 591,053 |56,200| 9.5
- November | 586,040 |27,769| 4.7 ||November | 644,770 |58,349| 9.1
- December | 581,630 |28,734| 4.9 ||December | 679,060 |61,619| 9.1
- 1906. | | | || 1909. | | |
- January | 588,121 |27,614| 4.7 ||January | 688,588 |59,786| 8.7
- February | 586,956 |26,064| 4.4 ||February | 696,688 |58,670| 8.4
- March | 585,376 |22,465| 3.8 ||March | 700,654 |57,450| 8.2
- April | 582,201 |21,037| 3.6 ||April | 700,867 |57,250| 8.2
- May | 590,919 |21,080| 3.6 ||May | 699,779 |55,473| 7.9
- June | 593,830 |21,785| 3.7 ||June | 698,284 |55,331| 7.9
- July | 595,637 |21,464| 3.6 ||July | 693,848 |54,877| 7.9
- August | 596,010 |22,528| 3.8 ||August | 697,268 |53,918| 7.7
- September| 598,611 |22,826| 3.8 ||September| 695,720 |51,749| 7.4
- October | 600,122 |26,313| 4.4 ||October | 694,930 |49,664| 7.1
- November | 604,370 |27,446| 4.5 ||November | 696,415 |45,569| 6.5
- December | 597,198 |29,212| 4.9 ||December | 692,153 |45,963| 6.6
- 1907. | | | || 1910. | | |
- January | 617,911 |25,990| 4.2 ||January | 694,456 |47,259| 6.8
- February | 618,574 |23,932| 3.9 ||February | 701,252 |40,121| 5.7
- March | 618,230 |22,058| 3.6 ||March | 701,766 |36,543| 5.2
- April | 619,591 |20,310| 3.3 ||April | 699,932 |30,475| 4.4
- May | 624,993 |21,081| 3.4 ||May | 703,439 |29,787| 4.2
- June | 622,584 |22,189| 3.6 ||June | 702,522 |25,866| 3.7
- July | 631,158 |23,291| 3.7 ||July | 698,888 |26,664| 3.8
- August | 632,068 |25,458| 4.0 || | | |
- September| 631,241 |28,914| 4.6 || | | |
- October | 638,788 |30,079| 4.7 || | | |
- November | 639,678 |32,010| 5.0 || | | |
- December | 644,298 |39,343| 6.1 || | | |
-
-As to the amount of short time worked between 1900 and 1910, we have no
-adequate information, but as to unemployment the evidences have forced
-themselves upon public attention in every part of the country.
-
-How ruthlessly the workman is made to bear the chief burden of bad trade
-and how, even in the best years, there is always a surplus of unemployed
-labour, can be clearly shown.
-
-There are about 2,000,000 men and women Trade Unionists in the United
-Kingdom, belonging to some 1,300 Trade Unions, and forming but about
-one-seventh of the manual workers of the United Kingdom. Some of these
-Unions pay "unemployed benefits," and are therefore enabled to record
-accurately how many of their members are out-of-work. The membership of
-these particular Unions is about 650,000. The Board of Trade collects
-from them, monthly, details of the members out-of-work and these details
-are published in the official "Labour Gazette." From that publication I
-have compiled the table on pages 116-117, which shows faithfully, so far
-as about half a million of our workmen are concerned, how capital deals
-with labour. It covers the years since 1900, and continues the record
-printed on pp. 106-107 of "Riches and Poverty," edition 1905.
-
-The period examined covers a complete trade cycle, with its fat years
-and lean years. I think the reader cannot fail to be struck with the
-extraordinary variations in the state of employment shown in the table.
-Even in the best year of the period, 1900, and in March, the best month
-of that year, 11,821 members were receiving out-of-work pay out of a
-total of 524,199, and before a month had passed 1,200 more men had been
-discharged. By January, 1901, the number of unemployed exceeded 21,000,
-or 4.0 per cent. By the end of 1901 the employers had rid themselves of
-26,000 men out of 554,000. Throughout 1902 the number receiving
-out-of-work pay was round about 25,000 at the end of each month, the
-figure rising to 30,000 in December. By the end of 1903 another 7,000
-were discharged, and in December 1904 the total rose to over 43,000 out
-of 574,000, or 7.6 per cent. In 1905 there was improvement, continuing
-in 1906-7. At the end of 1907, however, 39,000 out of 664,000 were out
-of work, and a year later 62,000 out of 679,000, or 9 per cent., were
-unemployed. 1909 saw recovery, which has happily continued until now
-(August 1910). At the end of July 1910 the unemployment rate had fallen
-to 3.8 per cent.
-
-These facts relate, not to casual labourers, but to the flower of our
-skilled workmen—to a class of men who are least likely to suffer (1)
-because they are the most needed instruments of capital, and (2) because
-they are organized and best able to resist injustice. If we were able to
-set out the facts relating to all manual labourers we should probably
-get a picture even more distressing. It is at any rate unlikely that,
-amongst manual labourers as a whole, employment is better than in the
-chief Trade Unions.
-
-In December 1904, the Hackney Town Council conducted a census of the
-unemployed of Hackney. It was carried out in a very sensible way. At a
-cost of about £150 every house in the borough was canvassed between
-December 12th, 1904, and January 31st, 1905, and particulars obtained
-from every person over 16 years of age found to be unemployed. The
-results were:—
-
- Population
- (1901). Houses. Unemployed.
-
- North Hackney 45,110 9,152 465
- Central " 69,368 9,837 1,090
- South " 104,794 14,751 2,963
- ------- ------ -----
- Totals 219,272 33,740 4,518
- ======= ====== =====
-
-South Hackney, which contains the poor Homerton Ward, of course gave the
-worst results. The unemployed in South Hackney actually numbered 3 per
-cent. of its whole population, men, women, and children! Taking the
-borough as a whole, including well-to-do Stamford Hill, the unemployed
-rate came out at nearly 7 per cent. of the "employable" population of
-all classes. 530 cases of "pawning and selling home" were discovered.
-Thus, for all classes of workers in Hackney, the unemployment rate was
-almost precisely the same as the rate in the Trade Unions paying
-unemployment benefit. It is also worthy of note that, out of a total
-number of 4,315 males unemployed, as many as 1,477 were "labourers," and
-1,167 of these "general labourers." These facts, impressive as they are,
-amount to an understatement of the case, however. Many of the
-unemployed, from feelings of delicacy, failed to record their condition
-for fear of public attention being directed to them personally. Mr
-Councillor Fairchild of Hackney told me that he knew of forty cases of
-unemployment not returned in the census. This goes to show that we are
-justified in taking the unemployed Trade Union rate as really
-representative of the whole body of labour. While, on the one hand, it
-excludes postmen, railway servants, policemen, and others who have quite
-regular work, it does not include the great mass of "labourers" and
-other casual workers whose state of employment must always be worse than
-that of the men belonging to the benefit-paying Trade Unions.
-
-It is well to point out, for the facts are little known, the enormous
-sums expended by the chief Trade Unions in out-of-work pay. For recent
-years the figures have been:—
-
- EXPENDITURE ON UNEMPLOYED BENEFIT BY CERTAIN TRADE UNIONS HAVING A
- TOTAL MEMBERSHIP OF ABOUT 650,000
-
- Year. Expenditure.
-
- 1898 £234,000
- 1899 185,000
- 1900 261,000
- 1901 325,000
- 1902 429,000
- 1903 516,000
- 1904 655,000
- 1905 523,000
- 1906 424,000
- 1907 466,000
-
-Thus, even in the best recent years, 1899 and 1900, these Unions had to
-pay out £185,000 and £261,000 respectively to sustain members
-out-of-work. Modern industry works with a constant margin of unemployed
-labour, a margin which ever tends to depress wages and to place the
-employed at a disadvantage in bargaining for the sale of their services.
-
-The sums above named are part, of course, of the alleged working class
-"capital" referred to on page 56, and often advanced as proof of the
-_riches of the poor_. In plain fact they are abstracted from poor wages
-in order to keep the home together when those poor wages fail altogether
-in seasons of unemployment. To term them "capital," or to flaunt them as
-"wealth," shows a curious perversity of ideas.
-
-While we do not know how many workers are unemployed at any given time,
-it is probable that, as the whole body numbers about 15,000,000, and
-60,000 are sometimes unemployed out of a group of 650,000 of these, the
-total may reach 500,000 or 600,000 or more in bad years.
-
-Yet, when we obtain particulars of the profits of capital in "bad years
-of trade," we see little diminution in the handsome sums confessed to
-the Commissioners of Inland Revenue, and we understand how profits are
-sustained at the expense of the suffering and partial degradation of a
-great body of British citizens larger in number than the entire
-landowning and capitalist classes. I shall be surprised if it does not
-occur to some of those who read these lines that in view of the
-extraordinary profits shown in the totals on page 112 the wholesale
-dismissal of workmen at the first symptom of slackening trade is a
-disgrace to our civilization.
-
-As I have remarked earlier in these pages, unemployment is by no means
-confined to the manual labour classes. All the humbler units of
-commercial life are subject to treatment which is little better than
-that accorded the "workman." As I write there are thousands, if not tens
-of thousands, of clerks, writers, warehousemen, shop assistants,
-travellers, canvassers, agents, and others out of work and undergoing
-terrible sufferings in the endeavour to keep afloat. Cases are frequent
-in which advertisements offering berths of small account are hungrily
-applied for by hundreds of applicants. It is a sad reflection that for
-the vast majority of our people there is no such thing as security of
-tenure of employment. The profits assessed to income tax, the income,
-that is, of about one-ninth of our population, continue to rise by leaps
-and bounds, but the state of employment remains very much as it was.
-After a careful examination of the employment records of forty years the
-Board of Trade gave their verdict in 1904 (Cd. 2337, p. 84), that "the
-average level of employment during the past four years has been almost
-exactly the same as the average of the preceding forty years."
-
-But, as our population to-day is very much greater than in 1860, the
-same "average level of employment" means that there are far more
-unemployed workmen in England to-day than was the case forty years ago.
-The proportion of out-of-works is neither larger nor smaller, but the
-magnitude of the problem is greater because there are more of us.
-
-No attempt is yet made by our inadequate Census to obtain particulars of
-the number of unemployed. The Census Bill of 1910 led to a wrangle as to
-whether a religious census should be taken, but there was not even a
-wrangle as to whether the golden opportunity should be seized to
-ascertain the number of unemployed. So the Census of 1911 will come and
-go. Before the Census of 1921 is taken many proposals will be made for
-dealing with unemployment, but no one will know the size of the problem
-to be dealt with.
-
-There is, of course, no remedy for unemployment under present economic
-conditions. All that can be done by the State, consistently with the
-private ownership of land and industrial capital, is to _remedy the
-distress arising from unemployment_, and as I write (1910) the
-Government are contemplating a scheme for unemployment insurance, based
-on contributions by men and masters, with aid from taxation. Such a
-scheme should be strongly supported, but there should be clarity of
-ideas as to what is effected by insurance. Unemployment insurance no
-more cures unemployment than life insurance cures death. All that is
-done by it is to _relieve the distress caused by the unemployment_. It
-is a great and worthy object, but the unemployed workman drawing his
-out-of-work pay, _is still unemployed_.
-
-The Labour Party has propounded a "Right-to-Work" Bill, but this again,
-on examination, suggests work _or maintenance_, its promoters seeing
-clearly that economic work cannot be made to order by a State which is
-as poor in property as the workmen themselves. The Right-to-Work Bill is
-thus no more a _remedy for unemployment_ than an insurance scheme is
-such a remedy.
-
-Nor can the State, by pursuing its few public works chiefly in bad
-seasons, level unemployment as between good years and bad, or as between
-good seasons and bad. The troughs of the waves of depression are too
-great to be filled by such means, and they deceive themselves who think
-that they can rule those waves by the manipulation of Government
-contracts.
-
-The Labour Exchange is a useful machine for organizing labour to meet
-the vicissitudes of individualistic industry. It has been described as
-equivalent to the _organization of industry_, but that is a misnomer.
-The organization of industry can only begin with the organization of the
-means of production. If we organize production we necessarily organize
-labour. If we enrol unemployed workmen, and move them about as pawns to
-suit the uneconomic conditions of unorganized capital units ("Come and
-tell us if you want a man;" "Come and tell us if you want a job") we may
-save the workman some trouble and loss of self-respect in finding new
-jobs, and render more tolerable his periods of idleness, but most surely
-we neither organize industry nor increase the volume of employment.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER X
- PART OF THEIR WAGES
-
-
-In considering the earnings, as distinguished from the rates of wages,
-of the manual labour classes, we have found it necessary to make an
-allowance for time lost through sickness and accidents. Let us now
-examine the available records of the industrial accidents and diseases
-of occupations which are part of the wages of the working classes, and
-at the price of which the comforts of the well-to-do are purchased.
-
-As to persons employed in factories and workshops, we have the reports
-made to the inspectors under the Factory and Workshop Act of 1901. By
-Section 19 of the Act it is provided that where there occurs an accident
-which either
-
-(_a_) Causes loss of life to a person employed in a factory or workshop;
-or
-
-(_b_) Causes to a person employed in a factory or workshop such bodily
-injury as to prevent him on any one of the three working days next after
-the occurrence of the accident from being employed for five hours on his
-ordinary work, written notice shall forthwith be sent to the factory
-inspector for the district.
-
-If the accident arises from special causes defined as machinery moved by
-power, boiler explosions, escape of gas or steam, or use of hot liquid
-or molten metal, the casualty has to be reported to a Certifying Surgeon
-as well as to the Inspector.
-
-It is also provided that if any notice required by Section 19 as to an
-accident in a factory or workshop is not sent to the local inspector,
-the occupier of the factory or workshop shall be liable to a fine not
-exceeding £5.
-
-Thus, under the Factory and Workshop Act, an accident is not always a
-reportable accident. One worker may meet with a trivial accident which,
-though he is able to continue work, prevents him from doing his ordinary
-work for, say, the next six hours only after the accident. This would be
-a reportable accident. A second worker may meet with an accident which,
-though it does not prevent him from continuing his ordinary work for
-five hours on "any one of the three working days next after the
-occurrence of the accident," may afterwards develop into a permanent
-partial disablement, so that for weeks, or even months, he may be unable
-to do any work. This accident would not be "reportable" under the
-Factory Act.
-
-But there is a more important reason why the official records of
-accidents are incomplete. It lies in the fact that the administration of
-the Factory and Workshop Act by the Home Office is lax, and the staff of
-men and women inspectors ridiculously inadequate. The number of
-factories and workshops under inspection in 1908 was as follows:
-
-
- FACTORIES, WORKSHOPS, ETC., UNDER INSPECTION, 1908
-
- Class of Works. Number of Works.
- Factories 110,691
- Workshops 149,398
- -------
- 260,089
- =======
-
-The staff of inspectors and assistant inspectors in 1908 was stated
-officially to be of an authorized strength of 200. This is an
-improvement upon the 152 recorded in "Riches and Poverty," edition 1905,
-p. 115, but it cannot be termed adequate. If we imagine the 260,000
-registered workplaces divided equally amongst the staff we see that each
-inspector has to deal, on the average, with 1,300 workplaces. If, then,
-each registered workplace were inspected only once in each year, each
-inspector would need to inspect 32 factories or workshops per week. As
-this is a physical impossibility, it is clear that each registered
-workplace is not called upon even once in each year.
-
-Whether an employer does or does not report a reportable accident
-largely depends upon the vigilance of the local inspector, and as it is
-physically impossible for a few inspectors to be vigilant in regard to
-many employers there can be no question that an exceedingly large number
-of accidents go unreported. No reflection is made here upon the
-inspectors themselves; it is simply pointed out that, however devoted
-they may be, they cannot properly carry out the work which needs to be
-done.
-
-The Factory Report for 1908 (Cd. 4664) enables us to make the following
-comparison with the 1903 figures given in "Riches and Poverty" (1905
-edition).
-
- CASUALTIES IN FACTORIES AND WORKSHOPS, 1903-8
-
- Fatal Non-Fatal
- Accidents. Accidents.
- 1903 1,047 92,600
- 1908 1,042 121,112
-
-The fatal accidents have remained stationary; the non-fatal accidents
-have curiously increased. The explanation is largely that the additional
-staff of inspectors has led to better reporting of accidents. Probably
-many still go unreported.
-
-However, merely to take the list of "reported" accidents as it stands,
-we get the gruesome total of 1,042 persons killed and 121,000 wounded in
-factories and workshops in a single year.
-
-A considerable number of the non-fatal accidents are of a serious
-character, as may be judged from the following details showing the cases
-reported to certifying surgeons as arising from the "special causes"
-already referred to:
-
- FACTORIES AND WORKSHOPS: ACCIDENTS REPORTED TO CERTIFYING SURGEONS, 1908
-
- Degree of Injury. Number.
-
- Fatal 1,042
- Loss of hand or arm 126
- Loss of part of hand 3,303
- Loss of part of leg or foot 78
- Fractures 1,680
- Loss of sight 44
- Injuries to head or face 5,109
- Burns and scalds 5,617
- Other injuries 24,902
- ------
- 41,901
- ======
-
-The number of reports to the Certifying Surgeons in 1903 was 30,509
-("Riches and Poverty," edition 1905, p. 117).
-
-Having formed an idea, if an inadequate one, of the deaths, mutilations
-and injuries which occur in our factories and workshops in a single
-year, let us pass to the question of diseases of occupations. The
-particulars on page 129 are taken from the Factory Reports.
-
- DISEASES OF OCCUPATIONS IN FACTORIES AND WORKSHOPS
- (Cases reported under the Factory and Workshop Act)
-
- --------------------------------------------------+-----------+-----------
- | CASES. | DEATHS.
- +-----------+-----------
- |Year ended |Year ended
- Disease and Industry. | December. | December.
- +-----+-----+-----+-----
- |1908.|1903.|1908.|1903.
- --------------------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----
- LEAD POISONING— | | | |
- Smelting of Metals | 70 | 37 | 2 | 2
- Brass Works | 6 | 15 | |
- Sheet Lead and Lead Piping | 14 | 11 | |
- Plumbing and Soldering | 27 | 26 | |
- Printing | 30 | 13 | 2 | 2
- File Cutting | 9 | 24 | 2 | 2
- Tinning and Enamelling of Iron Hollow-ware | 10 | 14 | 0 |
- White Lead Works | 79 | 109 | 3 | 2
- Red and Yellow Lead Works | 12 | 6 | 0 |
- China and Earthenware | 117 | 97 | 12 | 3
- Litho-transfer Works | 2 | 3 | 0 |
- Glass Cutting and Polishing | 3 | 4 | 1 |
- Enamelling of Iron Plates | 7 | 4 | 0 |
- Electrical Accumulator Works | 25 | 28 | 1 |
- Paint and Colour Works | 25 | 39 | 0 | 1
- Coach Making | 70 | 74 | 3 | 5
- Shipbuilding | 15 | 24 | | 1
- Paint used in other Industries | 47 | 46 | 1 | 1
- Other Industries | 78 | 40 | 5 |
- +-----+-----+-----+-----
- Total Lead Poisoning | 646 | 614 | 32 | 19
- +-----+-----+-----+-----
- MERCURIAL POISONING | 10 | 8 | |
- +-----+-----+-----+-----
- PHOSPHORUS POISONING | 1 | | |
- +-----+-----+-----+-----
- ARSENIC POISONING | 23 | 5 | 1 |
- +-----+-----+-----+-----
- ANTHRAX | 47 | 47 | 7 | 11
- +-----+-----+-----+-----
- TOTAL FACTORIES AND WORKSHOPS | 727 | 674 | 40 | 30
- +-----+-----+-----+-----
- LEAD POISONING AMONGST HOUSE PAINTERS AND PLUMBERS| 239 | 201 | 44 | 39
- +-----+-----+-----+-----
- Grand Total | 966 | 875 | 84 | 69
-
-The greater part of the table, it will be seen, refers to factories and
-workshops, but a line is added to show the cases of lead poisoning
-amongst house painters.
-
-Thus, in 1908, 84 workpeople, and in 1903, 69 workpeople, succumbed to
-poisoning or anthrax, while about 966 non-fatal cases were reported in
-the later year. Hundreds more, of course, go unreported, but the figures
-as they stand, representing only part of the terrible truth, make one
-shudder.
-
-Most of the lead poisoning cases under china and earthenware refer to
-women and young girls, and it should be noted that the figures for 1903
-are very much better than those of previous years. Prior to 1899 one in
-every fifteen of the persons employed in lead processes was reported as
-suffering from plumbism! Stringent new rules were made in 1898, a
-monthly medical examination being provided for, and in 1899 the reported
-cases fell from 457 to 249. Now they have fallen, as our table shows, to
-about 100 per annum. That is bad enough, for only some 6,000 pottery
-workers are employed in the lead processes. The improvement, however,
-shows how much can be done to protect the factory worker. Pity it is
-that such steps were not taken before the people of the Potteries were
-stunted by their deadly employment.
-
-The horrible disease, anthrax, is responsible for about ten deaths per
-annum, and as its bacillus lurks in wool, hair, hides and skins imported
-from many countries for many industries, a large number of workers, from
-warehousemen to woolcombers, regularly run the risk of contagion.
-
-Turning to mining, the public is reminded at intervals, by a large scale
-disaster, of the work of the coal-miner. Momentarily, we think of the
-perilous nature of the industry upon which our wealth is built, and then
-the tide of events sweeps on—and we forget.
-
-Who remembers the last Rhondda holocaust? Was it in 1904 or in 1906? How
-many men perished? What was the cause? Few could answer these questions.
-Perhaps the 1910 disaster at Whitehaven will be more easily remembered
-because of its picturesque horror; because the sea washes over the
-miners' tomb; because reluctant hands were compelled to build a wall
-between the dead and the living. But these things are but the scenery of
-tragedy. It is the deaths that matter, and Whitehaven, awful as it is,
-accounts for but about one-ninth or one-tenth of the deaths in or about
-coal-mines of which the year 1910 will take toll.[31]
-
-There will be the usual inquiry in the matter of this disaster, and I
-assume that the gravest consideration will be given to the
-circumstances. It appears to have been forgotten that on November 26th,
-1907, five men were killed and seven injured at this same Whitehaven
-Colliery under circumstances which involved breaches of the Coal-Mines
-Regulation Act, and that on that occasion nearly 200 miners were
-imperilled. The cause was careless shot-firing, the same cause which
-destroyed 120 miners in the Rhondda in 1905—and in his official report
-Mr R. A. S. Redmayne said:—
-
-"Had the flame reached the haulage road, the loss of life would have
-been very great, as probably all the morning shift, amounting to 180
-persons ... would have lost their lives."
-
-Thus there was very grave and recent warning as to the need for care in
-this fiery mine underneath the sea.
-
-That in passing. My immediate purpose is to point out that such
-disasters as that of 1905 or 1910, destroying over 100 lives at a single
-blow, barely disturb the average loss of life in coal-mines, so great is
-the yearly loss.
-
- DEATHS FROM ACCIDENTS AND EXPLOSIONS IN COAL-MINES, 1851-1908
-
- 1851 to 1900 54,322
- 1901 1,131
- 1902 1,053
- 1903 1,097
- 1904 1,049
- 1905 945
- 1906 1,040
- 1907 1,136
- 1908 1,116
- ------
- Total, 58 years 62,889
- ------
- Average per annum 1,083
- ------
-
-Loss of life in getting coal is not a spasmodic thing for occasional
-tears; it is a day by day matter. The public at large is stricken with
-horror by such a disaster as Whitehaven. Miners' widows are made every
-day by trifling accidents of which the public never hears. It is bad
-that 133 men have been buried and burned off the coast of Cumberland in
-1910; it is worse that from 1,000 to 1,500 men will have perished in our
-coal-mines between January 1 and December 31, 1910.
-
-And what of the maimings? Under the Mines Acts, notification of
-accidents in mines and quarries is also compulsory. Three classes of
-accidents are distinguished under the Acts: (1) Fatal accidents; (2)
-injuries from special causes, viz. explosions of gas, accidents in the
-use of explosives, and boiler explosions; (3) other injuries not of a
-"serious" character, no definition being given of serious personal
-injury. When death occurs from a case already reported as an injury, a
-further notification is required.
-
-In 1908, the casualties in British mines and quarries were as follows:
-
- MINES AND QUARRIES, 1908
-
- Injured.
- (Cases of Disablement
- Killed. for more than 7 days).
-
- Coal and Metalliferous Mines—
- 1. Underground Accidents:
- (_a_) Explosions 128 139
- (_b_) Falls of ground 603 52,579
- (_c_) Shaft accidents 90 1,010
- (_d_) Miscellaneous 373 78,489
- 2. Surface accidents 151 11,041
- ----- -------
- 1,345 143,258
- Quarries 92 4,809
- ----- -------
- 1,347 148,067
- ===== =======
-
-(The above table gives fuller particulars than that on page 120 of
-"Riches and Poverty," edition 1905; the latter gave particulars of
-"serious" accidents only.)
-
-One miner in about 600 is killed, and one miner in six is more or less
-seriously injured in the course of a year. The incapacity of the injured
-included in these figures and proportions ranges from one week to
-life-long disablement.
-
-In the slate quarries of North Wales, one man in every three is injured
-in the course of a year. The wages paid are very low.
-
-Returning now to the figures of the table on p. 132, it will be observed
-that the deaths in recent years are almost precisely the same in number
-as the average of the fifty-eight years examined. That, of course,
-points to great improvement, because the number of miners at work and
-the quantity of coal got has rapidly increased in the period. With
-regard to explosions alone, the saving of life under the Coal-Mines Acts
-has been very great. In his valuable paper on the effect of British
-labour laws upon industrial occupations, read to the Royal Statistical
-Society in 1905, Mr Leonard Ward, H.M. Inspector of Factories told us:
-
-"The total number of deaths from explosions which occurred during the
-five years 1856-60 was 1,286, and if the number of persons employed and
-the death-rate from that cause had remained constant, the total deaths
-for fifty years would be 12,860; allowing for increase in numbers
-employed, the total deaths during that period would probably have
-exceeded 25,000, instead of which the actual total is about 15,000 less
-than that, hence it would seem that by the prevention of explosions
-alone, no less than 15,000 lives have been saved during the last fifty
-years by the operation of the statutes which regulate the hygienic
-conditions of employment in coal-mines."
-
-That is to say, legislative insistence on ventilation of coal-mines
-saved some 15,000 lives in fifty years.
-
-This fact should, in the first place, give pause to those who have no
-faith in legislation, and in the second place it should give
-encouragement to those who believe that further great improvements can
-be effected. The law prevented 15,000 deaths in fifty years; it
-permitted 10,000 to occur. It is impossible to read such an official
-report as that upon the Whitehaven explosion of 1907 without being
-impressed by the great carelessness which still obtains in dangerous
-mining operations. The last great Rhondda accident occurred through
-wanton carelessness. I do not know the cause of the Whitehaven disaster,
-but, speaking of fiery mines generally, it does appear that there is a
-strong case for the total prohibition of shot-firing. One may hedge
-round this labour-saving process with what restrictions one will; if it
-is done under any conditions serious accident or disaster must come
-sooner or later. Can there be any justification for labour saving of
-such character?
-
-That is to speak of but one factor in the production of mining
-accidents. Other considerations, and serious ones, arise in connexion
-with such a case as that of Whitehaven where workings extend for miles
-under the sea and where yet there is no attempt made to provide egress
-to an emergency shaft. The men went down at Whitehaven and out to their
-work under the sea. They had either to return the way they came or to
-return not at all. It may be that the provision of a return passage to
-an emergency shaft would have burdened the undertaking with such a
-capital expenditure as to prevent the economic working of the mine. If
-that is so, a nation which owes its industrial greatness to coal should
-consider whether it is desirable to work this under-sea coal or not, for
-it would appear obvious that a mine as fiery as the 1907 inquiry proved
-the Whitehaven colliery to be, must sooner or later be the scene of
-serious disaster under the given conditions. To pass to another point, a
-large proportion of mining accidents occur in the shafts. It would be
-interesting to know the ages of many of the cages and of much of the
-winding machinery which are employed in our coal-mines. From reading
-official reports on mining accidents I have come to the uncomfortable
-conclusion that far too many of the appliances are fit for the scrap
-heap.
-
-In the figures relating to mining casualties, many young children are
-included. In the ten years 1895 to 1904, 414 children between the ages
-of 12 and 16 years were reported as killed underground, under the heads
-"haulage," "machinery" and "sundries."[32]
-
-It is quite unknown to the general public how many women, girls and boys
-are employed in and about mines. The figures of the 1901 Census show
-that in the coal-mines of England and Wales only, 134,422 boys and 1,458
-girls under 20 years of age are employed. Of the boys as many as 31,587
-are between the ages of 10 and 15 years! I dwell upon these facts
-because I once had brought home to my mind in a very striking way the
-necessity of making them known. Speaking to an audience at the National
-Liberal Club, I mentioned incidentally that a very large number of
-children were employed in our mines. To my astonishment, I was loudly
-interrupted by a certain Liberal candidate for Parliamentary honours,
-who openly scoffed at the idea that children were so employed, while the
-audience clearly did not know which of us was in error.
-
-With railway accidents the public is more familiar, although it is
-questionable whether many people realize that, in an average week, 10
-railway servants are killed and 250 are wounded.
-
-By a Board of Trade order, made under the Regulation of Railways Act of
-1871, accidents on railways are compulsorily reported. Fatal accidents
-must be notified to the Board of Trade within 24 hours after the
-occurrence of the accident. Non-fatal accidents must be reported
-whenever they prevent the injured servant on any one of the three days
-following the accident from working for five hours. The "special causes"
-distinguished in the cases of Factories and Mines are not referred to.
-
-Legislation has done a little to protect the railway worker. While the
-number of railway employees has increased considerably in the last 20
-years—from 350,000 to 579,000—the number of accidents has remained about
-the same. Nevertheless, the death roll is still heavy and the number of
-wounded very great. In 1903 there were 497 killed and 14,356 injured. In
-1908 there were 432 killed and 24,181 injured. Of course the risk varies
-considerably as between one kind of railway employment and another.
-Railway mechanics have an accident death-rate of 1 in 4,524 and an
-injury rate of 1 in 147. Shunters, on the other hand, are killed at the
-rate of 1 in 264 per annum, while 1 in every 17 is injured! Goods
-guards, who are not brought into contact with the public as are their
-more fortunate and safer colleagues the passenger guards, suffer almost
-as badly as shunters—1 in 374 being killed and 1 in 18 injured per
-annum. Facts such as these show how great is still the risk of railway
-work and what a debt we are under to those who do it. As to the manner
-of repayment of the debt it may be again remarked that, in 1908, the 27
-leading railway companies, employing something like 90 per cent. of the
-railway employees of the country, paid an average wage of only 25s. per
-week. There are probably 100,000 railway employees who receive less than
-20s. per week.
-
-In the case of merchant seamen we have only the records of accidents
-resulting in death. Every illness or injury has to be recorded in the
-ship's log, but only death statistics are compiled. The fatalities from
-shipwreck and accident vary considerably in number from year to year,
-but appear to be falling.
-
-It remains only to record the accidents in engineering works covered by
-the Notice of Accidents Act of 1894. This Act provides for the
-notification of accidents in the construction of railways and in the
-construction, working or repair of tramways, canals, bridges, tunnels,
-or other works authorized by any local or personal Act of Parliament.
-Also it covers the use of any traction engine or other machine worked by
-steam in the open air. Under this Act there have been reported, in
-recent years, about 60 deaths and 1,200 injuries per annum.
-
-Collecting the figures we have reviewed, we are able to construct the
-table below, which shows, for all occupations, the number of persons
-reported as having been either killed or wounded in 1908.
-
- REPORTED CASES OF INDUSTRIAL ACCIDENT AND DISEASE, 1908
- Number of Workpeople who suffered Death or Injury.
-
- |Killed, or| Injured, or
- |Died from |Suffered from
- | Disease. | Disease.
- +----------+-------------
- Accidents in Factories and Workshops, etc. | 1,042 | 121,112
- Accidents in Mines and Quarries | 1,437 | 148,067
- Accidents on Railways | 432 | 24,181
- Accidents on Ships, etc.: | |
- Merchant Vessels | 999 | 3,781
- Fishing Vessels | 212 | 392
- Accidents in Engineering Works (under | |
- Notice of Accidents Act) | 32 | 1,228
- Diseases of Occupations | 84 | 966
- +----------+-------------
- Totals | 4,238 | 299,727
- +----------+-------------
-
-It should be distinctly understood that these figures refer to reported
-cases only and that they are far from complete. In the case of factories
-and workshops it is probable that the greater number of the serious
-accidents are reported, but thousands of minor cases escape record. The
-railway figures have been much more complete since 1896, in which year
-the number of accidents recorded jumped from 7,480 to 14,110 owing to a
-more stringent regulation as to reporting made by the Board of Trade.
-The figures as to accidents on ships and in engineering works are very
-incomplete.
-
-Cases of industrial disease form the smallest part of the table, but if
-the whole truth could be expressed in statistics, the result would be
-appalling. All that we have reported under this head are cases of
-metallic poisoning and of anthrax. Terrible as these are, they affect so
-few people as to be of far less consequence to the nation than the high
-death-rate of Lancashire cotton operatives or Belfast linen workers.
-Phthisis does not appear in official statistics as a "disease of
-occupation," but thousands of textile workers die of phthisis resulting
-from work done in a humid atmosphere. Physical degeneracy is not an
-"accident," for it progresses with our knowledge and deliberate consent,
-but how much graver is the deterioration of the jute workers of Dundee
-than the figures relating to railway accidents. In 1899, Mr H. J.
-Wilson, H.M. Factory Inspector for Dundee, measured and weighed 169 boys
-and girls with a view to discovering the amount of degeneracy as
-compared with the recognized normal. Here is the melancholy result:
-
- PHYSICAL DETERIORATION IN DUNDEE[33]
-
- ------------+---------------+---------------
- | Height. | Weight.
- +-------+-------+-------+-------
- Age. |Dundee.|Normal.|Dundee.|Normal.
- ------------+-------+-------+-------+-------
- 11 to 12— |Inches.|Inches.| Lbs. | Lbs.
- Boys | 50.0 | 53.5 | 62.8 | 72.0
- Girls | 51.5 | 53.0 | 63.0 | 68.1
- | | | |
- 14 to 15— | | | |
- Boys | 54.0 | 59.0 | 70.5 | 92.0
- Girls | 55.7 | 59.7 | 77.5 | 96.1
- ------------+-------+-------+-------+-------
-
-Speaking of the deaths from phthisis and diseases of the lungs in
-Belfast, Dr Whitaker, Medical Officer of Health for that city, says in
-his report for 1902: "Of the 2,911 deaths reported from these causes,
-1,779 were attributed to diseases of the respiratory organs and 1,132 to
-phthisis. It is therefore evident that these diseases caused upwards of
-one-third of the mortality in our midst. This is not to be wondered at
-when we remember the nature of the occupations in which so many of our
-people are engaged and the unhealthy surroundings which environ
-them."[34]
-
-The truth is that many thousands of the deaths which occur in the United
-Kingdom every year are really caused by "diseases of occupations," and
-that to the thousands of deaths must be added hundreds of thousands of
-cases of direct injury to health arising from work in unhealthy and
-insufficiently controlled factories and workshops.
-
-Death, injury and disease have thus been administered to our industrial
-population for several generations. To-day, conditions are better than
-of old, but they are still so bad that to speak of improvement is to
-indict the past as black indeed. Against the fact that industrial
-hygiene has improved, must be set the grave consideration that it is in
-part an enfeebled people which is now provided with a slightly better
-environment. We have effectually degraded no small proportion of the
-race; the present measures of industrial control are not strong enough
-to restore it.
-
-[Footnote 31: Since these pages went to press, another large scale
-disaster at Bolton has killed over 300 miners.]
-
-[Footnote 32: See Mr Fenwick's Return "Mines (Fatal Accidents)," No.
-140. 1905.]
-
-[Footnote 33: Annual Report on Factories and Workshops, 1900, page 336.]
-
-[Footnote 34: This and many other cognate facts were quoted by Mr
-Leonard Ward in his paper on Industrial Occupations read to the Royal
-Statistical Society on May 16th, 1905.]
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XI
- CONSEQUENCES
-
-
-The consequences of the error of distribution now demand our attention.
-
-The congestion of so much of the entire income and accumulated wealth of
-the United Kingdom in a few hands has a most profound influence upon the
-national development. It means that the great mass of the people—the
-nation itself—can progress only in such fashion as is dictated by the
-enterprise or caprice of a fraction of the population. The possessors of
-wealth exercise the real government of the country and the nominal
-government at Westminster but timidly modifies the rule of the rich.
-When we say that about one million people command one-third of the
-entire income of the nation we mean, broadly, that one million people
-have under their control the lives of one-third of the population or of
-15,000,000 people. When we say that about five million people command
-one-half of the entire income of the country we mean, broadly, that five
-million people control the lives of one-half of the population, or of
-22,000,000 people. Expenditure is a call for material or immaterial
-commodities, and a demand for commodities is a demand for labour. That
-call rules the continuous series of employments which form the main
-activities and which mould the lives and character of our people. If the
-call be for worthy things, our people are directed into noble
-occupations. If the call be for unworthy things, labour is misdirected
-and degraded.
-
-The self-degradation of a limited number of unduly rich persons would be
-a little thing from a national point of view if its effects could be
-confined to the rich themselves. Unfortunately, those effects are not a
-stagnant pool which we may avoid, but a stream which flows through and
-pollutes the lives of the majority of our people. A working man may
-resist the temptation to ape the vices which are bred of idleness, but
-the highest standard of morality cannot save him from degrading his
-manhood in the service of waste. Without his knowledge the product of
-his toil may be bartered for the toy of a moment, and the skill of his
-hands pass to the foreigner in exchange for the means of wanton luxury.
-The rare steam coal of South Wales, got in blood and tears in a fiery
-mine, may be exported to France in exchange for a racing automobile. It
-would matter little that a limited number of drones inhabited the hive
-if they had no command of the work of the community. It matters
-everything when these drones, by their expenditure, can each command
-thousands of workers to attend their idleness.
-
-There are certain well-defined servants of the rich wholly devoted to
-their pleasure, such as menial servants, grooms, stablemen, gardeners,
-makers of expensive articles of food, clothing, furniture, etc., hotel
-servants, many of the inhabitants of the rich quarters of towns and of
-fashionable pleasure resorts, many tradespeople and their shop
-assistants, and other workers. Again, there are certain well-defined
-servants of the poor, such as petty tradespeople, general storekeepers,
-the workmen and officials engaged in institutes, charities, free
-libraries, municipal tramways and other services, public gardens, and so
-forth. There is often, however, no clear distinction between those who
-serve the few rich and those who serve the many poor. Every trade,
-however useful nominally, has to give of its best to be poured into the
-cup of luxury and spilt in wanton extravagance. Our 1,300,000 builders,
-our 1,400,000 metal workers, engineers and shipwrights, our 1,300,000
-textile workers, our 1,300,000 clothiers, and all the other persons
-engaged in our "useful" industries, furnish their large quota of
-products for the rich and their small quota of products for the poor.
-The edict of the rich man goes forth and industry hastens to obey it.
-Bricks from Berkshire which are sadly needed for the building of decent
-cottages for agricultural labourers are taken into Surrey to form part
-of one of the vulgar and pretentious red-brick villas which mock every
-canon of architecture and make hideous the most beautiful portions of
-that Garden of England. Good fir from Sweden, imported in exchange for
-the toil of Lancashire or the sweat of Cleveland, roofs in the tenth,
-fifteenth or twentieth bedroom of the man who has more rooms than
-children, and more menial servants than guests, while the Census shows
-us that in England and Wales there existed, in 1901, 3,286,526 tenements
-of fewer than five rooms, of which 251,667 had but one room, 658,203 but
-two rooms, 779,992 but three rooms and 1,596,664 but four rooms. The
-mechanic, the electrical worker, the girl at the loom, all appear to be
-usefully employed in contributing to the well-being of the nation. As a
-matter of fact, the lion's share of the wealth they create goes to add
-to the income of a few, while the remainder is distributed amongst a
-number so great as to constitute nearly the whole of the population. If
-we consider the case of the cotton industry alone, it appears, on the
-surface, that 582,000 workers (172,000 men and 410,000 women and
-children) are most usefully employed in the production of articles of
-the first necessity. They do work, each year, upon some 16,000,000 cwts.
-of raw cotton which they manufacture into about £120,000,000 worth of
-cotton goods. But trace the history of these goods. Are they consumed by
-the countrymen of the people who make them? Alas! no. Of the yearly
-output of £120,000,000, as much as £100,000,000 is exported to foreign
-countries and British Possessions, chiefly to foreign countries. Only
-£20,000,000 worth of the magnificent output of our cotton workers is
-retained by our 44,000,000 people. In addition there is a consumption of
-a few million pounds worth of imported cotton goods. Can it be true that
-our population need to renew their household and personal stock of
-cotton fabrics to the extent of a value of but 10s. per head per annum?
-Of course it is not true. From cotton is manufactured, for the person,
-dresses or blouses of muslin, lawn, cambric, prints, mercerized stuff,
-etc., shirts and underclothing in great variety for both sexes,
-handkerchiefs, lace, hosiery, etc., and for the household, cotton sheets
-and other bed furnishings, curtains of lace, cretonne and muslin,
-towels, dusters, and a host of other things. Yet so poor are the mass of
-our people that 10s. per head per annum furnishes them with all the
-cotton goods which they can afford to buy for both their persons and
-their households. Great is their need and small are the means available
-for its satisfaction. If it were not so, our cotton trade would need
-many thousands more bales of raw cotton per annum, first to supply a
-quite ordinary home demand and second to export to the foreigner to
-obtain in exchange the satisfaction of other ordinary needs.
-
-In the following table I have estimated a demand for cotton goods by a
-household of five persons. The prices are wholesale and relate to the
-_materials_ only. It should be distinctly understood that nothing is
-included for retail profit or for the manufacture of the materials into
-garments. I have estimated for all the cotton goods used on the person
-or in the household, not forgetting the cotton linings commonly used in
-woollen clothing.
-
- CALL (AT WHOLESALE PRICES) BY A HOUSEHOLD OF 5 PERSONS, FOR COTTON
- MATERIALS
-
- For the Person:
- (1) The Man £0 16 0
- (2) The Woman 1 9 0
- (3) Three Children 1 2 1
- For the Household 1 10 6
- -------
- £4 17 7
- =======
-
-In framing this estimate I have imagined an exceedingly modest standard
-of comfort, one such as few readers of these lines would probably care
-to adopt, and the prices, as I have said, refer to the wholesale cost of
-the material only. Yet, modest as it is, the estimate works out at
-nearly 20s. per head. Given such a modest demand, our cotton trade would
-need to produce about £45,000,000 worth of cotton goods per annum for
-home consumption alone. As we have seen, it finds a call for only
-£20,000,000 worth, a great part of which, of course, is absorbed by the
-"rich" and "comfortable" classes.
-
-It is a deeply significant fact that a nation of 44,500,000 people,
-producing by its manifold activities a total income of £40 per head per
-annum, should be able to afford to retain of its total output of cotton
-fabrics but 10s. per head per annum.
-
-Let us turn to our woollen and worsted industries. Here we have in an
-average year an output worth some £65,000,000 of which £23,000,000 is
-exported, leaving £42,000,000 for home consumption. In addition there is
-a considerable importation (£12,000,000) of woollen and worsted goods,
-chiefly woollen goods, of a character which we do not ourselves produce,
-from France. Thus we have a total home consumption worth £54,000,000 per
-annum. This amounts to about 25s. per head per annum, a sum which, in
-view of our climatic conditions, is, if anything, less satisfactory than
-that for cotton consumption. Again let us picture our working-class
-household of five persons and inquire what might be its most modest
-imaginable expenditure upon articles made of wool:—
-
- CALL (AT WHOLESALE PRICES) BY A HOUSEHOLD OF 5 PERSONS, FOR WOOLLEN AND
- WORSTED GOODS. MATERIALS ONLY
-
- For the Person:
-
- (1) The Man £3 7 10
- (2) The Woman 2 9 9
- (3) Three Children 3 0 0
- For the Household 3 0 0
- ----------
- £11 17 7
- ===========
-
-In working out this estimate in detail, I have again postulated a low
-standard of comfort. Thus the man is assumed to have but one new woollen
-suit and one new pair of trousers per annum, and an overcoat once in two
-years. It is also assumed that the children are partly provided for by
-adaptation of their parents' discarded garments. Even so, the estimate
-works out at 47s. per head. At this rate there would be a call for about
-£105,000,000 of woollen and worsted goods by the 44,500,000 people of
-the United Kingdom. As a matter of fact, the call is for only
-£54,000,000 worth, or about 25s. per head on the average. But who is the
-Average Man? He is a creature of the statistician. The real truth is, of
-course, that quite a small number of people consume a very great part of
-our total present annual call for £54,000,000 worth of woollen and
-worsted goods. The masses of the people spend a sum which is a small
-fraction of the average expenditure of 25s. per head.
-
-Again, let us consider the boot and shoe industry. Here I have no
-reliable estimate as to the value of production, but we know that
-employment in the trade is sometimes exceedingly bad, and that in
-Leicester, Northampton and elsewhere the greatest distress exists from
-time to time because the boot manufacturers have _overtaken demand_.
-What does this mean? There are some 7,000,000 houses in England and
-Wales not assessed to the Inhabited House Duty because they are under
-£20 in annual value. It is safe to say that each of the inhabitants of
-each of these 7,000,000 houses would gladly purchase three pairs of
-boots and shoes if they had the means to do so, and would then not be
-overburdened with footwear. That means that a need exists at this moment
-for 7,000,000 × 5.2 (the average number of persons per house in this
-country) × 3 = 109,000,000 pairs. That great demand, obviously, could be
-renewed, did means allow, within 12 months.[35]
-
-Yet, in November 1904, the Mayor of Leicester (Mr S. Hilton, of Messrs
-S. Hilton & Sons, boot factors) dealing with the question of want of
-employment in the boot industry said:
-
-"I think the present great need of Leicester is a new industry. We
-cannot expect, at any rate for some considerable time, that much more
-employment will be derived from the boot and shoe trade, at least, not
-sufficient for a growing population. The rapidity with which boots and
-shoes are turned out, owing to the improved machinery and modern
-methods, will supply all the demands for some time to come, and the man
-who may be the means of introducing some additional industry in this
-town, which will not only prove remunerative to the employer, but
-provide work for the many men and youths who are in need of it, will be
-a benefactor to the town."
-
-With improving methods and machinery, there must, sooner or later,
-arrive, in every industry, a time when output overtakes visible demand,
-and when that time arrives, as it is alleged to have done in Leicester,
-great suffering is caused to many hard-working people. Their trade slips
-from them, and the matter of re-adjustment, the establishment of new
-industries, the transition to other employments, entails severe
-distress. But who can truly say that the boot trade has yet reached, in
-this country, the maximum of possible output? Certain it is that there
-are many who need new footwear and cannot afford it, even while
-Leicester men look vainly for employment. The real truth would appear to
-be that Leicester is suffering from the under-consumption of those who,
-if they had the means, would buy boots. I have shown that 100,000,000
-pairs at least could be readily absorbed in Great Britain. Yet men are
-unemployed at Leicester and the Mayor calls for a new industry!
-
-The fact is, of course, that while 7,000,000 or more poor householders
-lack the means to buy boots, some tens of thousands of unduly rich
-households are squandering those means and in effect commanding men to
-leave the boot trade to take up industries which shall serve their
-pleasures.
-
-In relation to the trades which supply the materials of clothing the
-census returns give evidence that our industries are not developing
-healthily. It should be remembered, however, that it is impossible to
-measure the growth of luxury by the census returns, although it makes a
-certain impression in them. The labour of tens of thousands who follow
-nominally useful occupations is actually devoted to waste. This may be
-illustrated by two typical cases which recently were brought to the
-notice of the public. On February 8th, 1905, in the King's Bench
-Division, a millionaire, well-known in financial circles (his name
-matters not, for I take the case not to reproach an individual but
-because it is a typical one) sued a West-End firm of contractors and
-caterers for damages. It appears that in July 1903 he gave a dinner
-party with a concert and supper, and engaged the defendant firm to erect
-behind his residence in Grosvenor Square a temporary supper-room for the
-occasion. He gave instructions that "no expense was to be spared." The
-electric light was installed in the temporary structure, and from this
-or another cause, a fire occurred, and the temporary structure perished
-a few hours before its time. Out of this arose the claim for damages,
-which failed, the jury awarding the contractors their counter-claim for
-the work done.
-
-It is not the merits of the action to which I direct the reader's
-attention. What would the mere statistics tell us of the men who were
-engaged in erecting the temporary supper-room "regardless of expense"?
-We should find them described as following quite useful occupations:
-
- Building Contractors.
- Electrical Engineers.
- Plumbers.
- Carpenters.
- Painters.
- Upholsterers.
- Carmen.
- Labourers, etc.
-
-As a matter of fact the skill and labour of these honourable callings
-were turned to sheer waste at the command of the millionaire financier.
-With the same expenditure of time and effort, and with the same
-consumption of material, those men might have decently housed one or two
-families for life. Had they been free to choose between the housing of a
-poor family and the carrying out of a rich man's caprice, can we doubt
-which work they would have chosen? But they were not free to choose, and
-inquiry would probably show that they are constantly employed to do
-similar work in rich men's houses. Their lives are wasted to the nation
-at large, and devoted to the fancies of a few. In return, they are
-handed wage-money which is too often unearned by those who pay the
-bills. Thus A the financier commands B to waste his precious skill, and
-at the same time commands certain other persons, C and D, to devote part
-of their labour to sustaining B while he wastes his time and does
-nothing for them in return.
-
-Let me give another pertinent illustration:
-
-In July, 1904, a great deal of attention was aroused by a case in which
-a West-End dressmaker was fined for working her girls at illegal hours.
-Her excuse was that she was compelled to get finished at very short
-notice a frock to be worn at Ascot by a certain rich lady. Considerable
-comment was aroused by the case, especially in view of the fact that a
-play with a purpose in which a similar incident was introduced was being
-played at the time in a London theatre.[36] I was particularly struck
-with the fact that the fashionable customer who caused the trouble was
-chiefly censured for her dilatoriness and want of consideration in
-ordering her frock at the last moment. But the gravamen of the offence
-lay not in ordering the frock late but in ordering it at all. The chief
-point is not one within the scope of the consolidated Factory and
-Workshop Act of 1901, but a much greater one, which goes deep down into
-the roots of the problem of want and poverty in the richest country in
-the world. For the special Ascot frock, the garment costing anything
-from 10 to 50 guineas, made to be worn once and then cast aside, is a
-perfect illustration of the misdirection of life and waste of labour
-which is caused by the error in the distribution of the national income.
-For every special Ascot frock worn by one woman, whether that frock be
-made in legal or illegal hours, a number of other women go
-insufficiently clad.
-
-Such illustrations might be multiplied indefinitely. At the great Albert
-Hall Charity Bazaar held in 1904 a titled lady present wore a
-magnificent dress which had been completed literally at the eleventh
-hour of the previous evening by a number of young women whose economic
-condition is such that only the best of health and the best of fortune
-can save them from becoming the objects of "charity" in the time to
-come. As in the case of the temporary supper-room, these girls, to judge
-by the census of occupations, would appear as following useful
-occupations. From the point of view of the national welfare, they had
-better be paid wages for digging holes and filling them up again.
-
-While the rich consume the means of living of the poor we need not be
-surprised if useful trades languish. A rich person can but consume a
-limited quantity of useful commodities. After that consumption, having
-still a great superfluity, he seeks other diversions, and the orders go
-forth which swell the ranks of the wrongfully employed.
-
-At the other end of the scale, what is the possible expenditure upon
-goods by the poor? The answer which has been given to this question by
-the researches of Mr Charles Booth in London and of Mr Seebohm Rowntree
-in York is seen to be one which can only be regarded as inevitable in
-view of the figures we have examined. Mr Booth concluded that 30.7 per
-cent., or nearly one-third of the population of London were probably
-living in "poverty." Mr Rowntree found that in York, a typical
-provincial city, in a year of good trade, 7,230 persons, representing
-15½ per cent. of the working classes, or 10 per cent. of the entire
-population of York, were living below a primary poverty line drawn at an
-income of 21s. 8d. per week for a family of five persons paying only 4s.
-per week for rent. Mr Rowntree also found 13,072 persons living in York
-under conditions which were but little above the primary line, making a
-total of 20,302 persons, or 28 per cent. of the population of York,
-living in want.
-
-Mr Rowntree's primary poverty line of 21s. 8d. per week was arrived at
-thus.[37] He considered necessary expenditure under the three heads: (1)
-Food, (2) Rent, (3) Clothes, fuel and other necessaries. To begin with
-food, he framed a dietary which contained no butcher's meat or butter,
-and allowed such a luxury as tea but once a week. The only meat was
-bacon and very little of that. It was a dietary "more stringent than
-would be given to any able-bodied pauper in any workhouse in England or
-Wales." Taking the lowest co-operative store prices, he found that this
-dietary would cost 3s. each for the adults and 2s. 3d. each for the
-children per week. Thus the cost of food alone would be 12s. 9d. per
-week. Allowing for rent and rates 4s., we arrive at 16s. 9d. per week.
-To this Mr Rowntree added for clothing, fuel, and all other necessaries
-4s. 11d. per week, making, in all, the 21s. 8d. referred to. Here is the
-estimate in detail:-
-
- MR ROWNTREE'S PRIMARY POVERTY LINE
-
- _s._ _d._
- Expenditure on Food 12 9
- Rent and Rates 4 0
- Clothing, including Boots 2 3
- Fuel 1 10
- Lighting, washing materials, furniture, crockery, etc. 0 10
- -------
- 21 8
- =======
-
-It will be seen that nothing is allowed for drink, or tobacco, or
-newspapers, or postage stamps, or any relaxation whatever. Yet 15 per
-cent. of the working people of York were found to be living _below_ a
-primary poverty line conceived on such a scale as this. For boots,
-clothing, underclothing, hats, furniture, glass, crockery, utensils,
-curtains, washing materials, and gas or oil, only 3s. 1d. per week or £8
-per annum (32s. per head per annum). Need we wonder, then, if Lancashire
-is only called upon by 44,000,000 British people for £20,000,000 worth
-of cotton goods?
-
-The Board of Trade recently gave us (Cd. 2337) some useful studies of
-workmen's budgets which show that even Mr Rowntree's 3s. 1d. per week
-for goods is a larger sum than is expended by most workmen's families
-with about 21s. per week. The Board of Trade examined 1,944 workmen's
-budgets with the following results:—
-
- AVERAGE EXPENDITURE ON FOOD BY URBAN WORKMEN'S FAMILIES IN 1904
-
- Average Average Balance of
- Number no. of Average expenditure income
- of children weekly on after
- Families. living at income. food. expenditure
- home. on food.
-
- _s. d._ _s. d._ _s. d._
- Under 25s. 261 3.1 21 4½ 14 4¾ 6 11¾
- Between 25s. and 30s. 289 3.3 26 11¾ 17 10¼ 9 1½
- Between 30s. and 35s. 416 3.2 31 11¼ 20 9¼ 11 2
- Between 35s. and 40s. 382 3.4 36 6¼ 22 3½ 14 2¾
- Above 40s. 596 4.4 52 0½ 29 8 22 4½
-
-As the Board of Trade point out "It is not to be supposed that the
-returns received represent in their exact proportions the different
-grades of working-class incomes in the towns of the United Kingdom. The
-higher range of family incomes is unduly represented in the returns,
-partly owing to the fact that the more intelligent operatives have
-supplied returns more readily and more accurately than those belonging
-to the unskilled labouring classes."
-
-It is of interest to note that the 261 budgets under 25s. per week
-averaged 21s. 4½d. per week, which closely corresponds to Mr Rowntree's
-primary poverty line. The expenditure on food is seen to be 14s. 4¾d. or
-1s. 6¾d. more than was allowed by Mr Rowntree. Thus only 6s. 11¾d. per
-week is left for all other expenditures, including rent, fuel, light,
-clothes and furniture. If we take the class above, between 25s. and
-30s., we see that only 9s. 1½d. is left after payment for food. Even in
-the class earning from 30s. to 35s. the food bill leaves but 11s. 2d.
-per week for rent and all other requirements.
-
-If we pass from the town to the country and inquire into the condition
-of the agricultural labourer we find an even smaller command of comfort.
-At the census of 1901 the number of agricultural labourers, shepherds,
-etc., was 956,000. What of cottons or woollens or boots or furniture can
-these command? The late Mr Arthur Wilson Fox in the invaluable Report
-(Cd. 2376) on the wages of agricultural labourers, which was such a
-labour of love to him, shows that their total earnings including the
-value of all "truck" vary from 14s. 6d. per week in Oxfordshire to 22s.
-in Durham, the average being 18s. 3d. for the whole of England. In Wales
-the average is 17s. 3d.; in Scotland 19s. 3d. and in Ireland only 10s.
-11d. The expenditure on clothing in England varies between £6 and £10 by
-a family of six persons; in Ireland, of course, it is much less.
-
-The simple truth is that the total demand for clothes and underclothes,
-hats, boots, furniture, china, glass, ironmongery, domestic utensils and
-other comforts by about 20,000,000 of people out of our population of
-44,500,000 is exceedingly small. The greater part of slender incomes is
-absorbed by the cost of food and drink, and after provision is made for
-rent, fuel and lighting, the balance amounts to a few odd shillings. We
-need not wonder, then, that our textile industries have to meet such a
-modest home demand, or that the Mayor of Leicester cries out for a new
-industry to employ "surplus labour."
-
-Let us consider the position of bootmakers as customers for the textile
-trades. The Census figures of 1901 for the boot trade were as follows
-(England and Wales; 22,000 dealers included):
-
- PERSONS EMPLOYED IN BOOT AND SHOE TRADE, 1901, ENGLAND AND WALES
-
- Men (over 20) 165,589
- Women (over 20) 31,734
- Boys and youths 32,715
- Girls 21,105
- -------
- Total 251,143
- =======
-
-The average earnings of these workers are actually less than £1 per
-week. The Board of Trade publish monthly the earnings of a
-representative number of them, derived from particulars furnished by
-employers. The "Labour Gazette" for August 1910 showed that in July
-1910, 60,337 boot workers took £58,147 in a week, or about 19s. per
-week. After paying for rent and food, how little is left to provide
-custom for the makers of cottons or woollens. And equally, when textile
-workers draw meagre wages, how little is left, after the gratification
-of primal needs, to provide custom for the maker of boots.
-
-Thus the error in the distribution of income connotes an error in the
-distribution of our population amongst useful and useless, noble and
-ignoble, industries. Too few of our population are engaged in the
-manufacture of houses, boots, textiles, and furnishings. Too many of our
-population are engaged either in the direct production of luxuries or in
-the production of useful articles to be exchanged for foreign luxuries.
-The great masses of our people are under-served; a small proportion of
-our people are over-served. There is enough labour put forth to give
-material happiness and comfort to all, but so much of the labour runs to
-waste that only one-ninth of our population can be said fully to possess
-the means of comfort.
-
-Considerations such as these make us understand how futile it is to
-boast of the aggregate trade, internal or external, of a nation, or to
-term that wealth "national" which is the possession of a few.
-
-[Footnote 35: Some notes of mine on this subject in the "Daily News"
-brought me the following letter from the provinces:
-
-"You very rightly, I think, referred on Monday and Tuesday to the
-subject of boots. Here is my own experience. I am a railway man, in
-constant work at 30s. per week. I am the happy, or otherwise, father of
-six healthy children. Last year I bought twenty pairs of boots. This
-year, up to date, I have bought ten pairs, costing £2, and yet at the
-present time my wife and five of the children have only one pair each. I
-have two pairs, both of which let in the water; but I see no prospect at
-present of getting new ones. I ought to say, of course, that my wife is
-a thoroughly domesticated woman, and I am one of the most temperate of
-men. So much so, that if all I spend in luxuries was saved it would not
-buy a pair of boots once a year. But this is the point I want to
-mention. During 1903 my wages were 25s. 6d. per week, and I then had the
-six children. My next-door neighbour was a bootmaker and repairer. He
-fell out of work, and was out for months. During that time, of course,
-my children's boots needed repairing as at other times. I had not the
-money to pay for them being repaired, so had to do what repairing I
-could myself. One day I found out that I was repairing boots on one side
-of the wall, and my neighbour on the other side out of work, and longing
-to do the work I was compelled to do myself. I shall never forget the
-feelings that passed through my mind as I thought of the circumstances;
-and so it came home to me again when I read your reference to the boot
-trade, and I decided I would forward this to you. Most surely, as you
-say, if the 30,000,000 could and would buy those 50,000,000 pairs of
-boots you mention, there need not be any slackness in the boot trade;
-but, as you say again, if your reference to the question is the means of
-making people think seriously about it, much good will be done."
-
-Thus between my correspondent who sorely needed boots, and his neighbour
-the bootmaker there stood a wall—and our commercial system.]
-
-[Footnote 36: "Warp and Woof," by Mrs Alfred Lyttelton.]
-
-[Footnote 37: "Poverty," a Study of Town Life, by B. Seebohm Rowntree
-(Macmillan).]
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XII
- THE WASTE OF CAPITAL
-
-
-It has been observed by Professor Marshall that "perhaps £100,000,000
-annually are spent even by the working classes, and £400,000,000 by the
-rest of the population of England in ways that do little or nothing
-towards making life nobler or truly happier."[38] In view of the fact
-that the "working classes" are the bulk of the nation, and the "rest of
-the population" a relative handful, this estimate points to a little
-waste by the many, and much waste by the few. The fact is, of course,
-that if the working classes, after prolonged study of dietetics and
-hygiene, spent their incomes in the most economical way possible, and
-refrained entirely from alcoholic liquor and tobacco, they would still
-be unable, save in exceptional cases, to command the means of a noble
-and truly happy life. As for the "rest of the population," if we
-consider the 5,000,000 persons who enjoy an income of £909,000,000 per
-annum, we see very clearly that their superfluity is so great that they
-could easily add to the fixed capital of the nation at the rate of
-£500,000,000 per annum, and still have left incomes sufficient, if
-wisely expended, to command a very considerable degree of comfort. As
-things are, an enormous amount of wealth is wasted every year upon
-current expenditure of an ignoble character, even while every city and
-every industry needs the application of more capital.
-
-Nothing is more striking in the estimate of capital which we formed in
-Chapter 5 than the small proportions of the total when considered in
-relation to the extent of the national income. For the total, it should
-be remembered, includes the value of the land of the United Kingdom.
-Subtracting it, we see that the wealth which has been added to the land
-is worth not more than about £8,000,000,000, whereas the national income
-amounts to £1,840,000,000. Thus, in the United Kingdom we have
-accumulated stock, apart from the market price of the land, only to the
-extent of about four years' income.
-
-The facts which correspond to these figures are that, in every county
-and in every township, there are more ugly and uncomfortable houses than
-beautiful and convenient ones, more inefficient plants than
-well-equipped businesses, more badly clothed than well-clothed people,
-more evidences of poverty than of wealth. On every hand we see the need
-of capital, but while its application is so sorely needed, the few rich
-who command so much of the national income pour it out in wanton
-extravagance. The growth of luxury has been accompanied by an increasing
-want of enterprise in industry and commerce. Even in London the most
-fruitful opportunities lie neglected. The port is inefficient; the
-Thames highway has been neglected; north and south Londoners remain
-strangers because of lack of transit facilities; street traffic is
-archaic; the important railway termini are dirty, inconvenient and
-unconnected. All these and many less important things cry aloud for the
-application of capital. In London and in every other town there is a
-housing problem, and the housing problem is a problem of capital. If the
-income of the last 20 years had been patriotically expended there would
-be no housing problem to-day, and the fixed capital of the country would
-be very much greater than it is.
-
-Another significant fact is the very considerable investment of British
-capital abroad, probably amounting, as we have seen, to about
-£2,600,000,000. These investments are often spoken of as "our foreign
-investments." There is a grim irony in the phrase. For what in essence
-are these investments? They left our shores, originally, in the form of
-exported manufactures, the product of British labour. We had no gold to
-lend, but some amongst us could command and lend the fruit of our work.
-These exported products were sent away from our shores by a mere handful
-of rich persons who saw in foreign or Colonial loans or enterprises the
-opportunity of gaining a higher rate of interest than at home. Year by
-year there is returned to those who made the investments, or to their
-successors in title, a tribute of foreign and Colonial commodities which
-goes to swell our imports. In 1908 this yearly tribute of imports, for
-which no present exports have to be exchanged, amounts to about
-£130,000,000 or £140,000,000. Whether the nation as a whole gains by
-this tribute depends entirely upon the wisdom and patriotism of those
-who receive it. If we could ensure its wise use as capital for the
-promotion of the general welfare, then the United Kingdom would gain
-materially by the lien which a few of its people possess upon foreign
-and Colonial activities. But we have no guarantee as to the manner of
-its use, and too often it but serves to bring to this country
-commodities which in no way make life "nobler or truly happier." I do
-not mean that articles of luxury are necessarily imported in payment of
-the interest on "our" oversea investments, but certain it is that the
-limited class which owns them are the chief consumers of luxuries. It
-should never be forgotten that, as has already been pointed out in these
-pages, the most ordinary raw material may become a vehicle of luxury,
-and the commonest forms of labour its servants. Certain imports, _e.g._
-motor cars or Steinway grand pianos, can be ear-marked as luxuries, but
-potatoes from Jersey wasted in a long dinner or Douglas pine from Canada
-built into a racing pavilion are "luxuries" more to be deplored than the
-importation of Valenciennes lace or Sèvres porcelain by persons of
-refinement.
-
-It may be well to remark, in passing, that to place a heavy customs duty
-upon imported luxuries would in no way benefit the nation at large. It
-would merely stimulate the production of luxuries in the United Kingdom,
-and so increase the already considerable number of persons engaged in
-the trades of luxury.
-
-That we have incidentally gained by acting as a world money-lender is
-indisputable. The case of Argentina is a familiar one. British exports
-have been largely lent to that country for the construction of railways.
-Those railways have cheapened Argentine transport, and so placed at our
-disposal cheap bread and meat. But this benefit has been incidental and,
-moreover, shared by the world at large. Against such incidental gains we
-have to place the criminal neglect of our own country. While capital has
-gone overseas in a never-ending stream, the people whose united
-activities produced the commodities embodied in that capital have
-remained poor for lack of the proper investment of capital at home.
-Large sections of the British people have unconsciously worked for the
-benefit of the foreigner and of the British Colonist, never realizing
-that their own country sorely needed all the capital that their labour
-could create.[39]
-
-We cannot even lay the flattering unction to our souls that the British
-capital which has been sent abroad has gone entirely to build foreign or
-Colonial railways, or to develop other useful industries, nor, in so far
-as it has been usefully employed, can we claim much credit for the fact.
-The sole motive which has influenced the individuals who have thus
-disposed of the products of British labour has been individual gain.
-That gain they have sought without regard to any consideration of
-patriotism. Foreign nations have had our capital indifferently for war
-or for peace, for building railways or for constructing warships. A
-generation ago we wickedly poured our capital into Turkey. A generation
-ago were born hundreds of thousands of British children who, for lack of
-the full employment of British capital on British soil, are to-day
-creatures of the abyss.
-
-The flow of capital to places abroad continues to this hour. If South
-Africa is booming, the possessors of capital hasten to gather dividends
-on soil thousands of miles away, and with the interest received in this
-country, direct British labour to noble or ignoble ends, as may seem
-good in their eyes. If a foreign war is proceeding, they hasten to lend
-the belligerents as many millions as may be required at anything from
-five to eight per cent., and with the interest they give righteous or
-unrighteous "work" to other British sons of freedom. If a South African
-mine or a Japanese war loan offers apparent opportunities of quicker
-profits than putting fresh capital into British ironworks, or founding a
-new British industry, it is the end of South Africa or Japan which is
-served. Three per cent. gained at home, of course, is not so desirable
-as ten per cent. gained abroad. If, therefore, a housing scheme at home
-promises to yield but three per cent., while the employment of coolies
-in South Africa promises ten per cent., South Africa and the coolies are
-"developed"[40] and the housing scheme collapses. This is by no means a
-rhetorical flourish; it is the statement of a case not more extreme than
-hundreds which occur every year.
-
-If I have dwelt upon our oversea investments (I use the possessive
-pronoun for the sake of simplicity of expression) it is because they
-illustrate in a very forcible way the misuse of British capital. But the
-neglect of British interests which they illustrate is small indeed when
-compared with the waste of income upon the pursuit of pleasure and the
-foundation of worthless industries at home. If the whole of our oversea
-investments had been made since 1860, the average amount so invested
-would be not more than £50,000,000 per annum. That consideration enables
-us to view the matter in its due perspective. The foreigner and the
-Colonist have gained through the profit-hunting of the few possessors of
-British wealth, but only to the extent indicated. The oversea
-investments, with all the taint of national shame which attaches to many
-of them, sink into insignificance when we consider the wanton waste of
-labour which has occurred at home. Since 1860 probably as much as
-£6,000,000,000 of income which should have passed into reproductive
-capital has been thrown away in forms of expenditure which have been to
-the degradation of the community. Had that £6,000,000,000 been employed
-in the promotion of cheap transport, in the attachment of agricultural
-workers to the soil, in the acquisition of land by municipalities, in
-the provision of healthy homes for the people, the problems which
-confront us to-day would be of a different order, and it would not be
-possible for the dire poverty of one-third of our people to be basely
-used as a weapon of political warfare.
-
-And while so much of the labour which might have added to the nobility
-and happiness of the British people has been wasted by direction of a
-small fraction of their number, no small part of our employed capital is
-but the tool of mischief. For just as individual capital goes abroad to
-seek its usury without regard to principle or patriotism, so at home it
-engages in the most profitable enterprise known to its limited
-intelligence, without regard to morality or the national welfare. It is
-often more profitable to appeal to what is worst in human nature than to
-seek to supply it with things healthy and honourable. "Is there money in
-it?" is the only touchstone which individual capital applies to
-enterprise.
-
-Obviously there must be reciprocation between the demand for luxurious
-articles and the capital employed in their production. The misdirection
-of labour which we examined in the last chapter connotes a considerable
-misdirection of capital. Thus the effects of luxurious expenditure are
-two-fold. There is dissipation of income in the payment for luxurious
-immaterial commodities which call for no fixed capital, and again there
-is the expenditure of income upon luxurious material commodities which
-call capital to their creation. In either case the result is waste. The
-menial servant is an illustration of the first process. He is divorced
-from production and his work lost to the nation at large. The commodity
-which he sells is obsequious hand-service, degrading alike to himself
-and the person he serves. The purchase of a motor-car is a striking
-example of the second process. To produce it a considerable plant is
-required and capital flows to a business profitable because its
-customers are rich persons who view low priced articles with suspicion.
-
-A striking illustration of a combination of the two processes is
-afforded by a fashionable hotel and restaurant. Here we have a large
-amount of capital sunk in an enormous building which is sustained
-entirely by the expenditure of the wealthy. A host of menial servants
-are employed, whose lives are a denial of manhood and womanhood. In
-addition there are nominally useful occupations associated with the
-conduct of the business. It calls for the manufacture of food, of
-utensils, and of furniture, and a large number of tradesmen and their
-nominally useful assistants are regularly employed in connexion with its
-supplies. A hotel of 700 bedrooms directs the services of an army of
-people, most of whom would appear in the Census as following useful
-occupations. The whole concern is for the most part an organization for
-the waste of capital and labour, and its manifold activities are called
-into existence by the orders of a very limited number of unduly rich
-people who desire that hand-service shall be at their command at a
-moment's notice wherever they may be.
-
-Even more extraordinary is the organization of entire districts in the
-service of wealth and luxury. Nothing can be more pitiable than the
-spectacle which is presented by a neighbourhood the inhabitants of which
-are economically dependent upon the patronage of a limited number of
-well-to-do residents. The local tradesmen, the local builders, the local
-carters, the local nurserymen, the local physician, the local
-boat-builders, the entire local organization, with its little capital
-and much labour, is under the economic over-lordship of a few persons
-whose patronage sustains the entire machinery. Little that is useful is
-produced in the district; but by a process which none of its inhabitants
-could explain there are imported into it commodities from all parts of
-the country. Parasites upon parasites, they scramble for the expenditure
-of the well-to-do, and often contrive to make fat livings out of them.
-Thus, through the initial evil, the underpayment of labour at one end of
-the scale, there is created at the other end a class of luxury providers
-who have no conception of their true position in our social system, or
-of their uselessness to the community at large.
-
-There remains to consider the tremendous waste of capital which arises
-from (1) unnecessary competition and (2) weak or bogus company
-promotion.
-
-In the game of competition frequent attempts are made to establish
-superfluous businesses in many branches of trade. While industry remains
-unorganized such waste of capital must continue, for lacking an estimate
-of the quantity of commodities required in any particular department,
-the limits of consumption can only be found by fruitless attempts to
-discover an unsatisfied demand. This blind application of capital, not
-to service, but in the hope of gain, accounts for the waste of large
-quantities of labour.
-
-Turning to company promotion, it is certain that hundreds of millions of
-capital have been wasted in the last twenty years through the dangling
-of fancy baits before the possessors of unearned increment. The company
-promoter obtains from Somerset House the names and addresses of
-shareholders in such concerns as those referred to in Chapter 8, and so
-is enabled to send to persons who have already tasted the joys of
-"waiting" a prospectus promising them even larger slices of unearned
-increment than they already receive. So other millions derived from
-labour pass into channels of waste.
-
-The waste and misdirection of capital is a far-reaching matter. Lacking
-capital, which simply means lacking tools, labour cannot be economically
-exerted, whether in agriculture, in manufacturing, or in distribution.
-For the use of tools we leave the great mass of our population dependent
-upon a comparative handful of rich persons. That dependence amounts to
-an economic serfdom which places the direction of the lives and labours
-of the people in the hands of the few. The unduly large share of the
-national dividend possessed by the rich produces in them grave faults of
-character and purpose which make them indifferent administrators of the
-capital without which labour is powerless. The unduly small share of the
-national dividend possessed by the poor is the source of a stream of
-moral and physical evils which, mingling with the waters of death which
-descend from the high levels of luxury, produces effects whose causation
-is only obscure as long as we neglect the study of the Error of
-Distribution.
-
-[Footnote 38: "Principles of Economics," Vol. i., p. 786.]
-
-[Footnote 39: The same is true of France. Our neighbours across the
-Channel have fully £1,500,000,000 invested in places outside the
-country.]
-
-[Footnote 40: At Johannesburg on April 15th, 1905, Mr Lionel Phillips is
-reported to have said: "The Chinese were housed, fed and looked after
-better than the working population of England." It may well be.]
-
-
-
-
- BOOK II
- TOWARDS ORGANIZATION
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIII
- THE GOLDEN KEY
-
-
-The misdirection of labour and the waste of income can be checked if we
-would have it so. It is in our power, as a nation, to employ the wealth
-of the community for national ends and to increase abundantly the
-fertility of labour. It is true that we want "more trade," and it is
-also true that we need better use of the results of the trade that we
-have. The problem of poverty is neither obscure nor insoluble; its cause
-is clear from the extraordinary series of facts we have examined; its
-solution becomes equally clear when we realize what ample means of
-remedy we have at our command. We perceive that the chief ramifications
-of the social problem are but varying effects springing from one cause,
-the waste of labour. We realize that Poverty, in a nation of 44,000,000
-persons possessing an aggregate exchange income of about £1,840,000,000,
-need be with us only as long as we care to tolerate it. Each social or
-political problem takes on a new aspect when we consider it, as we
-should consider it, in relation to the income of the nation and its
-distribution.
-
-Unfortunately, the facts of the case have been studied by few people,
-and, in so far as they have been published at all, it has been in pages
-inaccessible to the public. Of our 44,000,000 people, it is doubtful if
-as many as a hundred have studied the subject matter at first hand. Even
-in relation to taxation, the question of distribution is rarely
-discussed. It is but necessary to listen to a debate on the income tax
-in the House of Commons to perceive that on the subject of "ability" the
-vaguest conceptions exist. Our most ardent reformers discuss their plans
-without reference to the economic framework of the society which they
-propose to reform. As a result, we get a vast amount of misdirected
-effort, a dreary outpouring of vague and empty rhetoric, a pitiful
-misconception on the part of the public as to the true condition of
-their finances, industries and commerce, and a succession of timorous
-proposals for reform ludicrous in relation to the nature and magnitude
-of the problems with which they seek to deal.
-
-In the following pages an attempt is made to correlate the facts as to
-the Error of Distribution with many of the problems of government. From
-the standpoint that we are a people with a great income, with a clear
-idea as to the ill-distribution of that income and the manner in which,
-through the joint operations of luxury and poverty, a nation may be
-devitalized even while its income is growing, let us consider the means
-of amelioration.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIV
- THE NATION'S CHILDREN
-
-
-Let us begin at the beginning with what should be the chief care of the
-reformer—the child.
-
-Every year in the United Kingdom there are some 700,000 deaths and some
-1,200,000 births. The social structure which we seek to improve thus
-offers us a double hope. However degraded, however enfeebled, however
-criminal many of the units of the present generation may be, they must
-pass away. Unit after unit is cancelled; unit after unit is replaced.
-The child, save in a small percentage of cases, is given to us an
-unsullied page, upon which we may write what we will.
-
-If the reader would realize fully the truth which I have just expressed,
-let him ponder the following utterance by Professor D. J. Cunningham
-when under examination by the recent Inter-Departmental Committee on
-Physical Deterioration. After referring to the manner in which changes
-in the condition of life affect the growth of an individual class, and
-more especially how poverty with its squalor, its bad feeding, and its
-attendant ignorance as to the proper nurture of the child, lowers the
-physical standard of the poor, he went on to say:
-
-"In spite of the marked variations which are seen in the physique of the
-different classes of people of Great Britain, anthropologists believe,
-with good reason, that there is a mean physical standard which is the
-inheritance of the people as a whole, and that no matter how far certain
-sections of the people may deviate from this by deterioration (produced
-by the causes referred to) the tendency of the race as a whole will
-always be to maintain the inherited mean. In other words, those inferior
-bodily characters which are the result of poverty (and not vice such as
-syphilis and alcoholism) and which are therefore acquired during the
-lifetime of the individual, are not transmissible from one generation to
-another."
-
-I break the quotation to accentuate the conclusion:
-
-"Therefore, to restore the classes in which this inferiority exists to
-the mean standard of national physique, all that is required is to
-improve the standard of living, and in one or two generations the ground
-that has been lost will be recovered."
-
-According to Dr Alfred Eichholz, H.M. Inspector of Schools, fully 90 per
-cent. of the children born in poor neighbourhoods are healthy. Dr Edward
-Malins, President of the Obstetrical Society, gives it as his opinion
-that 80 to 85 per cent. of children are born physically healthy,
-whatever the condition of the mother antecedently.[41] The weight of
-new-born children, he thinks, is, speaking generally, not below the
-average—there is a constant reversion to the race standard.
-
-It is probable that these statements of Dr Eichholz and Dr Malins
-require some modification. Other evidence goes to show that it is far
-from true that the majority of children born in poor neighbourhoods are
-healthy. Thus Dr Henry Ashby, of Manchester, a leading authority on the
-diseases of children, said in a letter to the "Lancet" on October 1st,
-1904:—
-
-"My own experience in the out-patient room entirely confirms the opinion
-that the nutrition of the mother has a very important bearing on the
-nutrition of the fœtus and that the statement that the percentage of
-unhealthy births among the poor is small is not justified by facts. We
-constantly see fully developed infants a day or two old brought by
-midwives or neighbours exceedingly badly nourished, blue and feeble, and
-who are clearly ill fitted, as the event indeed proves, to withstand the
-conditions of an external existence. There must be numbers of such born
-in this city that perish within a few weeks of their birth, and who fail
-to thrive for even a day. There is no question of syphilis; they are the
-children of poor mothers who have lived lives of hard wear and tear
-during pregnancy, are themselves badly nourished and weakly, and have
-felt the pinch of poverty, though often perhaps poverty of the secondary
-sort. I have a strong conviction also that the infants of the poorer and
-weaker mothers, even though they are born fairly well nourished, are
-difficult to rear, and easily waste even when under fairly favourable
-conditions in a home or hospital."
-
-Evidence to the same effect was given to the Physical Deterioration
-Committee, but unfortunately ignored in their report. It seems to a
-layman a common-sense view that if, in the period when a woman has to
-eat to "feed two," she is badly nourished, and exposed to undue fatigue,
-the child must suffer. Nevertheless, the striking phrase of Dr Malins,
-"Nature intends all to have a fair start," may be fully accepted, and
-Professor Cunningham's words of hope require no modification. What we
-have to remember is that pre-natal as well as post-natal conditions must
-be improved if we wish to rehabilitate our stock. If we have not a
-renewed opportunity with each birth, at least we have it, save in quite
-exceptional cases, in the person of each pregnant woman. The weight of
-evidence goes to show that the influence of heredity upon disease has in
-the past been greatly exaggerated. The chief causes of deaths from
-debility, atrophy and premature birth are to be found in the evil
-environment and malnutrition of the mother during pregnancy. The unborn
-child fights hard for its life, but in a number of cases, sufficiently
-large seriously to affect the total population, it is born unfit. It
-either succumbs rapidly or lingers on to be a curse to itself and its
-kind.
-
-These all-important facts once realized, an avenue of hope stretches out
-before us. 1,200,000 new births every year; 1,200,000 new units added to
-the national stock, and the possibility of ensuring that nearly the
-whole of them shall be born healthy. Here is Nature ever endeavouring to
-reform the race—ever offering us opportunity. Combine with knowledge of
-this opportunity knowledge of the means to take advantage of it. Combine
-with the determination to secure reform the application of national
-wealth to truly national ends and all things become possible.
-
-Under what circumstances are the children of the new generation now
-born? It follows from our examination of incomes that a large proportion
-of our new births are of mothers who exist in conditions of extreme
-poverty. Fully one-fourth to one-third of the 1,200,000 are born to want
-and squalor. In England and Wales, at the census of 1901, of a
-population of 32,527,843, there were 12,983,109 persons belonging to
-families living in four rooms or less. In one room each lived families
-forming 507,763 people. In two rooms each lived families forming
-2,158,644 people. In three rooms each lived families forming 3,186,640
-people. In four rooms each lived families forming 7,130,062 people.
-
-If the one-third of very poor could be gifted with all the virtues, if
-drink were abolished and every penny spent upon scientific principles,
-we have seen that they would still be unable to command a healthy
-existence. One-third of our hope of the future is thus mortgaged.
-One-third of the new-born go to feed the ranks of misery and to form,
-such of them as do not perish in infancy, the raw material of the social
-problems of those who are to follow us.
-
-In England and Wales, in 1908, 940,000 children were born. In the same
-year 113,000 infants died under one year of age, or 120 per 1000 births.
-The conditions which exist in some of our towns can be gathered from the
-following figures:—
-
- INFANT MORTALITY
- (Rates per 1000 births in 1908)
-
- Towns with High Rates. | Towns with Low Rates.
- Stalybridge 206 | Reigate 80
- Farnworth 209 | Tunbridge Wells 83
- Aberdare 198 | Hornsey 75
- Rhondda 182 | Guildford 71
- Burnley 194 | Winchester 88
- Batley 186 | Watford 88
- Longton 199 | Ilford 98
- Tunstall 198 | Salisbury 95
-
-The towns with low rates cannot be said to possess ideal conditions, but
-merely to take them as a standard we see how considerable is the wastage
-of life which goes on in Lancashire and Yorkshire and Staffordshire and
-South Wales. In some of the poorer wards of our great towns one in three
-of the children born perish within twelve months. That is the case in
-some parts of Birmingham, where the Medical Officer of Health recently
-stated that "a reduction of 50 per cent. in the rate of infant mortality
-in Birmingham would mean the saving of 1500 lives per annum."
-
-But death is only one of the symptoms we have to consider in this
-connexion, and death itself were preferable to the survival of a large
-proportion of the children of neighbourhoods where the rate of infantile
-mortality reaches one in every three or four births. Death is the
-extreme case. Those who do not die in infancy have physical degeneracy
-as their portion, and, in a world where virility and energy were never
-more needed by the labourer if he is to bargain successfully for a
-decent livelihood, enter the fierce lists of modern industry with
-enfeebled bodies. Docile units thus flood the casual labour market, or,
-totally unfitted for labour, swell the ranks of the "residuum."
-
-A woman ought not to work for the last three months of her pregnancy or
-during the three months after her child is born. Further, if the child
-is to be fed as Nature intended it should not be weaned until about the
-seventh or eighth month of its life.
-
-What cognizance does the law now take of these simple physiological
-facts? The Factory Act is not aware that pregnancy precedes childbirth.
-It recognizes, however, that children are born, and provides that the
-occupier of a factory or laundry shall not allow a woman to be employed
-"within four weeks after she has given birth to a child." Thus a feeble
-attempt is made to protect the working mother for a month after
-childbirth, but no law whatever protects the child. It is legal for the
-mother to go back to the factory on the twenty-ninth day and leave the
-child to take its pitiful chance.
-
-The "four week" provision is largely a dead letter. How is an employer
-to "know," when a woman applies to him for work, that she bore a child a
-fortnight before her application? And who shall blame the woman for
-seeking work, when she must work or starve? Miss A. M. Anderson,
-Principal Lady Inspector of Factories, gives the following three cases
-found in a single town in one week's inquiry:—[42]
-
-A. B., aged 24, unmarried, jute worker, had to leave work, being unfit,
-seven weeks before confinement. Became destitute, and found work with
-new employer, saying nothing about the baby. Earns 9s. 8d. per week.
-
-C. D., aged 34, married, jute spinner; the child illegitimate. Went back
-to work three weeks after childbirth. The new employer knew nothing of
-the confinement.
-
-F. F., aged 32, married, jute spinner. Went back to work in 15 days—to a
-new employer. Earns 11s. to 12s. per week. Father out of work and
-disappeared one week after the birth. The woman's mother "takes care" of
-the new baby and two other children, the eldest of whom earns 8s. a week
-in a jute mill. Thus 19s. or so per week supports two adults and three
-children. They all live in a single room which is very dirty.
-
-In spite of an overwhelming mass of evidence as to the devastating
-effect of the employment in factories and workshops of pregnant women
-and mothers, the Physical Deterioration Committee's recommendations on
-the subject were exceedingly timid. They appear to have been impressed
-with the terrible consequences of the employment of women "from
-girlhood, all through married life and through child-bearing"; they
-realized that "the decreasing physical capacity of the child-bearing
-woman brings her at last some relief at the hands of the manager of the
-mill and she is sent away, often to take up the equally unsuitable
-occupation of charwoman or house scrubber." But, after setting out pages
-of good reason for action, the Committee, in effect, came to the
-conclusion that little or nothing could be done, because they were
-reminded of "the enormous practical difficulties that would accompany
-any sort of legal prohibition." Even as to extension of the period after
-confinement during which employment is forbidden, a point as to which,
-as in many other matters, we are falling behind Western civilization as
-a whole, the Committee did not advocate the enactment of a longer period
-than four weeks. They pinned their faith to a medical certificate as to
-fitness, and production of proof that reasonable care is made for the
-child in a municipal crèche or otherwise. They also strongly urged the
-application of "voluntary assistance" in the shape of maternity funds.
-
-Thus lastly they came to the crux of the matter, the subject of "ways
-and means." The cause of the Committee's timidity is only too plain. It
-is impossible to make a recommendation of any value which does not
-entail expense. What is the use of talking of "medical certificates,"
-unless we can ensure that, when the medico has certified unfitness, the
-poor mother shall have the means of refraining from work? Of what use to
-talk of "reasonable care" of the infant, unless the means of reasonable
-care be provided, and what form of care other than that of the mother is
-"reasonable"?
-
-The whole aspect of the question is changed when we consider the extent
-of our national resources. Miss Anderson, in the invaluable memorandum
-on the subject which she supplied to the Committee, said: "It ought not
-to be impossible to link together in one great national provident and
-protective association all the isolated, half-informed societies and
-agencies at work in aid of maternity and for the saving of infant life.
-More than that, I believe, with Miss Squire (Lady Factory Inspector),
-that all over the country, but particularly in the great centres in the
-Midlands and the North, it needs only an organizing mind and purpose to
-bring such a national movement into being."
-
-The Committee did not take up the idea of a "national movement." They
-preferred to urge that "voluntary assistance" should devote itself to
-the formation of maternity funds. But a problem of so much gravity
-demands national effort, and the use of the national purse. Out of the
-labour of the poor is drained the rents, profits and dividends which
-make the gross assessment to income tax in 1908-9 as much as
-£1,010,000,000. Of this sum, how much is needed to deal with the problem
-of the poor mother?
-
-We have to consider not alone the woman who works in the factory, but
-also the woman who works in the home. A large proportion of the latter
-are necessitous and ignorant, lacking both the means to feed themselves
-and their children properly, and the training to apply the means if they
-had them. The case is one in which education and supply must go hand in
-hand, and both education and supply should be provided for nationally.
-
-In the school the teaching of personal and domestic hygiene to scholars
-of both sexes should begin at an early age. In the case of girls, infant
-hygiene should be added in the higher standards. Girls should not leave
-school or continuation classes until they have been seriously trained in
-domestic duties. At present we herd them in classes of 60 or 80, and
-leave a teacher, herself often ignorant of the chief duties of
-womanhood, to impart to them a smattering of matters of secondary
-importance. Able to write badly, to cipher inaccurately, and to read a
-novelette, the girl goes forth from the school "educated," and more
-ignorant of essential things than the untutored savage.
-
-If we would have these children technically trained in domestic economy
-and hygiene, acquainted with the dietetic value of simple foods, and
-sent out into the world fit to take their places in the national
-economy, we must make up our minds to increase our expenditure upon
-education. We must have more teachers and better trained teachers.
-
-But, if we put our hands earnestly to this work tomorrow, many years
-would elapse before we could rear a new generation of mothers. What of
-the mothers who now lack education—of the vast number of girls who are
-now passing from school into the world they are so unfit to play a part
-in? Work upon the right lines has already been commenced at Preston, St
-Pancras, and other places. Let me outline the admirable scheme of Dr J.
-F. J. Sykes, the Medical Officer of Health for St Pancras.
-
-St Pancras is a poor and crowded London Borough in which, as in many
-other such neighbourhoods, infants are dying at a younger and younger
-age from increased immaturity at birth, from diminished capacity to
-resist disease and from increased rearing "by hand." It is but necessary
-to take one walk through its mean streets to see that St Pancras is
-breeding a degenerate race. The Borough Council has awakened to the
-terrible evil which increasingly threatens them. They have a most
-capable medical officer and they have appointed women inspectors to act
-under his authority. These women inspectors perform the important
-function of following up the weekly official returns of births. There
-are about 130 births a week in St Pancras, and all of them cannot be
-visited by the present small staff, but an endeavour is made to visit
-every necessitous case. To all the mothers, whether visited or not, a
-card or leaflet of useful information is sent by post. Dr Sykes does not
-teach the mothers how to wean or artificially feed their children, but
-to suckle their babies and to avoid weaning them before their first
-teeth appear. To the many indigent mothers the women inspectors give
-advice as to regimen and diet and, where artificial feeding is
-absolutely necessary, how best to proceed. Endeavour is also made to
-reach and advise pregnant women. Throughout, the chief aim is to reduce
-hand-feeding to the smallest possible proportions.
-
-In cases of poverty requiring temporary assistance, the women inspectors
-give cards of introduction to the Charity Organization Society, or to
-the Poor Law Guardians. Where health is deranged or there is a desire or
-necessity to wean, introduction to a doctor or a hospital is arranged
-for. Where the husband is out of work the case is notified to the Labour
-Bureau. In every case the hygienic, sanitary and domestic circumstances
-of the mother and infant are carefully inquired into and reported upon.
-
-This practical work, now in operation in St Pancras, and with variations
-in some other places, is what is wanted everywhere if we are to rescue
-the poor children of the new generation. The appointment of sufficient
-Women Health Inspectors by local authorities must be made compulsory. In
-"Riches and Poverty," edition 1905, I wrote: "The Health Inspectors must
-of course be directed by a capable Medical Officer enjoying a permanent
-appointment. It is most important that Medical Officers of Health
-everywhere should have the same security of tenure which they have in
-London. At present they hold office as a rule at the goodwill of the
-local authority." Mr Burns's Housing Bill of 1909 has secured this
-important reform. In future every county will have its independent
-Medical Officer, unafraid of local influence.
-
-Closely allied to the work of the Health Inspector is that of the
-medical man, and here is raised a point of the utmost importance. Above
-all, if we are in earnest about this matter of breed, the public medical
-service should be greatly enlarged as part of the machinery of a
-Ministry of Health, and the sale of soothing syrups and other "patent"
-medicines absolutely prohibited.[43] The Medical Officers of Health
-should be able to marshal a liberal service of trained medical skill in
-defence of the national well-being. Also at their command should be an
-ample supply of Health Visitors and trained and certificated nurses. The
-creatures, nearly always ignorant and frequently unclean, who now
-"assist" poor women in their time of trouble, are responsible for part
-of the infant mortality which swells our death returns. I shall never
-forget some of the "monthly nurses" I have met in the homes of the poor.
-One ancient dame I found swilling stout. She leered at me out of a beery
-eye and explained that she liked stout "because it made her feel as
-though she could sing." Needless to say, she strongly recommended the
-same joyful fluid to her patients.
-
-The excellent Notification of Births Act of Lord Robert Cecil (1907)
-should be adopted (or its adoption enforced—the Local Government Board
-has power to enforce adoption) universally, in order that Health
-Visitors may do their work effectually.
-
-Given a properly organized public medical service we could begin at the
-beginning, with the unborn child. The pregnant woman could obtain, free
-of charge and as a matter of course, advice upon her diet and conduct.
-Through such a service, it would be a simple matter to administer a
-Public Maternity Fund. It is probable that, of the 1,200,000 births per
-annum, as many as 300,000 are in necessitous families. We cannot afford
-to allow 300,000 children to be starved before and after birth every
-year.
-
-The nation must set its face against the employment of married women in
-factories or workshops, and gradually extend the period of legal
-prohibition. There is only one proper sphere of work for the married
-woman and that is her own home. In the case of factory workers the
-employer must be made to furnish a maternity fund if he wishes to employ
-married women. Thus penalized he will probably prefer not to employ
-them—to the very great advantage of the labour market and the nation.
-There are several model factories in the United Kingdom where the female
-workers are dismissed upon marriage. This is found to prevent the girls
-falling victims to loafers who desire to play three days a week. The
-Jewish community amongst us, the very aliens who are despised by the
-race they are supplanting in the East End of London, set us an example
-which we should do well to imitate. The Jewish children are much
-healthier and stronger than their Gentile neighbours because they are
-better mothered. Jewish women find their true avocation at home. The
-Jew, however poor, does not live on his wife's earnings, and it would be
-counted shame for a Jewess to work during pregnancy or after childbirth.
-
-But what of the poor woman in her home? We can safely confer upon our
-medical officers and women inspectors power to report upon and advise
-the assistance of necessitous cases, before and after childbirth. The
-mother and child must be fed. Nature must be allowed to fulfil her
-desire to give the new unit of population a fair start in life. The cost
-would be surprisingly small. If 300,000 cases were assisted to the
-extent of £10 each it would entail an expenditure of only £3,000,000 per
-annum. With £10 per case a great deal could be done.
-
-By assistance to the extent of £10 each I do not necessarily mean a
-money payment. Often the assistance which is most wanted is personal
-help. The poor Jewish women of East London have the aid of that
-excellent institution the Sick Room Helps Society, which is practically
-a charitable institution, the poor mothers contributing less than
-one-third of the expenditure. The "Sick Room Helps" provided by this
-Society are thus described by Miss Bella Löwy:
-
- "They had to take the place of the house-mother when, through
- confinement or sickness, she was laid low, and when, were it not for
- their ministrations, the children and husband, and the home (sometimes
- consisting of one room only) would be absolutely uncared for. The Helps
- were only sent in where there was no woman or girl old enough and able
- to do the work. The Sick Room Helps, for the time being, took the place
- of the housemother, washed the baby, got the children ready and sent
- them to school, cooked the food, tidied and cleaned up the home, saw
- that any accumulation of washing was done. In fact, she attended to the
- hundred and one little things which required to be seen to even in the
- most modest home, and they could readily understand how much more
- cleanliness and order became indispensable when the family had to live,
- eat and sleep in one room only. The advent of the Sick Room Helps also
- ensured for the mother peace of mind, as well as of body, at a time
- when she sorely needed both, and if she knew that her husband and
- children were well-cared for and well looked after she was assisted on
- the road to health and strength, and was, thereby, enabled to take up
- afresh the routine of her numerous daily duties. Formerly the poor
- mothers used to grudge themselves even a few days of enforced idleness,
- and, by premature activity in getting up and about, they but too often
- sowed the seeds of illness and sickness, and brought untold troubles on
- themselves and their families. Notwithstanding that these facts were
- well-known and were perfectly obvious to every thinking person, the
- opposition to what was erroneously termed a new form of pauperization
- had been very great. But an institution which not only benefited the
- recipients by nursing them when it was imperatively necessary, but, at
- the same time, gave employment to deserving women, enabling them to
- support themselves, and, perhaps, their family, could not be accused of
- encouraging pauperism in any way."
-
-Mrs Alice Model, the honorary secretary, tells me that the Jewish Board
-of Guardians applies a sum annually for the relief of destitute women in
-childbed, which is handed to this Society and applicants for relief are
-referred to it. If a case is found suitable, a nurse is sent in twice
-daily and milk and other suitable nourishment provided. Excellent
-results are obtained and many lives saved. Work on such lines might
-easily be carried on given a sufficient staff of Women Health Inspectors
-and an expenditure such as I have mentioned to provide nurses and
-nourishment.
-
-In this connexion a municipal milk service, which will be discussed in
-these pages hereafter, would be of the first importance, and it would be
-found a simple matter to supply pregnant women and nursing mothers with
-an ample quantity of pure milk. Such a supply might be made universal
-and be specially supplemented in necessitous cases. In any case, the
-mother has a special claim upon the community and that claim should be
-recognized. The birth of a child is a special tax upon the family in
-which it occurs, a tax which is deliberately avoided by many people. Yet
-the unit not only belongs to its family; it is an integral part of the
-nation, and entitled to the care of a country which desires strong and
-healthy citizens.
-
-Such provisions should be accompanied by drastic punishment of parents
-who neglect their duties. Upon report of the Health Officer, the
-prosecution and punishment of offenders against the nation's children
-would swiftly follow. We must make the man who neglects his child, which
-is also the nation's child, feel that he is the greatest criminal of
-them all.
-
-It is impossible to leave the subject of the birth of the new generation
-without reference to the necessity for the segregation of the unfit. It
-must be made no longer possible for the habitual drunkard, the vagrant,
-the criminal, the mentally defective, to reproduce their terrible kind.
-The subject is so rarely brought before the public that few people
-realize the nature and extent of the danger. _Fully two per cent. of our
-existing elementary school children will never be fit to direct their
-own lives._ The State has but one duty in the matter and that is to
-protect society from the breeding of the unfit, while protecting the
-unfit from themselves. The child of the habitual drunkard is often
-feeble-minded. The child of the feeble-minded is frequently an idiot.
-Need we wonder, while the State has no control of the feeble-minded,
-that our lunatic asylums are ever growing too small for their pitiable
-populations. Our criminal and workhouse records are full of testimony as
-to the terrible results of the unchecked propagation of the insane by
-the mentally weak. A few years ago, at Daventry, a couple were charged
-with neglecting their ten-year-old son. It was stated that the child was
-in the habit of smoking a pipe and drinking beer, supplied by the
-father. A doctor stated that the boy was a perfect savage. He was
-undersized and threatened to be an idiot or a criminal. The boy was sent
-to the workhouse while the mother and father, described as "mentally
-weak," were sentenced to one day's imprisonment and are now free to
-bring forth _sui generis_. Another recently reported case which I noted
-was that of a partly paralyzed old man who applied for out-relief to the
-Oulton Guardians. He has had thirty children and the youngest, a girl,
-is described as "practically an imbecile." From her, doubtless, and from
-others of the brood, the terrible strain will proceed. Mr Amos W.
-Butler, speaking at the American Association for the Advancement of
-Science, gave particulars of the descendants of a feeble-minded woman.
-She was the mother of two daughters, who were free to marry because,
-like their parent, they were not actually insane. One of them, Rachel,
-has married twice, and borne eleven children, three of whom are dead.
-One of the survivors is a criminal and the others are degenerates. The
-other daughter, Kate, has four children, all feeble-minded, two of them
-illegitimate. One of them became the wife of a feeble-minded paralytic
-and has had five awful children. The direct descendants of the woman
-first mentioned number twenty-nine, and in ten years twelve of them have
-spent an aggregate of twenty-two years in asylums and orphans' homes.
-
-These details may be nauseating, but of what use to shirk them? It is
-only when we realize that such propagation is going on unchecked that we
-see our duty clear in the matter. We then also see that segregation of
-the unfit would not increase our burdens, but decrease them.
-
-Segregation recognized as a painful duty, it would no longer be
-necessary to make any reservation when speaking of the hope that lies in
-the child. Our 1,200,000 new births per annum would soon regenerate the
-race. _During the next twenty years about 25,000,000 children will be
-born in the United Kingdom._
-
-[Footnote 41: See evidence before the Physical Deterioration Committee.]
-
-[Footnote 42: Cd. 2175, p. 117.]
-
-[Footnote 43: In this connexion it should be observed that there are
-28,000 surgeons, physicians and medical practitioners in the United
-Kingdom. The number (one to about 300 families) is probably larger than
-the nation needs, but even to organize the whole of them as public
-servants, and to make the medical service entirely free, would cost only
-about £10,000,000 per annum, allowing for salaries ranging from £250 to
-£1,000.]
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XV
- THE SCHOOL
-
-
-In a commonwealth a man would need a healthy mind in a healthy body to
-be true to himself, and to every man. In an unorganized community, in
-which each man must needs struggle with his fellow for the right to
-live, and in which to be unselfish is to be weak, and to be weak is to
-go to the wall, a man needs a healthy mind in a healthy body in order to
-set up himself and those dear to him in a fortress impregnable, with
-ramparts against competitors, secret stores against time of siege, and
-insurance policies against the horrors that threaten weak women and
-young children whose champion has departed.
-
-As things are now, we have then, not merely to train the boy to be a man
-for manhood's sake, but to fit him to fight what has been pleasantly
-called "the battle of life." He must be not only strong but artful, not
-only intelligent but cunning, not only brave but aggressive, not only
-fit to work but fit to bargain, not only an artist but a shopkeeper.
-
-Knowing what we do of the hardness of the competitive system, how unfair
-we are to these children whom we affect to "educate." We dose them with
-a little book-learning and pass them on to seek employers. Nothing has
-been taught them by way of preparation for the real education upon which
-they are about to enter. They are wholly ignorant of the nature of the
-machine of which they are about to become an insignificant part. They
-plunge into the hard work which henceforth is to be their portion and
-little that has been taught them is of value in connexion with it. The
-boy is compelled to play a game for wages without knowledge of the
-rules. Business presents itself to him as an impenetrable mystery, the
-secrets of which are known but to a few. He becomes a producer of things
-which in some way, he knows not how, are sold and bought and come to
-yield him a certain or uncertain wage. He does not see, nor, if he saw,
-would he understand, the balance sheet which sums up the processes which
-yield him a part only of his production. He is not competent to measure
-the extent of the injustice which he suffers. It is a game played
-between a few who know and many who do not know.
-
-From the beginning of the child's life, the Error of Distribution plays
-its part. The opportunity offered the child varies directly with the
-income of its parent. The frontispiece of this volume measures not
-income alone; it measures also the degree of opportunity which is
-offered to the children respectively of the rich, the comfortable and
-the poor. Since the bulk of the people are poor, the greater number of
-the nation's children are handicapped at the start. Individually they
-are deprived of their birthright. Collectively the community is deprived
-of the proper value of their strength, their intelligence, their genius.
-
-The last point is rarely discussed. Intellect and genius are the
-possessions of no single class. Year by year we kill off units of our
-population who might live to work good for their kind. Year by year we
-brutalize men who, given opportunity, might enrich our literature or
-ennoble our art. Year by year we waste the greater part of the gifts of
-our people. Here and there some rare combination of muscle and brain
-rises superior to circumstance and lives to command the class which
-would have repressed him. These exceptional cases serve to remind us of
-the ability which is lost. We know only of the soldiers who live to be
-commanders. Probably greater generals than Napoleon have perished as
-privates in their first battle. That is unavoidable, for in battle some
-must die. But in the arts of peace the sacrifice of potential commanders
-need not go on. Given equality of opportunity, the marshal's baton in
-each private's knapsack, and the nation need not waste one of its great
-men.
-
-If we are in earnest in this matter of the problem of poverty, we must
-hasten to equalize opportunity, and having begun with the unborn child,
-continue our work in the school. We must seek to make the school a
-preparation for life and endeavour to build up, out of the new
-generation, citizens who understand, and who, understanding, will see to
-it that they remain not poor.
-
-In the first place, we have to attend to the child's body. Through the
-school we can see that the child is properly clothed and properly fed.
-Through the school we can teach the child to understand its physical
-nature and to respect it. In a certain class of trumpery novel, the
-"tubbing" Englishman is distinguished from the unclean foreigner. The
-simple fact is that the Englishmen who "tub" are quite exceptional
-specimens of their kind. Few of the 9,000,000 houses of the United
-Kingdom are provided with tubbing apparatus, and even the London County
-Council has lately built "model" cottages which contain no bath. We must
-change all that. The Germans are setting us the example of introducing
-shower baths into their public elementary schools, and all the children
-are bathed once a week. They soon get to enjoy it, and it is rarely that
-a child objects. Mr George Andrew, in his valuable report to the
-Scottish Education Department on the schools of Berlin and
-Charlottenburg,[44] says that in the poorer localities this weekly bath
-system is found to have an educational effect upon the parents. The
-mothers, influenced by the knowledge that their children's underclothing
-will be scrutinized, supply them with clean things. Thus even that least
-amenable of subjects, the parent, may be reached through the child.
-
-In "Riches and Poverty" edition 1905, I wrote:—
-
-"In the matter of school hygiene and the physical training of children,
-the introduction of the medico into the school is all-important. At
-present, proper hygienic inspection of our schools does not exist.
-Medical officers should be appointed both to see that school buildings
-are absolutely healthy and to care for the personal health of the
-pupils. Upon entering the school, the child should undergo a preliminary
-examination and from thence onward remain under the care of the school
-doctor. The preliminary examination would decide the question of fitness
-for normal instruction; defective children would be drafted into special
-classes."
-
-In 1907 the Education (Administrative Provisions) Act made it the "duty"
-of local education authorities "to provide for the medical inspection of
-children immediately before, or at the time of, or as soon as possible
-after, their admission to a public elementary school" and the "power" of
-such authorities to make arrangements "for attending to the health and
-physical condition of the children." It is earnestly to be hoped that
-this "power" will be exercised; at present many authorities are blind to
-it. The reader may judge from a single example the importance of using
-the schools as a means of physical control and training. Dr Ralph H.
-Crowley, the Medical Superintendent of the Bradford Education Authority,
-conducted an inquiry into the physical condition of the school children
-of Bradford in 1907. The results make painful reading.
-
-Let us begin with the "general condition" of the Bradford children. The
-examination as to cleanliness was made by observations of the head,
-ears, and neck, and by rolling up the sleeves of the children. The
-following approximate figures were arrived at:
-
- CONDITION AS TO CLEANLINESS
-
- Number. Per Cent.
-
- Clean 10,000 22.2
- Somewhat dirty 22,000 49.0
- Dirty 11,500 25.5
- Very dirty 1,500 3.3
-
-I think we must agree with Dr Crowley that these figures "show a
-deplorable state of things." What is to be said of "home life" and
-"education," which between them fail to teach a child to be clean?
-
-Here are some saddening details as to the condition of the heads of
-girls:
-
- CONDITION OF GIRLS' HEADS
-
- No. of Girls. Per Cent.
-
- Clean 7,000 30
- Nits present 8,500 35
- Lice present 8,500 35
-
-And these figures, we are told, exclude many children sent home because
-their heads had "broken out" through the presence of lice.
-
-As to clothing, here are the figures:
-
- CONDITION OF CLOTHING
-
- No. of Children. Per Cent.
-
- Good 10,000 22
- Average 19,000 42
- Bad or very bad 16,000 36
-
-As for boots, the results are worth the consideration of British
-bootmakers. As many as 6,500 children had foot-gear so bad that in many
-cases "it was difficult to see how what were meant for boots managed to
-keep on the feet."
-
-Condition as to nutrition was judged broadly, irrespective of cause. Dr
-Crowley divided the schools into three classes—better class schools,
-poor schools, poorest. I take the case of the poorest schools:
-
- C. SCHOOLS—POOREST
-
- Nutrition. Infants. Upper School.
- No. Per Cent. No. Per Cent.
-
- Good or sufficiently good 51 30.7 105 24.4
- Below normal 58 34.9 183 42.6
- Poor or very poor 57 34.4 142 33.0
-
-Taking the three groups of schools together, we find that 1,019 children
-out of nearly 2,000 were "below normal" in point of nutrition. More than
-one-half, that is, were suffering from chronic semi-starvation. Of the
-1,019, as many as 344 were described as "poor or very poor."
-
-Very instructively Dr Crowley measured nutrition against mental
-capacity, and showed clearly how often unhealthy minds are the product
-of unhealthy bodies. Of children of exceptional intelligence, 62.7 per
-cent. were of good nutrition. Of dull children only 24.9 per cent. were
-of good nutrition.
-
-Dr Crowley concluded his significant report with these words:
-
-"No increased facilities for higher education or technical instruction
-can in any way take the place of attention to the physical side of our
-children. The future of our nation will depend, not on the ability of
-the few, but on the fitness of the many, and this fitness must be
-secured at all cost. It is for us as a nation a matter of life and
-death."
-
-To proceed, anthropometric statistics should be carefully compiled, and
-a sickness register kept, so that the nation may judge of the progress
-made in restoring its stature. The teeth would have special attention
-and the school dentist would work hand in hand with the school doctor.
-Children need few dosings, but in special cases cod liver oil or a
-suitable tonic could be administered, as is done in Belgium.
-
-In cases of defective nourishment the child must be fed, whatever the
-character of the parent. No fears as to the loosening of parental
-responsibility need stand in the way in this essential matter, for
-drastic punishment of neglectful parents should go hand in hand with our
-care of the child. Nothing, in my opinion, is so likely to encourage the
-feeling of parental responsibility, and to shame careless mothers, as
-the knowledge that at the school the child is regarded as a valuable
-commodity. In this connexion it would be well for the Board of Education
-to insist upon periodical reports, not less frequently than every three
-months, to parents upon their children. A carefully written report upon
-the progress of the scholar in all departments would be calculated to
-stimulate the better feelings of the parent.
-
-The greatest timidity was shown by the Physical Deterioration Committee
-in dealing with the important subject of underfed children. The report
-runs:
-
-"By a differentiation of function on these terms—the School Authority to
-supply and organize the machinery, the benevolent to furnish the
-material—a working adjustment between the privileges of charity and the
-obligations of the community might be reached. In some districts it
-still may be the case that such an arrangement would prove inadequate,
-the extent or the concentration of poverty might be too great for the
-resources of local charity, and in these, subject to the consent of the
-Board of Education, it might be expedient to permit the application of
-municipal aid on a larger scale."
-
-It is the State that must furnish the "material," not as a matter of
-charity, but from motives of the purest common sense. The timidity of
-the Committee is the more remarkable when the evidence presented to them
-is examined. Dr Eichholz made a special investigation into the
-conditions of the Johanna Street Board School, Lambeth, as a type of
-school in a very bad district, and he considers that 90 per cent. of the
-children are unable, by reason of their physical condition, to attend to
-their lessons in a proper way. His estimate of the underfed children in
-the elementary schools of London is 122,000, or 16 per cent. of the
-whole.[45]
-
-Those alone who have had to do with voluntary free breakfast schemes can
-have any idea of the terrible hunger of the children who attend them.
-The hugging of the mug of cocoa, the ravenous swallowing—it cannot be
-called eating—of the slices of bread, make one shudder to think that,
-but for such isolated voluntary effort, the poor children would in an
-hour or so be entering a school at which their attendance is compulsory
-to—study! And for one helped by voluntary effort how many go hungry to
-their tasks, utterly unable, through physical weakness, to do their
-work!
-
-Those who have grasped the importance of the utterance of Dr D. J.
-Cunningham, quoted in the last chapter, will heartily agree with Sir
-Shirley Murphy, L.C.C. Medical Officer of Health, that "the child has
-got to be fed." The chief deterrent to many is fear that parents will be
-demoralized by free meals at the schools. It must be realized by those
-who entertain this fear that the parents are often already thoroughly
-demoralized, and that their demoralization in the great majority of
-cases has resulted from the conditions imposed upon them from their
-birth by our social system. They are what they are because of
-circumstances over which their control was nominal. _The reader, or
-myself, if transplanted to Lambeth at a few months old, and nurtured as
-they were nurtured, would at this moment be what they are._ "There, but
-for the Grace of God, goes myself," is the reflection which every man
-should make when he contemplates the waste products of the civilization
-of which he himself is a favoured part. That truth realized by any man,
-it is never again possible for him, if he has more than the average
-share of the nation's income, to grudge a part of the amount by which
-his income exceeds the average to raise to a higher level the children
-of those whose lives have been a crying injustice from their cradles—of
-those who have, with all their faults, done more than their share of the
-hard labour of the world.
-
-In 1906 the Education (Provision of Meals) Act enacted that a local
-education authority "may take such steps as they think fit for the
-provision of meals for children in attendance at any public elementary
-school in their area" to the extent of a halfpenny rate and no more. So,
-with extreme timidity, the legislative machine advances.
-
-Games, physical drill, gardening and swimming, should be taught to every
-child, under proper medical control. I assume the existence of
-playgrounds in some ample shape—each school having its indoor and
-outdoor places of recreation and its school garden. A great object is to
-keep the child from the street. For the same reason, the school grounds
-should be open on summer evenings and during all vacations. It is a
-simple matter to make the vacations a time of real holiday for every
-child—filled with lively interest and healthful sport. With the physical
-exercises and teaching of games and, indeed, with all other departments
-of school life should be associated what Rousseau considered to be the
-chief moral principle that a child should learn—to do harm to no one.
-That carries with it the teaching of "manners" in their best sense. Nor
-should graces of person be neglected. The boy should not be allowed to
-slouch about with his hands in his pockets. If he does, he is only too
-likely to slouch into casual labour hereafter.
-
-Clean, neatly clad, healthy, well-nourished, upright, self-respecting
-and therefore respectful of others, feeling its strength in every limb,
-well-mannered, capable of lucid expression—is it beyond our powers to
-make the average child all this? Not if these things are as well worth
-consideration as the resistance of an armour-plate, the trajectory of a
-rifle-bullet, or the virtues of a smokeless powder. Not if the proper
-study of mankind is man.
-
-Having made provision for the body, we may now turn to the mind. I have
-referred to the child's power of expression, and I think that the
-average elementary scholar's incapacity to think clearly or to express
-its ideas with lucidity show how much we have missed the way in our
-educational methods. We have forgotten that to "educate" is literally to
-"lead out." The two guiding principles or characteristics of the German
-school curriculum as described by Mr George Andrew are: (1) The
-principle of "_Anschauung_" (observation, intuition, concrete), and (2)
-The development of oral expression.
-
-"Anschauung" literally means "looking at" and as an educational
-principle it means observation of the concrete as paving the way to the
-abstract. The child begins school with the supply of words and
-conceptions which it has gained from infancy in its own house. These
-have to be corrected and completed; the child's concepts are enriched by
-fresh observations and by gradual steps it is advanced from the familiar
-to the strange, from the known to the unknown. In the youngest classes
-the instruction in reading, writing, arithmetic, drawing, nature study,
-is all in varying degrees based on "Anschauung," and later the same
-principle of observation is to be traced in the teaching of such
-subjects as geometry, geography, and history, where models, pictures,
-maps, and plans are continually resorted to in order to deepen and
-vivify the ideas gained from the printed page. Mr Andrew thus contrasts
-infant teaching in Scotland with that in Berlin:
-
- "In Scotland, infant classes generally begin with the alphabet and the
- elementary reading-book, the object-lesson being something of an
- "extra," in which much useful and stodgy information is often imparted
- to the youthful mind—not always on subjects within its range of actual
- experience—and then retracted under an incessant fire of jerky
- interrogatories.
-
- "The Berlin child begins in a different way. With him the "observation
- lesson" is the starting-point. It is maintained that the child in his
- natural intercourse at home with his parents, brothers and sisters, and
- playmates, has equipped himself with a certain rudimentary supply of
- words and ideas, which concern themselves mainly with objects that have
- fallen within his own range of vision. He has learned to speak in a
- language, the purity or corruptness of which will largely depend on his
- environment. It is on these two lines, his rudimentary knowledge of
- simple objects and his power of simple speech, that his first school
- instruction proceeds, individual words and their constituent _sounds_
- with (the corresponding letter names) being reached by a gradual
- analytical process. In the "observation lesson" such objects as are in
- the schoolroom, or again, the child's body and limbs, his food, his
- clothes, his home, his street, etc., anything, in fact, which he can
- see, or has seen, are made use of. But even in this early "observation
- lesson" one cannot fail to note how the foundations are laid for
- developing oral expression—for teaching the child _Sprachfertigkeit_.
- Just as the child comes to school with his rudimentary ideas, and has
- these gradually corrected and extended by "observation," so also in
- this lesson the power of speech he brings with him is taken up and
- developed from the beginning. He is asked to describe what is placed
- before his eyes; he is made—and this is naturally the first
- difficulty—to speak in a distinctly loud tone of voice; and he is made
- to answer in a sentence or sentences. For example, the teacher's watch
- was taken as the subject of an "observation lesson" in a class of
- pupils newly come to school. One heard such little sentences as "This
- is a watch"; "from the watch hangs a chain"; "on the face of the watch
- are figures," etc. Every now and then some child is made to
- recapitulate the whole account, e.g. to repeat the above three
- sentences—a process to which great importance is attached."
-
-Thus from the beginning the child is taught to observe and to express
-lucidly what it has observed, and this excellent principle—this real
-"education"—is followed throughout its school life. As a result the
-children become self-reliant in utterance, able to think clearly and to
-express their ideas orally or in writing in logical order and
-appropriate language. Thus, whatever the influence of the home the child
-gains a proper use of its mother-tongue. In our own country the
-vocabulary of the home remains the vocabulary of the child, and I know
-of nothing more painful than to listen to the talk of our "educated"
-elementary school children in poor neighbourhoods.
-
-There is no subject in the curriculum to which the principles of
-observation and development of expression are not applied with success.
-Thus, arithmetic is not taught by rule-of-thumb, as is too often the
-case in our schools, but from the beginning the child is led to "count
-with understanding." The child does not merely learn a series of
-mechanical rules. He understands the process he employs and can give a
-lucid account of his knowledge. It is perhaps hardly necessary to add
-that he studies the metric system, and becomes familiar with the
-arithmetic of business operations.
-
-Our elementary school curriculum must be made to include the study of
-the sciences as a matter of course and not as special subjects.
-Unfortunately, public opinion is still lamentably absent on this point.
-An ex-Prime Minister is not ashamed to state publicly that he is
-ignorant of science, and the majority of those who have received what is
-known as a "liberal" education could not intelligently explain the
-ringing of an electric bell or the action of their own hearts. This
-deplorable neglect of science is sadly handicapping us as a nation in
-every department, and it is a notable fact that the majority of recent
-scientific discoveries have been made in other lands. In "Riches and
-Poverty," 1905, I mentioned the following as especially notable: X-Rays,
-Germany; Radium, France; Synthetic indigo, Germany; Artificial Silk,
-France and Germany; Incandescent gas light, Germany; Wireless
-telegraphy, Italy. Since then the English Channel has been crossed by a
-flying machine—from the French side. I notice that Mr Andrew, in the
-report already referred to, while acknowledging that science was
-generally treated excellently in the German schools, obtained a "vague
-impression that rather much was attempted." Is that vague impression to
-be wondered at, in view of the pitiable condition of science teaching in
-the United Kingdom?
-
-As a matter of fact, nothing is more fascinating to the average child
-than the science-lesson. The child is instinctively a scientist; its
-mind is ever searching for the reason of things, and the average British
-parent is every day through his ignorance of science compelled to evade
-the simple but very reasonable inquiries of his offspring. It should be
-our object at the school to encourage the child's wonderings, and to do
-what we can to cherish the wise habit of wondering. The savage at least
-wonders when he sees a locomotive. The average "educated" citizen has
-long ceased to wonder either about the science that moves his train or
-the science that lights his house.
-
-It is easy to understand how well the two guiding principles of German
-teaching fit the study of science, or of nature-knowledge, to use the
-terminology of the Charlottenburg curriculum. The material aim of the
-course is to give the pupil knowledge of nature in a form suited to his
-grasp, including, be it observed, the laws of health. Then there is the
-formal aim—to train the pupil's powers of observation, and to develop
-his powers of thinking, and to awaken his sympathy with plant and animal
-life and admiration for the beauty of Nature. At Charlottenburg Natural
-History is taught under the three sub-divisions A. Botany, B. Zoology,
-and C. Anthropology. Under the third is taught animal physiology, the
-laws of health, and first aid in cases of accident. In connexion with
-Botany, school excursions for the study of plant life are organized. I
-can imagine no more useful discipline for a town dweller. In the domain
-of physical science, the pupils are led on to the knowledge of Nature's
-laws and to the causes of common things. Particular attention is paid,
-Mr Andrew tells us, to such phenomena or principles as are of importance
-in domestic, industrial and commercial life—those of domestic life
-applying to the girls, the latter two to the boys. Light, heat,
-magnetism, electricity, mechanics, sound, chemistry and mineralogy are
-taken. Experiment is largely employed, and the apparatus used is
-adequate and admirable, in this respect being a striking contrast to the
-mean outfit which is usually considered good enough in the United
-Kingdom. The reflection is forced upon one that, in the region of
-foreign competition, with which this work is not concerned, they will be
-formidable antagonists, these scientific German children, in the time to
-come.
-
-In connexion with the teaching of hygiene in schools we can do much to
-encourage abstinence from intoxicating liquors. If in the study of
-physiology the harmful effects of alcohol upon the kidneys and other
-organs is made clear to the children, a very wholesome fear of "drink"
-will be bred in them.
-
-The little we are doing in the way of teaching domestic economy and
-cooking to girls needs much strengthening. These subjects should be
-compulsory in the highest classes of all girls' schools. There is
-perhaps no other country in which poor women are so ignorant of cooking
-as in the United Kingdom. There is no simple national dish which every
-one knows how to make, and it is rarely that poor Englishwomen can make
-a decent soup or have any idea of the proper cooking of vegetables.
-
-As a preliminary to the abolition of child labour under the age of 16,
-the introduction of the principle of compulsion in connexion with
-continuation classes is badly needed. The children are now set free at
-the most dangerous period of their lives, and nothing but good could
-arise from compelling their attendance at classes which, in the case of
-girls, should deal with infant and domestic hygiene, cookery, and
-dressmaking, and in the case of boys with science, technics and
-languages.
-
-In 1908 I introduced into the House of Commons a measure to establish
-compulsory day continuation schools in England and Wales. The Bill was
-prefaced with a memorandum which pointed out:
-
-"According to the census of 1901 there were in England and Wales about
-4,600,000 persons of both sexes between the ages of 14 and 21 years.
-According to the reports of the Board of Education the number of pupils
-aged 15 to 21 years attending day and evening continuation schools of
-all sorts is only about 387,000."
-
-The Bill itself was as follows:
-
- 1. This Act may be cited as the Continuation Schools Act, 1909.
-
- 2. The earliest age at which a child shall be entitled to any exemption
- from obligatory school attendance shall be fourteen years, and the
- Education Acts, 1870 to 1902, are hereby repealed in so far as they
- permit the partial or total exemption from school attendance of
- children under fourteen years of age.
-
- 3. Every child whose age exceeds fourteen but does not exceed seventeen
- years shall be deemed to be a continuation scholar, and is hereinafter
- so termed in this Act.
-
- 4. Every education authority shall establish classes (hereinafter
- termed a continuation school) for the continued education and technical
- training, without fees, of all continuation scholars in its district
- who do not attend approved day secondary or day technical schools.
-
- 5. The continuation school shall be carried on at hours which do not
- terminate later than six o'clock p.m., and every continuation scholar
- shall attend the continuation school for a period of not less than six
- hours per week.
-
- 6. Sufficient school places, and sufficient teachers, scientific and
- technical apparatus, material, tools, or plant, et cetera, shall be
- provided to enable every continuation scholar controlled by the
- education authority to be instructed in industry or agriculture, or in
- domestic economy, in the English language and literature, in the
- principles of hygiene, and in the duties and obligations of
- citizenship, and the scheme and curriculum of each continuation school
- shall be subject to the approval of the Board of Education.
-
- 7. For the purposes of the administration of this Act, the education
- authority may co-opt any number of local employers not exceeding six.
-
- 8. Every employer shall permit every continuation scholar in his employ
- time in which to attend the continuation school, and, failing to permit
- such attendance, shall be liable on summary conviction to a penalty not
- exceeding _two pounds_ for every day upon which his employee therefore
- fails to make his due attendance at the continuation school.
-
- 9. Every parent or responsible guardian of a continuation scholar who
- fails to attend a continuation school shall be liable on summary
- conviction to a penalty not exceeding _ten shillings_ for every day
- upon which the continuation scholar fails to attend the continuation
- school, unless the non-attendance is due to the fault of the scholar's
- employer, or to illness, accident, or other unavoidable cause.
-
- 10. It shall be the duty of the education authority to prosecute the
- parent or responsible guardian or the employer of any continuation
- scholar who is absent from the continuation or other approved school
- save through illness, accident, or other unavoidable cause:
-
- Provided that no continuation scholar shall be required to attend a
- continuation school held beyond two miles, measured along the nearest
- road, from the residence of the continuation scholar.
-
- 11. _The cost of carrying out the provisions of this Act shall be paid
- out of moneys provided by Parliament._
-
-So much is said about the example of Germany that it may serve as a
-stimulus to those who think the above provisions too drastic to observe
-that my Bill was based upon the scheme which is in actual operation at
-Munich and which may soon be in operation for all German children.
-
-It is by the adoption of such rational methods in our schools that we
-may give opportunity to the new generation. If they exhibit ability they
-can advance to, and benefit by, a secondary education which shall fit
-them to perform the highest service for the State. If their abilities
-are of a meaner order, we shall at least send them out into the world
-well-equipped mentally and physically for their life's work and keep a
-guiding hand upon them after their school days are ended.
-
-With such an education the individual unit of industry would have
-strength and understanding to contend for a better wage and be fitted to
-do better work. He would also take thought as to the constitution of the
-society of which he forms a part, and employ intelligently the franchise
-which in the past he has so frequently used to his own undoing. In an
-individualistic society such a unit would be better fitted to hold his
-own. In the wise collectivism towards which we are steering, he would be
-fitted to do his whole duty to his fellows and himself.
-
-The relevance of education to the main theme of this book demands little
-comment. It is obvious that, if we are to provide a proper physical and
-mental training for our people we must spend more money. Better schools,
-better playgrounds, better apparatus, more and better trained teachers,
-classes not exceeding 30 pupils per class, the introduction of the
-school doctor and school dentist, the provision of meals, the compulsory
-continuation schools—all these things are needed and all these things
-are costly. It is only want of reflection upon the enormous resources at
-the disposal of the State which makes so many people timid in
-educational reform. Take the matter of school doctors, for instance. On
-page 64 of the Report of the Physical Deterioration Committee will be
-found:
-
-"Dr Eichholz thought it (the medical inspection of school children) was
-the greatest need in school organization."
-
-Therefore, you would say, Dr Eichholz and the Committee would urge that
-the "greatest need" be properly supplied. Alas! the report goes on:
-
-"On the ground of expense he would confine a general examination to the
-poorest schools, and considered that in London the work could be done by
-ten young men at £250 each."
-
-The Committee, speaking for themselves, say:
-
-"The Committee believe that, with teachers properly trained in the
-various branches of hygiene, the system could be so far based on their
-observation and record, that no large and expensive medical staff would
-be necessary...."
-
-Always the idea appears to be uppermost that this is a poor, a very
-poor, country, which cannot afford to do the things which it would wish
-to do. That teachers "properly trained in the various branches of
-hygiene," which certainly do not cover the diagnosis of disease, should
-be considered competent to decide which children should or should not
-undergo medical examination amounts to an expression of opinion that we
-cannot afford to provide the schools with their "greatest need."
-
-I refer the timid to the fact that the gross assessments to Income Tax
-in 1908-9 were over £1,000,000,000. The practical point is this. Of the
-£1,000,000,000, can we spare a few millions for the purposes mentioned
-in this chapter?
-
-[Footnote 44: Cd. 2120.]
-
-[Footnote 45: It is of interest to observe that Mr Robert Hunter
-estimates that 70,000 of the school children of New York arrive at
-school either breakfastless or underfed. This estimate accounts for 13
-per cent. of the school children of the city.]
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVI
- THE HOME
-
-
-It is an amusing statistical fact that at the census of 1901 our
-"overcrowded" England had but 558 persons to the square mile, or one
-person to 1.15 acres, or one family to about 6 acres. If in 1901 the
-population of England and Wales had been distributed evenly over the
-area there would have been a distance of 240 feet between each person.
-In 1871 a similar distribution would have removed each person from his
-neighbour by 288 feet. Thus England is little more "crowded" to-day than
-it was a generation ago. It is useful to remind ourselves by these
-statistical exercises that the country is indeed nearly empty, and the
-towns very full. In the 75,000 acres of the administrative county of
-London were crowded, at the census of 1901, 4,536,541 people, a number
-as great as the entire population of Australia, almost as great as the
-entire population of the Dominion of Canada, and more than one-tenth of
-the entire population of the United Kingdom. In London and 75 other
-great towns in England and Wales are crowded about 15,000,000 persons or
-about one-half of the entire population of the country. As London and
-the great towns grow, the countryside is increasingly depopulated, and
-not the countryside alone. Many small towns are decreasing in size. Thus
-an increasing population is ever huddling closer together in a
-diminishing number of centres.
-
-The greater number of our new births, then, are in crowded districts.
-The figures of Book I. tell us, also that the greater number are in
-urban houses of a rental under £20 per annum. The rental values of the
-houses of Great Britain in 1907-8 were as follows:
-
- HOUSES OF GREAT BRITAIN, 1907-8
-
- The figures do not include Ireland, but they include all residential
- shops, lodging-houses, hotels, farm-houses, etc., in Great Britain.
-
- Under £20 (Exempt from House Duty), 6,875,000
- £20 and over (Charged to House Duty). 1,912,000
- ---------
- 8,787,000
- =========
-
-Of the 8,787,000 houses fully 7,000,000 are obviously the homes of the
-very poor, as we should expect if the statements made in the earlier
-parts of this book are true. In various districts the accommodation
-which can be bought for £20 a year varies greatly, as has been already
-pointed out. £20 per annum may command a decent home in some parts of
-the provinces or Scotland, or a filthy tenement in East London or
-Manchester. Broadly speaking, the majority of the houses under £20 are
-fit for demolition. They rank in our estimate of capital (Chapter 5) for
-a great deal of money; they command an enormous amount of rent, but, I
-repeat, they are chiefly fit for destruction. In a minority of cases
-they are indecent or insanitary; in a majority of cases they are either
-old or ugly or uncomfortable. Rarely are they fit habitations for a
-self-respecting people. The same is true of many of the houses up to £40
-and even £50 per annum in London and other crowded centres. Many £40
-dwellings in London are crowded tenement houses, each of several reeking
-floors.
-
-What overcrowding means to the lives of those who suffer it may be
-illustrated by the table prepared by Sir Shirley Murphy, which compares
-the sanitary areas of Hampstead and Southwark in respect of expectation
-of life. I have added the fourth column to give prominence to the
-accusing fact that _the poor are robbed not of means alone but of life
-itself_:
-
- EXPECTATION OF LIFE IN HAMPSTEAD AND SOUTHWARK, MALES ONLY,
- IN 1897-1900
-
- Expectation of life in Southwark
- less than that in
- Age. Hampstead. Southwark. Hampstead by
- --- --- --- ---
- Years. Years. Years. Years.
- At birth 50.8 36.5 14.3
- 5 57.4 48.7 8.7
- 10 53.3 45.0 8.3
- 15 48.7 40.6 8.1
- 20 44.2 36.4 7.8
- 25 39.8 32.4 7.4
- 30 35.5 28.6 6.9
- 35 31.3 25.0 6.3
- 40 27.5 21.9 5.6
- 45 23.8 18.9 4.9
- 50 20.3 16.2 4.1
- 55 17.0 13.6 3.4
- 60 14.1 11.3 2.8
- 65 11.5 9.1 2.4
- 70 9.2 7.0 2.2
- 75 7.1 5.2 1.9
-
-In Hampstead only 6.3 per cent. of the population live more than two in
-a room in tenements of less than five rooms, and only 11.1 per cent. of
-the population live in tenements of one or two rooms. In Southwark, on
-the other hand, 22.3 per cent. of the population are in the first
-category, and 31.6 per cent. in the second category. The table enables
-the reader to measure the years which are stolen from the lives of the
-inhabitants of Southwark. The area of Hampstead is 2,248 acres and the
-population 68,416. The area of Southwark is 544 acres and the population
-89,800. We should never forget that there are two sorts of crowding, one
-of which is measured by room or tenement, the other by area.
-
-The Census definition of "overcrowding" by room or tenement is a very
-modest one. It applies to tenements containing more than two occupants
-per room, bedrooms and sitting-rooms included. Accepting this definition
-there were 392,414 overcrowded tenements in England and Wales at the
-Census of 1901, which were the homes of 2,667,506 people, or 8.2 per
-cent. of the total population.
-
-That is bad enough, but if we take a more reasonable definition of
-"overcrowding" and apply the term to all tenements (by tenement is meant
-a separate occupation, whether a house or part of a house) of three
-rooms or less we find that in 1901, in England and Wales, as many as
-5,853,047 or 18 per cent, of the entire population occupied tenements of
-either one, two or three rooms. A further 7,130,062 persons or 21.9 per
-cent. of the population of England and Wales were housed in 4-roomed
-tenements. The complete tenement figures are as follows:
-
- TENEMENTS (SEPARATE OCCUPATIONS, WHETHER HOUSES OR PARTS OF HOUSES)
- IN ENGLAND AND WALES. 1901
-
- -------------+-----------+-------------+-----------+----------
- | | | Percentage|
- | | | of Total |
- Number of | Number of | Occupants of| Population| Average
- Rooms | Tenements.| Tenements. | in each | Occupants
- in Tenements.| | | group of | per Room.
- | | | Tenements.|
- -------------+-----------+-------------+-----------+----------
- 1 Room. | 251,667 | 507,763 | 1.6 | 2.02
- 2 Rooms. | 658,203 | 2,158,644 | 6.6 | 1.64
- 3 Rooms. | 779,992 | 3,186,640 | 9.8 | 1.36
- 4 Rooms. | 1,596,664 | 7,130,062 | 21.9 | 1.12
- 5 or more | | | |
- Rooms. | 3,750,342 | 19,544,734 | 60.1 |
- +-----------+-------------+-----------+----------
- | 7,036,868 | 32,527,843 | 100.0 |
- -------------+-----------+-------------+-----------+----------
-
-It will be seen that, even in the 4-roomed tenements, there was an
-average of 1.12 persons per room (room meaning every apartment in the
-tenements, including sitting-rooms, attics, box-rooms, kitchens or
-sculleries), and when we remember the small cubical content of many of
-these "rooms" we see that as many as 12,983,109 persons, or 39.9 per
-cent. of the population of England and Wales were certainly crowded, if
-not "overcrowded."
-
-In Scotland, at the Census of 1901, 969,318 families occupied 3,022,077
-rooms, giving an average of only 3 rooms per family. Into the 3,022,077
-rooms of all sorts were crowded 4,472,000 people.
-
-While overcrowding, measured by room, slightly decreased between 1891
-and 1901, overcrowding on area considerably increased. In the ten years
-a considerable number of model dwellings—models, that is, of everything
-that dwellings should not be—were erected, and much ground in London and
-elsewhere which should have been left open, was covered with buildings
-of every conceivable degree of ugliness.
-
-As for existing houses, thirty years after the passing of the Public
-Health Act of 1875, and fifteen years after the passing of the Housing
-of the Working Classes Act of 1890, a considerable proportion are
-actually insanitary, and only a minority conform to the most modest
-standard of convenience and comfort. In the North of England and in the
-Midlands there remain tens of thousands of houses built back-to-back, so
-that there is no passage of air through them.
-
-The Manchester Citizens' Association recently published, from the pen of
-its secretary, Mr T. R. Marr, a little book,[46] which shows, by a
-coloured map, that slum property, including many back-to-back and
-"converted" back-to-back houses, form a great ring round the offices and
-factories of Central Manchester. Its lessons are enforced by a series of
-photographs of slum property. Here is a picture of a Salford court, upon
-which face the living rooms of eleven houses. Standing out in the court,
-as a public exhibition, are three rotten places of convenience, only one
-of them usable. Here, again, is a photograph taken in St Michaels'
-Ward—taken, let us hope, in the absence of St Michael. A group of four
-closets open on the street, and beside them, surrounded by a group of
-slum children curiously watching the photographer, is a tap which is the
-sole water supply of 22 houses. A third picture, also taken in St
-Michaels' Ward, shows a stone-paved court of eleven houses. There is one
-tap, an open ash-box, and several closets the doors of which are torn
-from their hinges.
-
-In Liverpool, according to a paper read before the Royal Sanitary
-Institute in April 1905 by Mr Fletcher T. Turton, the Liverpool Deputy
-Surveyor, there were still 8,600 back-to-back houses standing, the
-death-rate in their area being about 60 per 1,000! Further erection of
-such houses is forbidden by Mr Burns's Housing Act of 1909, but there
-are tens of thousands already in existence.
-
-In Leeds there are many of these back-to-back houses, without
-ventilation, or yard, or private sanitary arrangements, let at rentals
-varying from 3s. 6d. to 7s. 6d. per week. As many as three and four
-houses join at one closet. The closets are frequently in yards, forty
-yards from the house. In wet weather, rather than carry the waste water
-from the bedrooms the length of the street, women may often be seen
-pouring it down the street gully. On Sundays, when the inhabitants are
-all at home, the difficulty as to sanitary accommodation is intensely
-aggravated.
-
-In Sheffield, in the Potteries, and many other places, these abominable
-back-to-back houses are to be found. Few workers' houses in the
-Potteries have more than two bedrooms. The back-to-back houses in
-Sheffield number 15,000, and sometimes as many as eight or ten persons
-are to be found in their three little rooms. If we take only 7 persons
-to the house there are 105,000 Sheffield people living in these dens.
-
-If there are not back-to-back houses or cellar dwellings in London,
-there are many squalid areas which contain greater aggregations of the
-poorest of the poor than can be found in any other part of the country.
-In Marylebone, Southwark, St Pancras, Holborn, Bethnal Green,
-Shoreditch, Stepney, and Finsbury upwards of 30 per cent. of the
-inhabitants live in tenements of one or two rooms. In Finsbury the
-proportion reaches 45 per cent.; in Shoreditch and St Pancras 37 per
-cent. In Lambeth, Westminster, Paddington, Chelsea, Kensington,
-Islington and Bermondsey 20 per cent. and upwards of the population live
-in tenements of one or two rooms. Only, indeed, in Lewisham, Wandsworth,
-Stoke Newington, Hampstead, Woolwich, Greenwich, Deptford, Camberwell,
-Hackney and Fulham, do less than 15 per cent. of the inhabitants occupy
-tenements of one or two rooms. Not even the school children of Ancoats
-or Deansgate, Manchester, exhibit the degree of physical deterioration
-of those of Lambeth or West Ham.
-
-It cannot be too strongly insisted that in connexion with the problem of
-housing the people there is not merely the question of "overcrowding" or
-of "crowding," whether in rooms or on area, to be considered. Not only
-death and disease but ugliness and inconvenience have to be fought. The
-speculative builder is covering suburban areas with mile after mile of
-amorphous dwellings. Acre after acre of smiling meadow is disfigured.
-Street after street of buildings of unredeemed ugliness reach out into
-the beautiful country which lies so near to the 75,000 acres of London.
-Trees are felled; every particle of verdure is scraped away. The town
-advances, and before its grim threatenings Beauty flies. The lane
-becomes the street; the hedge is replaced by cast-iron palings; beyond
-the hedge there arises the row of "bay windows with venetian blinds"
-which figure in the advertisements. Pass to the rear and you will find
-the 16 or 18 feet frontage which the builder thought beautiful balanced
-by a "back addition" which even the builder knew to be ugly. Facing the
-back-additions, across two "gardens" together not so long as a cricket
-pitch, another row of rear elevations, and so on, row after row. Such is
-the vision with which we stimulate the fancy of the more fortunate of
-the children of the people. We teach them drawing on the latest
-principles—free-arm—in the school. We give them infinite ugliness as
-their environment outside the school. We have still to learn that while
-the dwellings and surroundings of the people are unlovely we cannot hope
-for a gifted race. We have yet to understand that education begins when
-the child opens its eyes and ears to the sights and sounds of the home
-and its surroundings. It is not alone that the people lack monetary
-income. To the ill-distribution of wealth is added the ill-distribution
-of the means of a beautiful life. The majority of our people are denied
-the vision of beauty, and even those who receive fair wages perish
-morally for lack of that vision.
-
-From the centre to the circumference there passes all the evil thinking
-and evil doing which the unnatural conditions of the centre have created
-in the minds of men. The workman who leaves the centre for the new
-suburb of Walthamstow is not surprised to find there the ugliness which
-he left behind him. He does not expect to find Beauty—that is a
-commodity confined to pictures. He does not wonder that man could be so
-blind as to create a sore on the borders of one of the most beautiful
-spots which this earth has to show. He owns his cottage with a smile,
-oblivious of the might-have-been, and rarely if ever wonders why in a
-country containing nearly 80,000,000 acres his considerable rental can
-command so small a share of the surface of his native land.
-
-And surely it is for lack of vision that our efforts in connexion with
-the housing problem are so misdirected. The rulers of our towns instead
-of directing their attention to the outskirts have practically confined
-themselves to tinkering at the centre. Blocks, palatial in size and
-unholy in principle, have been erected and ironically dubbed "model
-dwellings." It is true that in all big towns there are a certain number
-of workmen who must live near their work, but there is usually a far
-larger number who have no such tie. And the model dwellings referred to
-usually succeed in housing not the class which must live near their work
-but the class who could well go out beyond the suburbs. Thus the effect
-of tinkering in the centre is often but to set free for the poorest of
-the poor the tenements deserted by the better class who pass to the new
-dwellings. That is good in its way, but how much better it would have
-been to relieve the centre by emptying out its streets into the places
-beyond. To buy up slums in the centre and create model dwellings is to
-play into the hands of the landlords—to increase the value of the
-unbought slums. To empty out the centre of its movable population is to
-leave a better selection of homes for those who must remain, and to
-leave the slum landlord to mourn a fall in the value of his "property."
-
-A great deal is often said about unoccupied sites in towns and their
-suburbs and it has even been suggested that efforts should be used to
-force them into the market and compel building upon them. Here again is
-exhibited a most lamentable lack of vision. In so far as town sites are
-unbuilt upon let them remain so, and if their owners are waiting for a
-rise in value let us take measures to make that waiting prolonged.
-
-In a widely circulated leaflet on the land question I read: "If we pass
-through the outskirts of any of our great centres of population, we see
-pieces of land left practically derelict, with perhaps an old horse
-grazing there disconsolately, or a few hens investigating a rubbish
-heap. A little farther on we see houses being built and roads being laid
-out. We know that still more houses are badly wanted, and we wonder why
-the land between is not being utilized."
-
-Here we have a reformer ardently desirous of filling up an open urban
-space which, if he were wise, he would use his best endeavour to keep
-open for ever. Seeing houses being built and roads being laid out "a
-little farther on"—what kind of houses and what sort of roads, I
-wonder?—he is anxious to turn out the disconsolate horse and pile up
-more houses in the intervening space. It apparently does not occur to
-him that yet "a little farther on" there is land enough for the housing
-of an army, and that a horse, however disconsolate, is at the worst a
-prettier object than a speculative builder's "villa."
-
-Two things are necessary if the housing problem is to be grappled with
-seriously and not resigned to private profit timorously modified by
-municipal tinkering. The first is the control of land, and the second
-ready access to capital. As has been truly said, the housing question is
-a land question; as has been too rarely remembered, it is even more a
-capital question.
-
-There is only one effective way in which the community can control land
-and that is to become its landlord. It is also true that there is only
-one effective way in which the community can keep in its own hands the
-"unearned increment" arising from the enhanced value of land created by
-the presence and work of the community, and again that effective way is
-for the community to own the land. There is no necessity, however, for
-the town to play into the hands of suburban landlords by purchasing dear
-land. It can evade attempts to corner land required by the community by
-going out and beyond that land if it is held for a rise. Indeed it is
-better to leave a zone between its present circumference and the site of
-its new housing area. Even in London, it is a simple matter to reach
-land cheap enough for successful housing operations. It is of the utmost
-importance that all municipalities should without further delay secure
-considerable areas of the agricultural lands which surround their
-townships.[47] By doing this well in advance of their building
-operations they can insure that, as they themselves raise the value of
-the land by developing it and establishing means of transit, the whole
-of that value will remain in their hands. Moreover, if the owners of the
-intermediate land thus see their market failing they will gladly place a
-reasonable price upon their holdings. In this connexion it is probable
-that the taxation of land upon its selling value may prove to be of
-assistance. The man who controls a part of the area of his country and
-who will neither use it himself nor allow others to use it should in any
-case be taxed. I attach more importance, however, to the simple and
-effective policy of widening the radius of operations until cheap land
-is reached.
-
-It cannot be too clearly understood that simply to tax land on its
-selling value is of itself no solution either of the land question or
-the housing question. If land is priced by its owner at £1,000 per acre
-and he is holding it to obtain that figure, we should not necessarily
-bring it into the market by taxing it on its selling value. The price
-asked obviously includes all the rise in value expected by the present
-owner in the near future; that is why the price is held out for. If the
-land be taxed upon the capital value the owner, unless very strong
-financially, would probably have to sell. To do so, he would reduce the
-price and the land would be taken up by a second owner. The expected
-rise in value would thus be discounted, and the second owner having
-obtained the land at a lower rate, would be able to hold the land for
-the rise in spite of the tax payable. Thus the tax would not necessarily
-bring the land into use. Nor, if it did, would it necessarily be devoted
-to a desirable use. Owner B is not necessarily more moral or public
-spirited than owner A. Owner A held up the land, but owner B, having
-bought it, may put it to such base uses that we could wish it had been
-held up a little longer. Above all, therefore, we must have public
-control of area.
-
-As the owner of its own sites, the township can be the arbiter of its
-own developments. This has been clearly recognized in Germany, where,
-under the encouragement and stimulation of the State governments,
-municipalities are acquiring land beyond their existing borders.
-Considerable areas are owned by many German towns. Stettin has 12,500
-acres; Mannheim has 5,000 acres; Breslau has 12,000 acres; Frankfort has
-11,000 acres.
-
-Large as our population is, it is really remarkable to note how little
-area would be required to rehouse the people of the towns. Taking the
-number of families in the United Kingdom at 9,000,000, only 1,800,000
-acres, or less than one-fortieth part of the area of the country, would
-be required to house five families to the acre. This simple calculation
-helps us to realize the point referred to in a former page—how tiny an
-area now contains nearly the whole of our 44,500,000 people.
-
-Having wisely purchased land upon its borders, the municipality must
-take thought as to the distribution of the population upon its new
-territory. Plans must be made of the new roads, streets, open spaces,
-and transit facilities long before they are actually required, so that
-each step in development may be taken deliberately and that no new
-difficulties may be built up to be the despair of the future. The
-well-governed city should study its present and future area as the
-artist regards his prepared sheet of canvas. Within its borders what
-varying effects may be produced! With the loving care that the old
-Italians bestowed upon the preparation of their panels, the municipality
-should plan the ground upon which the life of the city is to move. It is
-a picture the arrangement of which means life or death to the citizens;
-it may easily be made to glow with health and beauty.
-
-Mr Burns's important Housing Act of 1909 has made it possible for local
-authorities to plan out the future extensions of towns; it will be
-interesting to see whether there is sufficient imagination in our local
-rulers to make the provision fructify.
-
-In one of the most valuable contributions to this subject which have
-been published in recent years,[48] Mr T. C. Horsfall describes the
-thought and trouble which is given to the planning of the extension of
-municipalities by German Town Councils. Thus Stuttgart, in 1901, when
-preparing for a large extension of the town borders (its present
-population is about 182,000), obtained the advice of skilled architects,
-engineers, medical authorities, and _artists_. The politico-economic
-aspect of the matter was also carefully considered. The opinions, plans,
-and suggestions were then published in a volume to enable all the people
-of Stuttgart to study the proposals for extension.
-
-Mannheim, again, which is chiefly a manufacturing town, prepared in 1901
-building plans which provide for the requirements of industry and
-housing, while always remembering the claims of Beauty. I quote the
-following from Mr Horsfall: "The description of the building plan for
-Mannheim, prepared by Professor Baumeister, which is published in
-Numbers 69, 70, and 71 of the 'Centralblatt der Bauverwaltung,' shows
-that the new part of the town will be provided with a remarkably
-complete system of narrow railways for passenger traffic, and with an
-equally complete system of railway lines of the ordinary width leading
-from goods-stations in all directions, for goods traffic, which will
-enable every manufactory to load goods on to trucks on its own premises.
-Carriage, therefore, will be exceptionally cheap in the town. Yet the
-Town Council, who are thinking so much of economical working, recognize
-that even their poorest fellow-citizens are men and women, whose bodies
-and minds need wholesome recreation and an abundant supply of fresh air,
-of light, and of the influence of flowers and trees. The building plan,
-therefore, provides for the creation of avenue streets of widths varying
-from 24 to 43 yards; and Professor Baumeister adds: 'Of course care has
-been taken to provide open spaces, decorative shrubberies, parks and
-sites for public buildings.' The width of ordinary streets varies from
-8⅓ to 21⅓ yards."
-
-The German building plans provide in what districts factories may be
-erected and determine (1) how much of building sites may be covered by
-houses, and (2) the height of all buildings. Thus, even in cases where
-the municipality does not own its own sites, it can in some measure
-control the greed of the houselord. It cannot too strongly be insisted
-upon, however, that absolute sovereignty of the manner of distribution
-of the people upon area can only be obtained by acquisition of the land.
-
-The practicability of going out and beyond the township and emptying
-into the open country the crowded and enfeebled inhabitants of the
-cities has been amply demonstrated in the United Kingdom. An
-object-lesson of the most practical character is afforded by the
-beautiful garden city of Bournville, which the beneficence and wisdom of
-Mr George Cadbury have raised four miles from the gloomy city of
-Birmingham.
-
-Most people have heard of Bournville, but few are aware that it is not
-merely a village erected for the accommodation of Mr Cadbury's
-employees, but a working model of what may be done to solve the housing
-problem of great cities. The village of Bournville now no longer belongs
-to Mr Cadbury, for he has bestowed it upon the nation, the gift being
-worth not less than £200,000. In December 1900, the estate was handed
-over to the Bournville Village Trust, which is under the final control
-of the Charity Commissioners. In the Deed by which the property was made
-over to the Trustees the founder has thus set forth its objects: "The
-founder is desirous of alleviating the evils which arise from the
-insanitary and insufficient accommodation supplied to large numbers of
-the working classes and of securing to workers in factories some of the
-advantages of outdoor village life, with opportunities for the natural
-and healthful occupation of cultivating the soil.... The object is
-declared to be the amelioration of the condition of the working-class
-and labouring population in and around Birmingham, and elsewhere in
-Great Britain, by the provision of improved dwellings, with gardens and
-open spaces to be enjoyed therewith."
-
-The objects thus outlined have been carried out by the provision of
-beautiful homes set in gardens which are at once a source of revenue and
-of healthful recreation to their possessors.
-
-Less than one-half of the breadwinners of Bournville are employed by Mr
-Cadbury himself. The village is not a private preserve, as is so often
-imagined, in which patronized cottagers live a bounty-fed existence, but
-a free independent and public-spirited community which rules itself in
-matters of detail through a Tenants' Committee or Council. A census of
-the inhabitants made in December 1901 gave the following results:—
-
-_Proportion of Bournville Householders working in_
-
- Per Cent.
- Bournville 41.2
- Birmingham 40.2
- King's Norton and Selly Oak (manufacturing
- villages within a mile of Bournville) 18.6
- -----
- 100.0
- =====
-
- _Occupations of Bournville Householders_
-
- Per Cent.
- Factory workers 50.7
- Clerks and Travellers 13.3
- Mechanics, Carpenters, Bricklayers and others 36.0
- -----
- 100.0
- =====
-
-Having this working population of people paying rentals between 5s. 6d.
-including rates and 12s. 6d. excluding rates, the rate of infantile
-mortality in Bournville in 1903 was only 65 per 1,000 against 331 in the
-district of Birmingham known as St Mary's.
-
-The architectural beauty of Bournville has not been secured by
-extravagant expenditure, but by tastefully treating good and simple
-materials with due regard to utility. Mr W. A. Harvey, the architect,
-says: "The idea of a cottage home that I have always endeavoured to keep
-in view is one in which beauty is based on utility." There is nothing
-tortured, nothing deliberately and queerly "quaint," no plastering of
-ornament. The houses look comfortable because they are comfortable. The
-windows are pretty because they are simple casements, the best possible
-sort of window.
-
-A type of house which particularly pleased me had the following
-accommodation:
-
- Ground floor:
-
- Living room, 17 feet by 16 feet with ingle-nook and bay window.
-
- Scullery, 13 feet by 11 feet 3 inches, with bath sunk in floor.
-
- Larder, 5 feet by 4 feet 6 inches. Coal cellar, watercloset, tool shed
- and small paved yard. Verandah in front.
-
- First floor:
-
- Bedroom No. 1, 17 feet by 13 feet 6 inches.
-
- Bedroom No. 2, 13 feet by 8 feet.
-
- Attic Bedroom, 10 feet by 8 feet 7 inches.
-
- Linen cupboard.
-
-The total cost, including fencing, laying out garden, etc., was £280.
-The house, it will be seen, has no "parlour," but one large living room
-measuring 17 feet by 16 feet without the ingle-nook and large square bay
-window. It is an exceedingly attractive and comfortable room, and the
-sensible idea is appreciated by many of the tenants. The tastes of
-others are met by the ordinary arrangement of a separate kitchen and
-parlour.
-
-The picturesque and comfortable houses have a charming setting. They are
-set back from the road and grouped in such manner as to give each house
-the best use of the sun—an important matter often neglected in the
-planning of even expensive houses, and absolutely ignored by the
-speculative builder. It follows that there are no monotonous roads in
-Bournville; natural grouping arises from attention to aspect. Each
-cottage has one-eighth to one tenth of an acre of garden. The gardens
-are laid out when the houses are built, so that the tenant has not to
-begin by breaking up uncultivated land. Lines of fruit trees are
-planted, and these, besides yielding a good supply of fruit, form a
-pleasant screen between the gardens. As a rule, the tenants take a keen
-interest in their gardens, and cultivate them with great success. In
-addition to the cottage gardens there are about 100 allotments, which
-are eagerly sought after by the inhabitants of the neighbouring
-manufacturing villages. There are two gardening classes for young men.
-Two professional gardeners with a staff are in charge of the gardening
-department, and are always ready to give whatever information and advice
-may be required, but each tenant is responsible for the cultivation of
-his own garden. It is a notable fact that the gardens are found to
-yield, on the average, 1s. 11d. each per week. Gardening is lovingly
-fostered by the Village Council already referred to. The members of this
-Council, whose services are rendered voluntarily, are elected by ballot,
-and the annual elections and by-elections evoke considerable interest.
-Through this body arrangements are made for the co-operative purchase of
-plants, shrubs, and bulbs in great numbers; gardening tools such as
-mowers, rollers or shears, bought for the purpose, are let on hire; a
-loan library of gardening books has been formed; also a gardening
-association with periodical inspections of gardens; while lectures are
-arranged for the winter, and excursions for the summer. Further, the
-Council has established and managed with conspicuous success flower
-shows and an annual fête for the children. The bath-house and children's
-playground are also under its control.
-
-The roads are 42 feet wide, and are all planted with trees. Out of the
-100 acres laid out for building 14 acres have been reserved as open
-spaces, including parks, green, and children's playgrounds. It is part
-of the plan that in no part of the little community should children be
-far removed from a proper playground.
-
-I have already referred to the rate of infantile mortality in
-Bournville. It may be added that the death-rate for 1904, as certified
-by the local Medical Officer of Health, was 6.9 per 1,000. The rate for
-Birmingham for the same year was 19.3. In his report for 1900 the
-Medical Officer of Health referred to Bournville as follows:—"I have in
-my previous reports made mention of the model buildings on the estate
-which has been laid out by Mr George Cadbury. I cannot refrain from
-again mentioning how much I admire the system he has adopted. The object
-of the dwellings has been to give plenty of light and air with a good
-deal of air space to each house with sufficient land adjoining, and so
-insure a 'breathing lung' for the inhabitants of these houses. The
-houses are moreover built on modern principles, and no pains have been
-spared to make them as dry and free from insanitary conditions as
-possible. In addition, open spaces have been laid out so that at all
-times there can never be any danger of increasing the density of the
-population over the area on which the buildings have been erected. I
-cannot speak too highly of these dwellings, and I can only hope that we
-may be able to keep all dwellings as far as possible up to this
-standard."
-
-To pass to the all-important financial side of the matter, the balance
-sheet for 1909 gives the following results:
-
- BOURNVILLE VILLAGE TRUST INCOME AND EXPENDITURE,
- YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31ST, 1909
-
- Income. Expenditure.
- Total rents £9,249 Salaries £1,313
- Other incomes 1,042 Office expenses 164
- Rates, taxes, etc. 754
- Maintenance, repairs
- and renewals 1,531
- Legal expenses 73
- Miscellaneous 143
- Maintenance of roads
- and open spaces 244
- Depreciation on fencing,
- etc. 229
- ------- ------
- £10,291 £4,451
- ======= ======
-
- Balance excess of Income over Expenditure, £5,840.
-
-The whole of this surplus profit is devoted to building new houses and
-to buying and developing more land, so that Bournville automatically
-increases in size year by year. At the present time it is growing at the
-rate of about 50 houses, or say, 250 persons, per annum, and the rate of
-increase will, of course, be progressive.
-
-In considering the above figures it must be remembered that the
-Bournville Trust in 1900 had the whole estate handed over to it by Mr
-Cadbury as an absolute gift. No capital charges had therefore to be met.
-I am informed by Mr L. P. Appleton, the building manager, however, that,
-with regard to the houses erected by the Trust itself, they all show a
-net return of 4 per cent. on the capital, after providing for ground
-rent, rates and taxes, repairs, management and all out-goings.[49]
-
-The respective parts played by land and capital in such a scheme should
-be carefully noted. If a municipality acquired land at £100 per acre,
-and laid out roads and sewers at a cost of £400 per acre, and erected
-upon each acre ten houses costing £280 each, the total outlay per acre
-would be £3,300, and per house £330. How little a considerable variation
-in the cost of land affects the result will be realized from the
-following table:
-
- | |Cost of Roads,| |
- Cost of Land | Cost of Land |Sewers, etc., | Cost of |Total cost of
- per Acre. |per House. 10 | per House | building | each House
- | to the Acre. | (£400 per | House. | and its Land.
- | | Acre). | |
- £ | £ | £ | £ | £
- 50 | 5 | 40 | 280 | 325
- 100 | 10 | 40 | 280 | 330
- 200 | 20 | 40 | 280 | 340
- 300 | 30 | 40 | 280 | 350
-
-It is not commonly realized by many of those who write on the housing
-question that building land is a manufactured article, and that when raw
-land is secured housing is as far off as ever unless capital can be
-secured to develop it. It would rarely be necessary for a municipality
-to pay more than £200 per acre, but whether it paid £20 or £200 the cost
-of making roads, sewers, etc., and of erecting the houses would remain
-the same. To house all our people on the scale of ten families to the
-acre as at Bournville would absorb only 900,000 acres of land, which
-could be acquired for quite a moderate sum of money at a small remove
-from crowded centres, but the cost of manufacturing the land and of
-manufacturing the houses would be great.
-
-Given the provision of healthy houses by a municipality, would they be
-appreciated by those for whom they were intended? Here the experience of
-Bournville is conclusive. The village has never a house untenanted and
-the new houses are eagerly sought after long before they are completed.
-There is a constant stream of applications, and this in spite of the
-fact that Birmingham is distant four miles. Many of the men cycle to and
-from their work in the big city. They do not come to Bournville for
-charity rents. They have to pay about the same rentals as in Birmingham.
-The difference lies in the substitution of a healthy and lovely home for
-a gloomy and uncomfortable tenement.
-
-There is nothing in the Bournville scheme which cannot be effectively
-carried out by any municipality. Under the housing acts local
-authorities possess the power to acquire land for present or future
-building operations, the power to raise loans, and the power to build.
-The explanation of their sluggishness in putting the acts into effect is
-to be found in the fact we have already noted, viz. that the housing
-question is chiefly a capital question. This was slightly recognized by
-the Housing of the Working Classes Act of 1903 which extended the period
-allowed by the 1890 Act for the repayment of loans from 60 years to 80
-years.
-
-The vital importance of good housing makes it necessary to do something
-to put capital cheaply at the disposal of local authorities for the
-purpose. The housing question is a national one, and demands the use of
-national capital. Again we touch the matter of ways and means and again
-we see the advantage of considering social problems in relation to the
-income and accumulated wealth of the country. Year by year, as we have
-seen, an enormous amount of capital is wasted. British workmen, denied
-proper housing, are paid something less than the value of their product,
-while the margin is largely wasted in luxury at home or even sent out of
-the country to establish water works in Argentina, supply the sinews of
-war to Japan, or employ Chinese Coolies in South African mines. The time
-has come when the nation must consider the nature of its resources, and
-study its own development. We must see to it that the demand for houses,
-the primary demand of a civilized man, is answered, not by the
-speculative builder, but by the nation itself.
-
-The proposal here made is a simple one. It is that National Housing
-Loans should be raised and the proceeds placed in the hands of a
-permanent Housing Board or Commission which should be empowered to
-guide, assist and if necessary stimulate local authorities to rehouse
-their poor. The Housing Board should have power to lend money to local
-authorities, for the execution of approved schemes, for a period of 100
-years at a nominal rate of interest, say 1½ or 2 per cent., the loss to
-be made up out of the proceeds of Imperial taxation. To deal effectively
-with the question, a yearly loan of at least £20,000,000 would be needed
-for some years. Borrowing this at 3 per cent. and lending it out at 2
-per cent. would create a charge of only £200,000 for each £20,000,000.
-If then we authorized an annual issue of £20,000,000 for ten years—in
-all £200,000,000, the total annual charge through loss of interest would
-be but £2,000,000. Such a loan, about two-thirds of the cost of the late
-South African war, would not only rehouse one-tenth of our people, but
-place local authorities in possession of assets yielding a fine
-revenue,[50] which on the Bournville plan, could be used for the
-progressive extension of housing schemes. With access to capital for
-housing at 2 per cent., and 100 years in which to repay it, local
-authorities would be eager to claim their share of the national housing
-provision. The loan would only be granted on the approval of plans for
-the extension of the town boundaries, for transit facilities, and of
-plans of the houses, gardens and recreation grounds for which the loan
-was desired.
-
-Failing action by the local authority, the Housing Board would make a
-compulsory housing scheme[51] upon representation by the persons lacking
-accommodation.
-
-A drastic housing policy is needed as much in rural as in urban
-districts. Want of housing accommodation is helping to thin our country
-population, and the Housing Acts have been simply ignored in the past by
-Rural Sanitary Authorities. On this head the Housing Bill of 1909 makes
-salutary provisions giving county councils power to act in default of
-rural district councils, and also giving power to the Local Government
-Board to order schemes to be carried out within a reasonable time.
-
-We have to do something more for the agricultural labourer than house
-him, however, and here we touch another question intimately bound up
-with national development—the land in its primary aspect as the basis of
-agriculture and the source of food and material. This brings us to the
-consideration of the empty country.
-
-[Footnote 46: "Housing Conditions in Manchester" (Manchester University
-Press price 1s.).]
-
-[Footnote 47: This point should be read in connexion with the more
-drastic proposal made in the next chapter.]
-
-[Footnote 48: "The Example of Germany," by T. C. Horsfall. Published by
-the Manchester University Press.]
-
-[Footnote 49: Near York Mr Joseph Rowntree has successfully carried out
-a housing scheme upon Bournville lines, and provided at the modest
-rental of 4s. 6d. a week (the rates are an additional 8d. per week)
-houses within the reach of unskilled workmen. The cottages are thus
-described:
-
-On the ground floor is a large living room (12 ft. 6 in. by 20 ft. 6
-in.) with a bay window and plenty of cupboard accommodation, a small
-pantry, and a scullery fitted with a copper, bath, and sink. The copper
-is fitted with a patent exhaust to carry the steam direct into the
-flues, thus preventing the discomfort which often arises in small houses
-on washing day. The bath is fitted with a drop-down lid, forming a table
-when the bath is not in use. Upstairs there are three bedrooms, each
-fitted with a fireplace, and there is a large wardrobe on the landing.
-The walls are plastered internally with adamant cement, which dries very
-quickly, and assumes a smooth hard surface, and is thus more sanitary
-than the ordinary plaster. All the rooms are fitted with picture
-mouldings. Gas is supplied throughout the house, and city water is laid
-on.
-
-The gardens are not so large as at Bournville and the houses of cheaper
-construction. The rental named, 4s. 6d. a week, is found to yield a
-clear profit of 4 per cent., which is devoted, in happy emulation of the
-Bournville scheme, to the extension of the little community.]
-
-[Footnote 50: On this point the experience of Richmond, Surrey, is of
-great value. In the "Housing Handbook" Alderman W. Thompson shows what
-great financial advantages Richmond will reap from its cottage building,
-although this was carried out on land costing £700 an acre. The houses,
-built in 1894 and 1900, cost from £162 to £276 each and let from 6s. to
-8s. per week. Altogether there are 132 houses containing 650 rooms and
-132 sculleries, on six acres of ground costing £4,250 for site; £1,857
-for roads and sewers; £505 for sundries, and £31,200 for building, being
-a total cost of £37,812 and an average inclusive cost of £58 per room.
-The income gives a gross profit which provides interest at 3¼ per cent.
-on capital outlay, a sinking fund contribution of £486 per annum, and a
-net profit of £38 per annum. Thus a large number of people have been
-well housed at a profit to Richmond. At the end of 42 years from 1897
-Richmond will have paid off the entire loan through the operation of the
-sinking fund and be in possession of a property worth £35,000 and
-producing a net income of over £1,600 a year. It is found that the
-tenants take a great pride in their dwellings, and that their social
-habits have greatly improved.]
-
-[Footnote 51: The Grand Duchy of Hesse compels municipalities to borrow
-money whether they like it or not. Hesse has determined that her people
-shall be properly housed—a most wise and patriotic determination. The
-Duchy therefore lays it down that the first duty of a municipality is to
-buy land that its borders may extend in a proper and healthful manner.
-Further, under the law of 1902, Town Councils which decline to build
-houses for the people can be compelled to accept a loan from the bank
-and to lend the money so obtained to a building society which is willing
-to do the work.]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII
-
-THE EMPTY COUNTRY
-
-
-Although it is a well-known fact that the increase of population of the
-United Kingdom is practically an addition to the urban population, it
-may be well to preface consideration of the land question in its
-relation to the national wealth and income by reminding the reader of
-the precise facts of the case.
-
-If we have regard only to the technical "Urban" and "Rural" Districts,
-we get the following figures:
-
- ENGLAND AND WALES: POPULATION OF URBAN AND RURAL DISTRICTS RESPECTIVELY
-
- Urban Rural
- Census of Districts. Districts.
- 1891 21,745,286 7,257,239
- 1901 25,058,355 7,469,448
-
-Thus the urban population increased by 15.2 per cent., while the rural
-population increased by 2.9 per cent.
-
-Many of the so-called "Urban" Districts, however, are quite rural in
-character, being often small towns dependent as business centres upon
-the agricultural areas in which they are situated. In 1901 there were
-215 Urban Districts with populations below 3,000; 211 with populations
-between 3,000 and 5,000; and 260 with populations between 5,000 and
-10,000.[52]
-
-Having regard to these considerations the following figures are arrived
-at:
-
- (1) Classing with the Rural Districts all those Urban Districts which
- had in 1901 populations below 10,000 we get:
-
- Urban Rural
- Population. Population.
- 1891 18,964,882 10,037,643
- 1901 21,959,998 10,567,845
-
-This gives an urban increase of 15.8 per cent. and a rural increase of
-5.3 per cent.
-
- (2) Classing with the Rural Districts those Urban Districts which had
- in 1901 populations below 5,000 we get:
-
- Urban Rural
- Population. Population.
- 1891 20,576,448 8,426,077
- 1901 23,803,714 8,724,129
-
-This gives an urban increase of 15.7 per cent. and a rural increase of
-3.5 per cent.
-
-Combining the three tests, we see that the truth broadly stated is that
-the rural population is almost stationary while the urban population is
-rapidly increasing. The rural population is thus a diminishing
-proportion of the whole.
-
-In 23 rural counties in England and Wales actual depopulation occurred
-between 1891 and 1901, ranging from a decrease of 7.5 per cent. in
-Montgomeryshire to a decrease of 1.9 per cent. in Cornwall.
-
-The Census Commissioners make an interesting test of depopulation of
-rural areas by taking the 112 Registration Districts which are entirely
-rural, and which had in 1901 an aggregate population of 1,330,319. Their
-population at each census back to 1801 has been approximately as follows:
-
- POPULATION OF 112 RURAL REGISTRATION DISTRICTS, 1801-1901
-
- Increase + or
- Census Year. Population. Decrease - in
- preceding decennium.
-
- 1801 932,364 ...
- 1811 997,494 + 6.99
- 1821 1,139,137 + 14.20
- 1831 1,216,872 + 6.82
- 1841 1,288,410 + 5.88
- 1851 1,324,528 + 2.80
- 1861 1,321,870 - 0.20
- 1871 1,321,377 - 0.04
- 1881 1,313,570 - 0.59
- 1891 1,304,827 - 0.67
- 1901 1,330,319 + 1.95
-
-The great advance in 1811-1821 was presumably due to the cessation of
-the long war. In 1851-1891 actual depopulation occurred, but in
-1891-1901 there was a gain of 1.95 per cent. Of the 112 districts,
-however, 73 showed actual decrease in 1891-1901, the total increase
-being entirely due to an advance in a few of the districts containing
-mines. It is clear that in the last 50 years there has been actual
-depopulation of strictly rural areas.
-
-This becomes still plainer when we examine the facts given in the table
-on page 237 as to the natural growth of the rural areas.
-
- THE MIGRATION FROM THE COUNTRY
-
- -----------------+-------------------+-----------+-----------+----------
- | Population. | Increase | Excess of | Loss
- +---------+---------+ of |Births over| by
- | 1891. | 1901. |Population.| Deaths. |Migration.
- -----------------+---------+---------+-----------+-----------+----------
- 112 Registration | | | | |
- Districts | | | | |
- entirely Rural |1,304,827|1,330,319| 24,492 | 150,437 | 124,945
- | | | | |
- 222 Registration | | | | |
- Districts which | | | | |
- contain urban | | | | |
- districts with | | | | |
- populations under| | | | |
- 10,000 |4,176,219|4,215,326| 39,107 | 414,816 | 375,709
- +---------+---------+-----------+-----------+----------
- Total of 334 | | | | |
- Registration | | | | |
- Districts |5,481,046|5,545,645| 64,599 | 565,253 | 500,654
- -----------------+---------+---------+-----------+-----------+----------
-
-It will be seen that in a rural population of nearly 5½ millions, the
-natural increase by excess of births over deaths was, in 1891-1901,
-565,253, but in the same time 500,654 persons left these districts
-either for urban England or for places abroad, so that the total
-increase in population was only 64,599.
-
-Turning to the number of persons employed in agricultural operations of
-all kinds, the table on page 239 shows the decline which has occurred.
-
-This extension of the table given in "Riches and Poverty," Edition 1905,
-p. 223, modifies it somewhat. The reduction of agricultural labourers is
-not so great as the crude totals suggest. It is the women and boys who
-have chiefly disappeared from British agriculture, and it should be
-observed that 248,500 wives and daughters disappeared in 1871 as
-compared with 1861 merely by reason of the fact that they were
-enumerated at the earlier date but not at the later one. According to
-Lord Eversley's careful analysis ("Statistical Society's Journal,"
-1907), the actual decline of male agricultural employment (men and boys)
-in Great Britain was from 1,657,000 in 1861 to 1,236,000 in 1901, or, in
-England and Wales alone, from 1,449,000 in 1861 to 1,079,000 in 1901.
-This is a serious decline, but not as great as is commonly supposed.
-
-Nothing is commoner than the belief that the trend to the towns is only
-to be observed in the United Kingdom. As a matter of fact it is confined
-to no country and is, indeed, a world-wide phenomenon. Between 1851 and
-1906 the urban population of France increased from 25.5 per cent. to
-42.1 per cent. of the whole. Between 1871 and 1905 the urban population
-of Germany increased from 36.1 per cent. to 57.4 per cent. of the whole.
-In both cases the population classed as "urban" is that contained in
-towns with at least 2,000 inhabitants.
-
- ENGLAND AND WALES: PERSONS EMPLOYED IN AGRICULTURE, 1851-1901
-
-+------+---------------------------+-----------------------+
-| | ADULTS | YOUNG PERSONS |
-|Census| (Aged 20 and over). | (under 20). |
-| of-- +---------+-------+---------+-------+-------+-------+
-| | Men. |Women. | Total. | Boys. |Girls. |Total. |
-+------+---------+-------+---------+-------+-------+-------+
-| 1851 |1,141,000|336,000|1,477,000|328,000|100,000|428,000|
-| 1861 |1,119,000|301,000|1,420,000|323,000| 60,000|383,000|
-| 1871 | 972,000|122,000|1,094,000|277,000| 52,000|329,000|
-| 1881 | 884,000| 50,000| 934,000|254,000| 11,000|265,000|
-| 1891 | 816,000| 40,000| 856,000|237,000| 6,000|243,000|
-| 1901 | 750,000| 43,000| 793,000|186,000| 9,000|195,000|
-+------+---------+-------+---------+-------+-------+-------+
-
-+------+----------------------------+
-| | TOTAL, ALL AGES. |
-|Census| |
-| of-- +---------+--------+---------+
-| | Males. |Females.| Total. |
-+------+---------+--------+---------+
-| 1851 |1,468,000| 436,000|1,905,000|
-| 1861 |1,442,000| 361,000|1,803,000|
-| 1871 |1,249,000| 175,000|1,424,000|
-| 1881 |1,139,000| 61,000|1,200,000|
-| 1891 |1,054,000| 46,000|1,099,000|
-| 1901 | 936,000| 52,000| 988,000|
-+------+---------+--------+---------+
-
-I remind the reader of these facts because it is necessary to
-distinguish between what is true and what is untrue in the arguments
-used in support of the cry "Back to the Land." As a general rule the
-stationariness of the rural population is attributed to cheap imports,
-or to land tenure, or to want of housing accommodation, or to the
-attractions of town life, or to the higher wages offered in industrial
-pursuits. All these things are causes of migration to the towns, but one
-of the most potent causes is rarely considered. It is the application of
-machinery and improved methods to agriculture. To produce a given
-quantity of food, far less labour is required than of old. Therefore,
-even in a country like France, which is almost independent of imported
-food, it is obvious that there must be a trend townwards as the labour
-displaced from agriculture seeks other employment.
-
-Thus, in considering land in its agricultural aspect _we must not regard
-it as containing an unlimited field of employment_. Agricultural methods
-will continue to improve, and the day will undoubtedly come when one
-man's work applied in agriculture will literally feed a multitude.
-
-But, having made that reservation, let us look at the French and German
-figures in another aspect. We see that in France, although the urban
-population has increased, it is still much less than one-half of the
-whole. In Germany, again, the town population in 1910 is about 60 per
-cent. of the whole. In our own country, if we counted as urban
-population the inhabitants of all towns containing 2,000 and upwards, we
-should find it amount to over 80 per cent. of the whole. While,
-therefore, not losing sight of the reservation already made, it is clear
-that, in the United Kingdom, causes other than the application of
-machinery to agriculture have operated to produce urban congestion.
-
-There was a time when no European country was so rich as England in men
-who cultivated their own land. To-day there is no country in the world
-in which cultivation and security of tenure are so widely divorced.
-Whatever the trend to the towns in other countries may be, there is no
-other country in which such a marked diminution in agricultural
-employment has occurred as in the United Kingdom. The land which bred
-the bowmen of Agincourt and the Ironsides of Cromwell now sends forth
-the men of whom Sir Ian Hamilton wrote to Mr Horsfall "I will not give
-you, a Manchester man, offence, if I say that their physique was hardly
-equal to the fine standard of their determination and courage.... It is
-the fault of some one that these brave and stubborn lads were not at
-least an inch or two taller and bigger round the chest, and altogether
-of a more robust and powerful build."
-
-Looking at the industry of our people as a whole, the main fact which
-stands out is want of security of employment. Nearly the whole of our
-industrial workers are earners of weekly wages, and of our sparse
-agricultural population but a small proportion are owners. Compare the
-position of France. There, fully one-half the population are attached to
-the soil by virtue of ownership and secure in the mother-earth which
-nourishes them. They may be poor, many of these peasant proprietors, but
-at least they are not constantly on the verge of hunger; at least they
-have the glorious privilege of independence.
-
-Our empty country-side is universally admitted to be a great national
-danger. It is not alone that we are so much dependent upon imported
-food; it is that the imported food is for the consumption of a race
-degenerating in the unwholesome environment of town life. Everywhere the
-cry of "Back to the Land" is raised, but, as though to mock that cry, it
-is only answered by well-to-do weekenders, attendance upon whom, in
-faked-up cottages from which labourers have been ousted, has become one
-of our many degrading trades of luxury.
-
-We must be under no illusions. We must not believe that mature and
-debilitated town-dwellers can be planted out in rows to gain a living by
-entire devotion to agriculture. We can hope for but little from farm
-colonies for the unemployed. Our chief hope, here as elsewhere, is in
-the children. We must seek to attach our present rural population to the
-soil under such conditions that their children may see hope where now
-there is none.
-
-How shall we secure allotments and small holdings for the agricultural
-labourer? Parliament in 1906-1909 has given much attention to rural
-problems, and the Small Holdings Act of 1908, setting up Commissions
-with power to make schemes for small holdings if County Councils neglect
-to do so, extending to eighty years the period for which money may be
-borrowed for the purposes of the Act, and giving powers for the
-compulsory acquisition of suitable land, is now in operation. The Report
-for 1908 shows that County Councils in England and Wales acquired 11,346
-acres for small holdings and 304 acres for allotments.
-
-We may venture to hope for better results than this, but is it asking
-too much of the nation, at this juncture, to broaden its conceptions?
-Why should we not, having regard to the extraordinary facts as to our
-national wealth and income, having regard to the admitted dangers of our
-present position, having regard to the best disposition and welfare of
-our 44,500,000 people upon their island home of 77,000,000 acres,—why,
-having regard to these things, should we not determine to secure
-absolute control of area, and, having secured it, to order the first
-essential of healthful life, proper distribution upon area?
-
-As has been already pointed out in these pages, the 77,000,000 acres of
-the United Kingdom, outside the tiny spots called towns which occupy an
-almost negligible fraction of the whole, _produce a gross rental of
-only_ £52,000,000. This is the sum at which the whole of the land of the
-United Kingdom, save that small part which is attached to houses, was
-assessed to Income Tax in 1908-9. It represents the rentals of
-agricultural lands as they stand with all their farm-houses and other
-buildings, roads, ditches, fences, etc. In 1898 the Royal Commission on
-Agriculture valued this land at only eighteen years' purchase. Twenty
-times £52,000,000 is only £1,040,000,000 or about one-half of one year's
-income of the country. This, it will be remembered, was the valuation of
-land which we adopted in Chapter 5.
-
-The question I submit for consideration is this: Is it worth our while
-to buy up our own birthright at the price of one-half of a single year's
-income?
-
-The question should be answered with due regard to all the
-considerations as to agriculture, housing and the distribution of
-population and industries which have been advanced in these pages. The
-problem of the town is before us, and not alone the question of the
-tilling of the soil. It should also be answered with due regard to the
-question of food importation and the probabilities as to the continuance
-of cheap supplies.
-
-In 1875-6 the gross assessments of agricultural lands—an area very
-little larger than at present, for, as has been shown, the largest town
-occupies a relatively insignificant area—amounted to £67,000,000 or
-£15,000,000 more than at the present time. If we had bought in 1875,
-then, and rents had remained the same, we should have lost capital, but
-would the value of the land have remained the same? In thirty years we
-could have created a considerable yeomanry,—men holding land from the
-State not in fee simple, but nevertheless in absolute security of
-tenure. They could have paid us rentals at which small holdings would be
-eagerly competed for, yet rentals larger than are at present derived by
-the little sovereigns of the British country-side from their tenants.
-Further, we should have stemmed the current of humanity which for thirty
-years has flowed to the towns, and done something, in the phrase of
-Ruskin, to "get as much territory as the nation has, well filled with
-respectable persons."
-
-My point as to the value that is and the value that might be is
-illustrated by Sir Robert Edgcumbe's experiment with Rew Farm, in the
-parish of Winterbourne St Martin, in Dorsetshire. Sir Robert bought this
-farm of 343 acres for £5,050, made a road through it, and sold it in
-small holdings at prices ranging from £7 to £20 per acre. The land was
-eagerly taken up and the experiment has been a great success. When Sir
-Robert bought the land in 1888 the outgoing tenant was in financial
-straits—he could not make Rew Farm pay. It was rented at £240 per annum
-and its net rateable value was £215. It is improbable that a new tenant
-would have paid more than £200. Yet, under small cultivation, the
-rateable value of Rew Farm rose from the £215 of 1888 to £346 in 1902, a
-rise of 60 per cent. In the same period, the rateable value of the
-parish of Winterbourne St Martin as a whole fell from £2,807 to £2,073.
-
-Apart from the question of small holdings, nothing is more probable than
-a rise in the value of British agricultural land to a point far beyond
-any yet attained. Already, within the last few years, a revolution has
-taken place in our wheat supplies—a revolution which has gone unnoticed
-by the British public, so long accustomed to its miraculous cheap loaf
-in the baker's shop that the miracle has become, as is the fate of all
-miracles, a commonplace and unregarded thing. The table on p. 245 shows
-the nature of the change which has occurred:
-
- UNITED KINGDOM IMPORTS OF WHEAT AND FLOUR IN EQUIVALENT WEIGHT OF GRAIN
- In Millions of Cwts.
-
-------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
- |1895.|1896.|1897.|1898.|1899.|1900.|
-------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
-Russia | 23.0| 17.2| 15.1| 6.4| 2.5| 4.5|
-Roumania | 2.0| 5.4| 1.2| 0.2| | 0.7|
-U.S.A. | 45.3| 52.8| 54.1| 62.0| 60.2| 57.4|
-Argentina | 11.4| 5.0| 0.9| 4.0| 11.5| 18.7|
-Canada | 5.1| 6.3| 6.9| 7.7| 8.7| 8.0|
-India | 8.8| 2.1| 0.6| 9.5| 8.2| |
-Australia | 3.6| | | 0.2| 3.0| 2.9|
-------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
-Total of above and| | | | | | |
- other countries |107.2| 99.6| 88.7| 94.4| 98.5| 98.6|
-------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
-
-------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----
- |1901.|1902.|1903.|1904.|1905.|1908.
-------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----
-Russia | 2.6| 6.6| 17.3| 23.7| 24.8| 4.6
-Roumania | 0.5| 2.4| 3.1| 1.5| 2.1| 1.8
-U.S.A. | 66.8| 65.0| 46.7| 18.5| 14.5| 40.7
-Argentina | 8.3| 4.5| 14.2| 21.8| 24.1| 31.8
-Canada | 8.6| 12.2| 14.5| 9.0| 8.4| 16.8
-India | 3.3| 8.8| 17.1| 25.5| 22.9| 2.9
-Australia | 6.2| 4.2| | 11.4| 11.5| 5.8
-------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----
-Total of above and| | | | | |
- other countries |101.0|107.9|116.7|118.2|114.2|109.1
-------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----
-
-In 1902 America sent us 65,000,000 cwts. of wheat. In 1903 this great
-supply fell sharply and in 1904-5 it was reduced to less than 20,000,000
-cwts. In 1908 there was recovery, but this was but temporary. Sooner or
-later the United States supply will wholly cease. By 1925 the United
-States will have some 110,000,000 to 120,000,000 people to feed.
-
-In "Riches and Poverty," 1905 edition, I wrote:—
-
-"The United States failing, we still secured our imported wheat supplies
-in 1904 and 1905, but at an increased price. Canada failed, but those
-uncertain suppliers, India and Australia, came to the rescue. Argentina
-sent us more than ever before and Russia also came into the export
-market. But the facts as to America remind us that none of these
-suppliers can be relied upon indefinitely, and some of them are
-notoriously uncertain. Canada has done badly in 1904 and there will
-always be difficulties of climate to consider. Moreover, the United
-States will in future come into the market as a buyer and compete with
-us for the exports of North-West Canada and Argentina. The sum is that
-we cannot for the future depend upon dirt cheap wheat raised by scratch
-farming on virgin soil, and that, as a consequence, the price of wheat
-will rise. As with wheat, so, sooner or later, with many other foods.
-When it comes to putting more labour and manure, and less luck, into
-farming in new lands, then conditions will be equalized, prices of
-produce will rise, and the price of British land will rise also."
-
-It is now (1910) only necessary to add that the price of wheat has moved
-thus:
-
- THE RISE IN WHEAT
-
- British Foreign Indian and
- Wheat. Wheat. Colonial.
- _s._ _d._ _s._ _d._ _s._ _d._
- 1894 (lowest on record) 22 10 22 10 23 6
- 1904 28 4 30 5 29 7
- 1905 29 8 31 2 30 8
- 1906 28 3 30 1 30 3
- 1907 30 7 32 4 33 10
- 1908 32 0 36 0 36 1
- 1909 36 11 39 2 40 3
-
-Merely as a commercial speculation, then, it would be well worth our
-while to invest £1,000,000,000 in buying up the United Kingdom. The land
-is now probably at bed-rock price, and we should come in, as the slang
-phrase goes, on the ground floor. The really dear land, that of the
-towns, we could pass by. We want to get our industries and our people
-out of the towns and with control of area we could do it. The State, as
-landlord from John o'Groats to Land's End, could afford to dispense with
-the acquisition of the tiny areas upon which the majority of our people
-are now crowded. Land nationalization, viewed in this way, presents no
-insuperable financial difficulties. On the contrary, it would put us in
-possession, at an absurdly low price, of the opportunity to recreate our
-social structure and the means to dispense with all taxation in the time
-to come. Under wise management the national acreage could soon be made
-to yield a revenue from farms, allotments, market gardens, houses,
-factories, forests, etc., of something over three pounds per acre on the
-average, for it would house the greater part of our people and produce a
-larger part of our food by intensive cultivation. If we wisely use our
-resources, our 77,000,000 can be made to produce, under methods of
-intensive cultivation and co-operation already in practice, if not
-enough food to feed our population, certainly a larger proportion of our
-supplies than at present.
-
-Also worth consideration is the important matter of afforestation. There
-are now but some 3,000,000 acres of woods and plantations in this
-country, and many of these are badly managed, for forestry is almost an
-unknown art in the United Kingdom. Landowners do not understand it;
-their agents do not understand it. Yet its possibilities are enormous
-and might be realized within twenty to thirty years of the simple
-financial operation which I have suggested. There need be no acre of the
-77,000,000 not useful or not beautiful. Millions of acres of land now
-termed waste may be clothed in verdure to yield a steady and certain
-income and make us largely independent of imported timber. There is no
-greater authority on this subject than Dr Schlich, and he gives it as
-his opinion, confirmed by thorough investigation of British and foreign
-conditions,[53] that five or six million acres could be brought under
-wood, thus producing the bulk of the timber we require. Every acre
-afforested would require about £2 worth of labour. After planting, each
-acre would need only about five days' labour a year, but that means
-30,000,000 days of work. The timber grown and cut, there would be the
-transport, lumbering, and allied industries calling for labour. Dr
-Schlich estimates that 500,000 men, or say 2,500,000 people, would find
-employment through the afforestation of say six million acres, and the
-estimate is based upon solid foundations.
-
-It may be asked, why do the present owners of "waste" land miss such an
-opportunity? The answer has several parts. Landowners are for the most
-part (1) ignorant of the subject, (2) unprovided with capital, (3)
-unwilling to wait. A business which does not begin to yield income for
-some 15 years is not for the average private landowner. But the people,
-who have waited so long for the right to tread their own soil, can wait
-these fifteen years and other fifteen if need be.
-
-Given the overlordship of area, the establishment of a permanent Land
-and Housing Commission, the nationalization of the means of transport,
-the establishment of well endowed schools of agriculture and forestry,
-and a generation of well-born children, what possibilities open out
-before us!
-
-Is this conception too large for a race which talks of Empire? In the
-United States there is a private trust which was organized by a single
-individual with a capital of 1,000,000,000 dollars—a trust which owns
-territory, mines, railways, steamships and mills, and supports 1,000,000
-people. Business transactions are growing greater, and must greater
-grow, for the world cannot afford to peddle with its resources. The
-future is with the men who realize that it is not more difficult to
-think in millions than in thousands. Within the last few years we have
-spent on a war with a small people £250,000,000 in the name of Empire.
-£250,000,000 is the price of one-fourth of the entire area of the Mother
-Country. It is high time for a little Imperial thinking in the home
-market.
-
-[Footnote 52: These facts are summarized from the Census Reports.]
-
-[Footnote 53: See his excellent "Forestry in the United Kingdom."]
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVIII
- ORGANIZATION
-
-
-It has already been remarked in these pages that quite inadequate
-numbers of persons are engaged in the production of many useful
-articles. This would be true even if all the individuals enumerated as
-producers in the census returns were fully employed upon existing plant
-and under their existing managers. As a matter of fact, they are not
-fully employed. Unemployment or short time always exists in greater or
-less degree. Between inadequate numbers and inadequate employment of
-those numbers the quantity of _ponderable commodities_ produced in the
-United Kingdom is so small, as we have seen, that only a small fraction
-of our people are well housed or well clothed. A great multitude craves
-for satisfaction of elementary needs, while a host of shopkeepers wait
-hungrily for customers who cannot buy.
-
-In the nineteenth century enormous strides were made in the invention of
-machinery and labour-saving appliances and methods, and now, at the
-opening of the twentieth century, we possess means more than ample for
-the satisfaction of all. If invention now came to a standstill, we
-could, with such science as we now command, produce, or obtain by
-exchange for our production, far more food, houses, clothes, furniture
-and other commodities than we actually need, and this while our
-population enjoyed ample leisure in which to develop their higher
-faculties.
-
-What, then, is at fault? Not only do the majority of our men work
-arduously, but an immense army of women and young children are also
-engaged in production and distribution. Of the population of England and
-Wales between the ages of 20 and 55 only 179,946 males and 823,135
-unmarried females figured in the Census of 1901 as "without specific
-occupations." What is the explanation, then, of an insufficient and
-ill-distributed production? The answer can be given in a few words. It
-is want of organization which leads to such poor results from so much
-hard labour. _A poor stream of ponderable commodities filters through
-thousands of unnecessary channels, and becomes the subject of many
-strange services, each of which claims and gets some sort of reward. By
-the enumeration of each of these services the total income which we
-examined at the beginning of this book is made up. The Error of
-Distribution of the national income connotes a wasteful and inadequate
-production._
-
-Waste in actual production is still exceedingly great. In only a
-minority of cases are factories equipped with the best plant and
-appliances. Model factories, in which the most economical production is
-attained, are still exceptional. There are tens of thousands of small
-employers who lack the capital properly to equip their establishments,
-and who perforce waste labour.
-
-That is to speak of production as a whole, without reference to the
-nature of the goods produced, but when we come to analyse the product,
-waste is everywhere apparent. Labour, to be economically employed,
-should produce only genuine articles, capable of application for a
-considerable period to the purpose which they are designed to serve. As
-we know only too well, a very great part of our manufacturing output is
-of articles which make-believe, and it is only a small fraction of
-production in any branch of industry which is the best of its kind. Our
-competitive system is largely an endeavour to make profits out of the
-sale of trashy articles, the production of which wastes alike the labour
-engaged in making them and the labour for which they are exchanged. It
-is difficult to say which is more pitiable, the waste of labour upon
-rubbish designed for the consumption of the poor, or the waste of labour
-upon luxuries designed for the consumption of the rich.
-
-Upon the waste connected with the trades and services of luxury I have
-already dwelt at some length. Here it is only necessary to remind the
-reader that it is of two kinds. There is the multiplication of servants
-and attendants upon rich men and their houses and animals,[54] and there
-is the employment of nominally useful workmen in the manufacture and
-repair of the instruments of luxury.
-
-Turning to the marketing and distribution of commodities we have many
-forms of waste of labour to study. Each manufacturer in a trade, selling
-his goods in competition with others, sends out his agent or agents to
-assert, not always truly, that his wares are the best and the cheapest,
-and to secure orders for them. Thus a large number of able-bodied men
-are divorced from production and made a quite unnecessary factor in
-distribution. At the Census of 1901, 64,322 commercial travellers were
-enumerated in England and Wales, as against 44,055 in 1891! These men
-are usually of an exceedingly capable type, whose work, better directed,
-might be of great service in useful production.
-
-Each factory, however small, must have its separate clerical staff, and
-to thousands of men wasted as travellers we have to add tens of
-thousands wasted as clerks. In the United Kingdom, in 1901, there were
-439,972 commercial or business clerks, as against 300,615 in 1891.
-
-The commodities produced by the wasteful competitive factories are
-often, too often, dealt with by wholesale middlemen, agents, brokers,
-factors, merchants, who, with their staffs of clerks and warehousemen
-account for an uncertain but considerable number of the working
-community. Our imports of food, which in an organized community could so
-easily be handled by a single staff at each port, are scrambled for by a
-great host of merchants, factors and commission agents.
-
-A most conspicuous waste in distribution is in advertising, one of the
-most unnecessary of all trades. In the game of competition, those often
-win, not who supply the best goods, but who say that they supply the
-best goods. As a result there has sprung up an enormous industry with
-many branches which is engaged in pushing the sale of a few good and
-many worthless articles. It "employs" thousands of male and female
-clerks and canvassers, and directly and indirectly lays many nominally
-useful trades under contribution. Printers, authors and journalists,
-enamellers, carpenters, bill-stickers, paper-makers and others are
-engaged to furnish the materials of the advertisements. Altogether it is
-probable that some 80,000 people find a "living" in connexion with
-advertising, when they should be doing useful work. Some part of the
-stream of useful commodities is directed to them, and in return they
-give nothing. Individually, they may be honest, industrious people,
-doing the work they are employed to do to the best of their ability.
-From a national point of view they are wasting their time. It may be
-added that when they are pushing the sale of "patent" medicines,
-whiskies and complexion creams they are doing something worse than waste
-time.
-
-Chiefly arising out of our commercial system of distribution and the
-crimes and misdemeanours which it creates, the various branches of the
-legal profession absorb a considerable number of able-bodied men who
-contribute nothing to the wealth of the nation but who are rewarded by a
-large share of the national income. At the Census of 1901 as many as
-27,184 barristers and solicitors and 42,339 law clerks were
-recorded.[55] These 69,523 individuals with their dependents, probably
-numbering nearly 300,000 in all, help to attenuate the thin stream of
-ponderable commodities which flow from the places where people labour to
-useful ends.
-
-We pass to the work of the hundreds of thousands of retail shopkeepers
-and their servants, and here again we find a vast amount of wasted
-labour. In each trade in each district there are a quite unnecessary
-number of tradesmen hunting for profits. It is not uncommon to find
-half-a-dozen butchers' men calling for orders upon the householders of a
-single street.
-
-It is sometimes represented to shopkeepers that any movement towards
-collectivism threatens their livelihood. Shopkeepers will do well to
-remember that it is unrestrained individualism which is their worst
-enemy. In almost every branch of retail distribution the multiple shop
-principle is eliminating the independent shopkeeper and substituting
-badly paid shop "managers." Apologists of individualism boast of the
-economy which is thus being achieved. Thus M. Leroy Beaulieu in his
-"Collectivism" (which is an attack on collectivism) writes, "The
-tendency of civilization, where freedom exists, appears to be towards a
-reduction in the number of persons who live entirely by commerce, owing
-to the gradual substitution of large for small industries that is now in
-progress. Would it be possible for collectivism to act more rapidly or
-efficiently?" M. Leroy Beaulieu forgets that the crushing of the small
-shopkeeper by private monopolists accentuates the error of distribution,
-while collectivism economizes labour for the general good.
-
-What I have written does not apply, of course, to all fields of labour.
-It has long been recognized that certain services can only be
-effectually and efficiently performed under one management. Railways,
-tramways, water-service, lighting, and so forth have come to be looked
-upon as "natural monopolies." Even Mr Henry George, who thought that
-"Socialism tended towards Atheism" and who considered that "limitation
-of working hours and of the labour of women and children" could only be
-enforced by methods which "multiply officials, interfere with personal
-liberty, tend to corruption and are liable to abuse,"[56] admitted the
-existence of "necessary monopolies" which might be treated as functions
-of the State. Indeed, it is apparent to the most unthinking that between
-two points A and B there can only be one best route for a railway, and
-that, therefore, railway service between points A and B should be a
-monopoly. Similarly it would be an obvious absurdity to construct two
-sewers in one road, competing with each other for the removal of refuse,
-or for two or more gas managements to run mains in the same streets. In
-these and many other cases it is clearly recognized that economy of
-labour is consistent with monopoly alone, and the only question that
-remains to decide is whether the necessary monopoly should be in public
-or private hands. I do not purpose here to discuss that question, for at
-this date it is scarcely an open one. An overwhelming weight of opinion
-has decided that public ownership must go with monopoly, wherever
-monopoly is shown to be necessary.
-
-It is not so generally recognized that proper economy of labour and a
-proper distribution of the products of labour can only be secured by:
-
-(1) The conversion of all common services into monopolies, and
-
-(2) The ownership of those monopolies by the public.
-
-Nevertheless, the waste arising from hundreds or thousands of
-unnecessary centres of production and distribution is becoming better
-understood, and in the United Kingdom, as in America and Germany, big
-fish are increasingly eager to swallow the little fish. Combination in
-the field of production is no less common than the unification of
-control of stores and shops in the field of ultimate distribution.
-Organization is in the air, and organization, commenced by individuals
-for individual gain, can only end in the erection of monopolies, which,
-for its own safety and health, the public, sooner or later, will find
-itself compelled to control.
-
-In the foregoing pages we have considered the proper use of area and the
-healthy housing of the people as questions urgently calling for
-collective action. The colonization of British land by the revival of
-agriculture and the redistribution of industries is ultimately bound up
-with the development of Transport and Power Distribution. The former is
-now a problem of private monopoly which we have allowed to arise. The
-latter will become one if we do not at once realize the possibilities of
-power distribution and determine that they are of so far-reaching a
-character as to demand public ownership from the beginning.
-
-If we are successfully to take our industries and people out of
-congested centres and spread them out over a considerable area we need
-cheap and rapid transport and cheap and easily handled power. The
-transport and power transmission of the future will be electrical. It is
-upon record that in the early days of the steamship a Royal Commission
-"sat upon" the then vexed question of "Steam versus Sails," and
-unanimously decided that sails were the only practical wear for the
-Royal Navy. One is reminded of this fact when one contemplates the slow
-progress made by electric traction in this country, and the marked
-reluctance to experiment on the part of those types of private and
-injurious monopolists—our great railway companies. After much thought
-and with the assistance of a pushful American citizen our London
-"Underground" is, as I write, electrified, many years after electric
-traction was known in Darkest Africa, but so far as the greater part of
-our transport system is concerned we are at a standstill. The field of
-experiment is resigned to the Americans and the Germans.
-
-The production and distribution of light, heat and power simply mean the
-production and distribution of energy in the form we call electricity,
-and since transport is simply motion we see that the future of lighting,
-heating, transport and power is the future of electricity.
-
-In the matter of transport there is perhaps something to be said for the
-statesmen who, without the slightest conception of the possibilities of
-steam power, allowed our railways and canals to be made sources of
-profit for private speculators. They erred in ignorance of the magnitude
-and importance of the subject. There will be no such excuse if we allow
-the production and distribution of electrical power to become the sport
-of private monopolists. If there is blindness in this matter it will be
-wilful blindness. For each district there can be but one power supply
-consistently with economy, and so much hangs upon the wise distribution
-of power that it is most important the public should be made to realize
-the nature of the interests which are at stake.
-
-The adoption of the mysterious word "Electricity" is a most unfortunate
-thing. If the public understood that electricity is Energy and that it
-is transmutable at will into Power or Light or Heat, they would better
-realize the possibilities of the future in town and country, and all
-that the proper organization and control of Energy means to them. They
-would at once resolve that the power of government must not be divorced
-from the Power which will run in the electrical mains of the future, and
-by the aid of which we can transform the face of our land.
-
-Let me drop the word Electricity and use the simple term Energy. Energy
-will be produced at a central power station and distributed over a
-considerable area. The energy mains will carry the means of lighting,
-the means of motion (transport), the means of heating, the means of
-manufacturing in large, the means of manufacturing in small, the means
-of cooking, the means of cleaning, to every person in that area. Energy
-will be at the disposal of every factory, of every workshop,—and of
-every private house. No building will be without its motors, large or
-small. Smoke and all the waste and dirt of smoke will disappear.
-
-I am not speaking of a remote future, but of possibilities which can
-forthwith be realized. How important it is, then, that this Energy
-supply, which is already entering and will increasingly enter into our
-everyday lives, should be publicly owned from the first. Given private
-ownership, the monopolists of Energy will run their mains where most
-profit is quickly to be garnered instead of seeking, as we should seek,
-first profits in the thinning out of towns and the restoration of the
-health of our people. If we part with the control of power, it is Power
-indeed which we part with. We should part, also, it is important to add,
-with a magnificent source of public revenue, which will amount, in the
-time to come, to much more than the revenue of our railways. It is only
-by securing the distribution of such profits by public ownership that we
-can make any impression upon the melancholy facts treated in the first
-part of this volume.
-
-As I have already said, it is commonly recognized that such a function
-as a tramway or water supply must of necessity be a monopoly, public or
-private, if its working is to be economical. It is not difficult to show
-that the control of the production and distribution of all articles of
-common use must be unified if labour is not to be wasted. Just as one
-water main and one alone is needed for the service of a row of houses,
-so, to use a familiar illustration, one vehicle and one alone is needed
-to supply the same row of houses with milk. If a number of milk-sellers
-are competing for the custom of one small neighbourhood, as is usually
-the case, a quite considerable number of able-bodied men, boys and
-animals are engaged in unnecessarily traversing the same streets, one
-after the other, to do the work which could be performed with much more
-ease, certainty and expedition by a fraction of their number. Each of
-the small tradesmen has to keep a set of accounts demanding his own
-attention or that of his wife or clerk. Each milk dealer, again, has his
-separate supply of milk from the railway station, sent by some farmer at
-a distance. Each of these doses of milk is the subject of a separate
-transaction, wasting labour at both ends of the journey and in transit.
-From first to last, the process is clumsy and tedious, wasting labour at
-every stage. The waste is precisely of the same nature as would occur if
-several water companies supplied a certain street with water and had
-their mains running side by side. There would be just as much absurdity,
-and no more, in serving my road by four water-mains as in serving it by
-the four milk chariots which now pay it such frequent visits.
-
-And to pursue this useful illustration a little further there is another
-analogy between a water supply and a milk supply which should not be
-forgotten. The importance of pure milk is not less than the importance
-of pure water. The milk supply of towns is derived from a thousand
-tainted sources, the precise nature of which is unknown both to the
-consumers and to the milk dealers. I fear we should drink less milk if
-we could see the handling of it—the literal handling of it—from the
-start. I have a lively recollection of the last milking operation I
-witnessed. Suffice it to say that I agreed, afterwards, that the butter
-made on the farm looked to be very fine butter, and that I was entirely
-satisfied with an ocular demonstration of its many virtues. As is
-pointed out by Dr G. F. McCleary, the Battersea Medical Officer of
-Health,[57] "if large towns want clean milk they must not look to
-outside authorities to get it for them." The ordinary milk farmer is a
-conservative creature who does not appreciate the "faddist" with his
-demands for a clean milker and a clean cow. A dirty person draws milk
-from a dirty animal into a dirty receptacle, and tons of manure come to
-London with the morning milk. Dr Leslie Mackenzie, Medical Officer of
-the Local Government Board for Scotland,[58] thus describes the process:
-
-"To watch the milking of cows is to watch a process of unscientific
-inoculation of a pure (or almost pure) medium with unknown quantities of
-unspecified germs.... Whoever knows the meaning of aseptic surgery must
-feel his blood run cold when he watches, even in imagination, the
-thousand chances of germ inoculation. From cow to cow the milker goes,
-taking with her (or him) the stale epithelium of the last cow, the
-particles of dirt caught from the floor, the hairs, the dust, and the
-germs that adhere to them.... Everywhere, throughout the whole process
-of milking, the perishable, superbly nutrient liquid receives its
-repeated sowings of germinal and non-germinal dirt. In an hour or two
-its population of triumphant lives is a thing imagination boggles at.
-And this in good dairies! What must it be where cows are never groomed,
-where hands are only accidentally washed, where heads are only
-occasionally cleaned, where spittings (tobacco or other) are not
-infrequent, where the milker may be a chance-comer from some filthy
-slum—where, in a word, the various dirts of the civilized human, are at
-every hand reinforced by the inevitable dirts of the domesticated cow?
-Are these exaggerations? They are not. I could name many admirable byres
-where these conditions are, in a greater or less degree, normal."
-
-There is but one way to obtain clean and pure milk and at the same time
-to secure economy of labour in its production and distribution coupled
-with adequate remuneration of the labour so economized, and that is the
-way of public ownership. The municipality should conduct the entire
-operation of milk supply. By so doing it would prolong the lives of its
-citizens, save the lives of many infants, and add to its revenue.
-
-A public milk supply, even in relation to the food of adults, is an
-urgent need. When considered in relation to infantile mortality the
-question is seen to be a vital one. All medical officers of health are
-at one on the point. We must have municipal milk depots if the children
-are to be saved, and if we supply milk for children and nursing mothers
-we may as well enlarge our basis of operations and make the milk
-service, like the water service, a complete municipal monopoly.
-
-Thus organized, another great service would be lifted out of the sphere
-of bargaining and chicanery and adulteration. In another industry the
-waste of labour would cease. In another trade men would work with intent
-to serve, and cease to hunt profits at the cost of their bodies and
-souls.
-
-The case for the municipalization of the milk supply is a very forcible
-one, but it is not more so than that for the public ownership of other
-common services. The point as to waste of labour in production or
-distribution largely affects them all. The dangers of adulteration and
-dirt touch not milk alone, but the manufacture and distribution of every
-commodity. Commercialism has undermined honesty. Sham, shoddy and
-make-believe—these are erected in the form of houses, sewn up in the
-form of suits, packed in tins to mock children as food, made the sole
-occupation of millions of quite honest people. If honesty of production
-is to be regained, the great services must pass, one by one, under
-public control, and as each passes another opportunity for the amassing
-of private fortunes will pass away and another factor in the Error of
-Distribution will be cancelled. The best services at low charges for the
-public will be accompanied by ample but not excessive remuneration of
-management, a proper reward and short hours for the privates of
-industry, and the accumulation of just so much profit in the public
-treasury as may be deemed necessary to provide for new capital,
-contingencies, or for public non-revenue services. Thus, and thus alone,
-can we raise the status of the mass of the people and prevent the
-congestion of wealth in a few hands. There can be no proper diffusion of
-wealth until we have ended the system by which good and bad employers
-use the lives of the multitude for their profit and pleasure, now
-working them arduously in exchange for a payment which is an unfair
-remuneration of the service, and anon refusing them even the opportunity
-to do hard labour.
-
-The remarkable success of municipal trading, so far, may be measured by
-the bitterness of the attacks which have been made upon it by private
-capitalists. The recent complaints of the railway companies as to the
-competition of municipal tramways entirely dispose of the theory that
-private enterprise alone can ensure economical management and an
-efficient production. It is argued that public bodies cannot obtain
-faithful service from their employees, and that businesses managed by
-them are bound to fail because the men in command do not understand the
-interests they seek to control or the methods of industry. Capital, it
-is represented, is bound to be wasted, and the tax-payer certain to
-suffer in pocket as part proprietor of an unsuccessful business, even as
-he suffers also as a consumer of his own poor product. In reply it is
-only necessary to point out that there is nothing which can be urged
-against a trading municipality which cannot also be urged against a
-limited liability company. In the latter case, as in the former, the
-shareholders know nothing of the details of the business they own. In
-each there is a governing body which in its turn usually knows little of
-the technicalities of the business undertaken. Thus the chairman of a
-well-known steel company is a solicitor. The boards of directors of the
-majority of our leading limited companies are composed of men who are
-strangers to the businesses they "direct." In practice management
-devolves upon the Managing Director, who is usually a man well versed in
-his trade or profession. We see, therefore, that a limited liability
-company, after all, is in precisely the same position as a municipality.
-The private monopolists are compelled to find a practical man to manage
-their business and make profits for them. That is precisely what the
-municipality does. As a matter of fact, some of the cleverest men in the
-United Kingdom are serving municipalities as advising and managing
-engineers, instead of hiring themselves out to some board of directors.
-
-What do railway directors, for example, know of railway management? Do
-they travel on their own line, note its deficiencies, and repair them?
-Do they take a practical hand in its affairs? No. The practical
-management is in the hands of certain paid servants, goods managers,
-general managers, locomotive superintendents, and so forth. Is it
-seriously argued that an individual engineer, as locomotive
-superintendent of a private railway company, is more efficient than he
-would be in the service of say the London County Council? If so, how
-does it come about that the railway companies are losing trade while the
-L.C.C. trams are crowded? If so, how is it that to travel on the South
-Eastern Railway is a martyrdom, while to travel on a L.C.C. tram is a
-pleasure?
-
-It will be seen on reflection that the only difference between the
-company and the municipality is this. In the case of the company the
-qualification of the directors is merely the owning of stock or shares
-in the undertaking, and the perfunctory votes of a few shareholders. In
-the case of the municipality the "director" has to secure the suffrages
-of a great body of his fellow-citizens. As for nepotism, it is far more
-common in private trade than in public life in this country. In nearly
-every private business some inefficient son or cousin or nephew is
-"provided for," to the loss of the undertaking. Competitive industry is
-full of square men carefully planted in round holes by their friends and
-relatives.[59] In the municipal service there are fewer wasters than are
-to be found connected with great limited liability companies. As for
-waste of capital, it is common in private business, and its loss is as
-real to the community, from an economic point of view, as the loss of
-capital by a municipality. As for negligence and theft, these are common
-in all kinds of business undertakings, but as a general rule audit and
-control are stricter in municipal trading than in the case of private
-companies. As for cheerful service, the reader has but to compare the
-servants of municipal tramways with those of any private omnibus
-company. My own experience is that it is the municipal servant who is
-the more civil and obliging. Perhaps it is because the municipality
-gives him better wages, shorter hours, and a decent coat. As for the
-product of the machine, the London County Council gives the public
-longer rides for the same fares while paying its men better. Thus the
-share of the product which once went to swell private fortunes is
-distributed, and by so much the Error of Distribution is reduced.
-
-What we have lost through the private ownership of our railways may be
-gauged by the experience of Belgium. The Belgian State Railways sell
-tickets which enable one to travel continuously, if desired, for the
-time specified thereon, within the limits of the country. For instance a
-five-day ticket will cost 16s. 6d. second class, or 9s. 6d. third class.
-During the life of one of these tickets it serves as a pass, and it is
-only necessary to show it upon request. The total length of the railways
-is nearly 3,000 miles. All that is required to obtain the circular
-tickets is to present at the office an unmounted photograph of small
-size, which is attached to the ticket as a means of identification. When
-the ticket is purchased an extra 4s. is demanded for the safe return of
-the ticket after its term of usefulness expires. On the morning after
-the expiration of the ticket it can be delivered at any ticket office
-along the line, and the 4s. extra will be returned. This system enables
-one to travel at a minimum expense. One would like to know why, if
-private trading produces the best results, that travel is cheap in
-Belgium and dear in England. Why cannot a Briton, favoured as he is with
-all the alleged virtues of private enterprise in railway management,
-obtain a circular ticket to travel in the United Kingdom? The benefits
-of the Belgian railways are conspicuous in the matter of the housing
-question. Cheap workmen's tickets are issued at rates so low that men
-are enabled to live at considerable distances from their work. How low
-the fares are may be gathered from the following figures:
-
- WORKMEN'S TICKETS ON BELGIAN STATE RAILWAYS
-
- For one Journey daily
- Distance. to and fro.
- Six Days' Ticket.
- Miles. _s._ _d._
- 3 0 9¼
- 6 1 0
- 12 1 2½
- 24 1 7¼
- 31 1 9¾
- 62 2 6¼
-
-Thus the daily return fare for 31 miles is less than 3¾d.!
-
-The special workmen's tariff has existed in Belgium since 1870, and was
-at first simply introduced to give Belgian manufacturers the command of
-plenty of cheap labour. But the Minister builded bigger than he knew,
-for the cheap fares have caused a profound revolution in the position of
-Belgian workmen. In 1870, 14,223 tickets were issued; in 1890,
-1,188,415; in 1901, 4,412,723! As a result it is estimated that 100,000
-industrial workers, out of a total number of 900,000, although employed
-in the towns, continue to live in the country, own a patch of ground,
-and, with the higher wages of the town, enjoy the inestimable advantages
-of country life.
-
-It is only through the nationalization of our railways that we can
-secure (1) for the travelling public the speed, safety and comfort which
-science has taught us how to command, (2) for the railway servants
-safety and a just share of the product of their labour, and (3) for the
-goods service rapid and economical transport. It is nothing less than
-national shame that our railway men receive an average wage of only 25s.
-per week. It is nothing less than national folly that our lives are
-placed at the mercy of underpaid and overworked signalmen.
-
-A striking illustration of national treatment as compared with the
-existing private exploitation of our national wealth is to be found in
-the coal trade. Upon coal is built the wealth and commerce of the United
-Kingdom. To it we owe our pre-eminence in manufactures and our
-world-wide shipping and commerce. Without it the United Kingdom would
-quickly sink to the position of a third-rate power. It might be assumed
-_a priori_, therefore, that the production and use of coal would be
-regarded by the British Government as a matter of national concern. As a
-matter of incredible fact, so little do we regard coal production that
-we even allow our rare supplies of naval coal to remain in private hands
-and to be sold freely to foreigners. The tradition of "liberty" could
-surely no further go.
-
-From first to last private coal production and private coal distribution
-are wasteful of life, material, and labour. Of our output of 260,000,000
-tons of coal less than 10,000,000 tons are mined by machinery! In
-nine-tenths of our coal-mines coal-cutting machines are unknown! Thus a
-vast amount of unnecessary hand labour is used in a degrading and
-dangerous occupation. From a national point of view it is undesirable
-that a single unnecessary man should descend the mines. Under private
-exploitation coal-mining employment reads thus (I quote from the Census
-of Production Report, 1907):
-
- UNITED KINGDOM COAL-MINES, 1907
-
- ------------+------------------------+------------------------+-------
- | MALES. | FEMALES. | Total
- +--------+-------+-------+--------+-------+-------+ both
- |Under 16|Over 16|Total. |Under 16|Over 16|Total. | sexes.
- | years. | years.| | years. | years.| |
- ------------+--------+-------+-------+--------+-------+-------+-------
- Below Ground| 43,862 |625,773|669,635| | | |669,635
- Above Ground| 15,623 |135,985|151,608| 643 | 4,681 | 5,324 |156,932
- ------------+--------+-------+-------+--------+-------+-------+-------
- Total | 59,485 |761,758|821,243| 643 | 4,681| 5,324 |826,567
- ------------+--------+-------+-------+--------+-------+ ------+-------
-
-With coal-mining organized with due regard to national welfare, there
-would be no boys, fewer men, and more machines in the depths of our
-mines, while the employment of girls and women even in surface work
-would be unthinkable. It is true that private capital may not now, as it
-did in the 'forties, employ young girls and boys under ten in its "dens
-of darkness." But it deliberately sacrifices hundreds of lives every
-year by using inefficient plant and by the use of explosives, and still
-we permit boys to go down the pits. In the holocaust in the Rhondda in
-1905 many children perished. Not infrequently three generations of a
-single family may be found working in the same colliery. Few people out
-of the industry know that 44,000 boys work in our coal-pits.
-
-With our collieries in our own hands we should not only keep boys out of
-the mines, but use every possible mechanical appliance to reduce the
-number of men required to get the coal. We should seek for new
-appliances to displace labour from such an unhealthy and dangerous
-calling. To the same end we should seek to prevent the waste of coal in
-every direction. Shot-firing would of course go, and after undercutting
-the coal by electrical or hydraulic machinery we should bring it down by
-hydraulic pressure.
-
-Having secured an economical production, in which we should no longer
-commit the crime of killing a thousand miners every year, we should
-distribute the coal cheaply to our local authorities, who would act as
-distributing agents. The army of coal merchants and their clerks and the
-thousand and one artful dodges of the retail coal trade would disappear,
-and the public would secure their coal economically.
-
-What is the alternative to public ownership of common services? The
-alternative is the rule of the "combine" or "trust," for it cannot be
-too clearly realized that the organization of production and
-distribution must proceed. But organization by private hands,—the
-combination of industrial units into great trusts economizing
-management, production and distribution,—cannot safely be tolerated. It
-means the wielding of the chief power in the State by monopolists who
-will use their power for private ends. The era of private competition is
-closing. On every hand capital is combining with capital in restraint of
-competition. Such combinations threaten the public welfare in several
-directions. They can make it practically impossible for new capital to
-enter an industry. They can, while economizing labour, keep the profits
-arising from economy in their own hands, and build up gigantic fortunes
-while increasing unemployment. They can offer such opposition to trades
-unionism as to wield untrammelled power over their employees. They can
-accentuate that Error of Distribution which it should be our chief
-purpose to modify and remove.
-
-Finally, the organization of services under public control is the only
-remedy for unemployment, for unemployment is but a phase of poverty.
-Underpaid or not paid at all, wrongfully employed or unemployed,
-overworked or underworked, these conditions are the inevitable
-accompaniment of a state of society in which individuals make bargains
-with individuals with a view not to service but to profit. To the
-individual the unemployed workman is a pitiable object—that is all. To
-the nation the unemployed workman is something more than pitiable; he is
-a dead loss. Unless physically or mentally unfit, and therefore entitled
-to gratuitous service, he should be employed in the scheme of the
-nation's work. The community needs the service of all its members; there
-is none superfluous, none. While yet one uncomfortable house rears its
-head, while yet one person goes ill-clad, while yet one rod of area
-remains unused, there is work to do, but to utilize the work of every
-man economically and wisely in the performance of necessary work is only
-possible through organization. We may delude ourselves how we will with
-palliatives; we shall find no remedy for unemployment short of the
-control by the community of the _essential_ work of the community. While
-we leave the direction of labour in the hands of a few rich men there
-will ever be a surplus of labour left for our hapless "government" to
-deal with wastefully. While the community resigns its right to decide
-its own destinies by submitting to the rule of the rich, there will
-remain the problem of poverty of which unemployment is not the worst
-part.
-
-Let it be clearly understood that, as things are, there is only one real
-form of government that matters, and that is the rule of the employed by
-the employer. The real arbiters of our destinies are not the King's
-Ministers, but the few men who have power of life and death over their
-fellows through the giving or withholding of employment. The majesty of
-the law decides what a man shall _not_ do. The majesty of the employer
-decides what a man shall do. The time has come when we must govern
-ourselves, not negatively by way of restraint, but positively by way of
-action. It is time that we determined where our roads should run and in
-what fashion and in what employments we should engage ourselves. It is
-time that we took stock of the lives and the homes of our people and
-resolved to abolish their poverty by organizing their labour.
-
-[Footnote 54: It it a melancholy fact that those employed in the service
-of waste are often better paid than those engaged in useful production.
-In a recent action brought by a cloak-room attendant at a fashionable
-restaurant it came to light that in two cloak-rooms each of four
-attendants drew as his share of the "tips" over £3 per week.]
-
-[Footnote 55: I hope that no manual workman who reads these lines will
-deduce from what I have written that, as things are now, his labour is
-necessarily more useful than that of the clerk, the lawyer or the
-shopkeeper. For every unnecessary distributing agent referred to above
-several producing agents could be named whose work is useless or harmful
-in the national economy. This I endeavoured to make clear in Chapter
-11.]
-
-[Footnote 56: "Condition of Labour," page 90.]
-
-[Footnote 57: "Infantile Mortality," by Dr G. F. McCleary.]
-
-[Footnote 58: "The Hygienics of Milk," "Edinburgh Medical Journal,"
-1898.]
-
-[Footnote 59: In a speech delivered to the students of the Crystal
-Palace Company's School of Practical Engineering in 1905 the following
-advice was given. I quote from the newspaper report: "Students should
-cultivate the art of making friends through life. Wherever they were
-they should try to make good friends, for such friends were always
-useful when one wanted to obtain employment. Half the battle was won in
-applying for a situation if the applicant had a friend on the board."
-
-Excellent! "Be artful, sweet youth, and let who will be clever."]
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIX
- THE AGED POOR
-
-
-In "Riches and Poverty," edition 1905, I passed at this point to the
-consideration of the cruellest phase of Poverty, the poverty of the
-aged. Since 1905 Mr Asquith has given us an Old Age Pension Act, and it
-is happily unnecessary to repeat in full the pleas which were advanced
-in these pages in 1905. It is well, however, again to record the known
-facts with regard to poverty in old age.
-
-If we did not know our country, and had never encountered its poor in
-the flesh, in what condition could we expect to find the aged labourer
-in view of the terrible extent of the Error of Distribution? It is not
-alone that the majority of our people have the slenderest incomes. To
-narrow wages is in most cases added uncertainty of employment, the
-greatest enemy of thrift, while the period during which the average
-workman draws the full rate of wages recognized in his trade has ever
-been short, and tends with the increased strenuousness of modern
-industry to grow shorter.
-
-There are about 2,100,000 persons aged 65 and upwards, in the United
-Kingdom, but these are not divided between rich and poor in the
-proportions shown in the frontispiece. We have to remember that the poor
-are slain by their poverty. In the "comfortable" and "rich" classes the
-span of life is much greater than in the case of the poor. It is
-impossible to say precisely how the 2,100,000 persons are divided in
-point of income, but probably, some 1,750,000 of them belong to the
-classes whose incomes are below the income tax exemption limit. As to a
-considerable proportion of them we have the clearest evidence of
-grinding poverty.
-
-In 1890 Mr Thomas Burt, M.P., moved for a parliamentary return showing
-the number of paupers of 60 years of age and upwards, distinguishing
-indoor from outdoor relief. It appears from this return that the total
-number of paupers over 60 years of age in receipt of relief on August
-1st, 1890 (excluding lunatics in asylums, vagrants and persons who were
-only in receipt of relief constructively by reason of relief being given
-to wives or children), was 286,867.
-
-The number of those persons who were in receipt of indoor relief, the
-number in receipt of outdoor relief, and their ages as stated, are given
-in the table on the following page.
-
-The notable fact which emerges is that of 286,867 paupers over 60, as
-many as 245,687 were over 65. Old age as a cause of pauperism is
-strikingly illustrated by a comparison of the two numbers. It is clear
-that death at 64 would mercifully have saved over two hundred thousand
-poor old men and women from the stigma of pauperism.
-
-According to the census returns, in 1891, the following year, there were
-1,372,974 persons (606,960 males and 766,014 females) at and over the
-age of 65. On August 1st, 1890, the date of Mr Burt's return, therefore,
-there were 245,687 persons out of about 1,372,000 persons 65 years old
-and upwards or say 1 in 5½ in receipt of poor relief.
-
-But Mr Burt's return related to the paupers relieved on one day only.
-What ratio does the number of aged paupers relieved in one day bear to
-the total number relieved in the course of the year?
-
- PAUPERS OVER 60 YEARS OF AGE (ENGLAND AND WALES ONLY)
- ON AUGUST 1ST, 1890
-
- ----------------+----------------------+------------------------+
- | Indoor. | Outdoor. |
- Ages. +------+--------+------+-------+--------+-------+
- |Males.|Females.|Total.| Males.|Females.| Total.|
- ----------------+------+--------+------+-------+--------+-------+
- 65 to 70 | 9,468| 6,339 |15,807|10,567 | 35,866 | 46,433|
- 70 to 75 | 9,953| 6,856 |16,809|17,633 | 43,266 | 60,899|
- 75 to 80 | 7,086| 5,298 |12,384|16,474 | 32,021 | 48,495|
- 80 and over | 4,949| 4,803 | 9,752|12,456 | 22,652 | 35,108|
- +------+--------+------+-------+--------+-------+
- Total over 65 |31,456| 23,296 |54,752|57,130 |133,805 |190,935|
- 60 to 65 | 8,018| 5,354 |13,372| 5,959 | 21,849 | 27,808|
- +------+--------+------+-------+--------+-------+
- Total over 60 |39,474| 28,650 |68,124|63,089 |155,654 |218,743|
- ----------------+------+--------+------+-------+--------+-------+
-
- ----------------+------------------------
- | Total Paupers.
- Ages. +-------+--------+-------
- | Males.|Females.| Total.
- ----------------+-------+--------+-------
- 65 to 70 | 20,035| 42,205 | 62,240
- 70 to 75 | 27,586| 50,122 | 77,708
- 75 to 80 | 23,560| 37,319 | 60,879
- 80 and over | 17,405| 27,455 | 44,860
- +-------+--------+-------
- Total over 65 | 88,588|157,101 |245,687
- 60 to 65 | 13,977| 27,203 | 41,180
- +-------+--------+-------
- Total over 60 |102,563|184,304 |286,867
- ----------------+-------+--------+-------
-
-This question is answered by a further parliamentary return, asked for
-in 1892 by Mr (afterwards Lord) Ritchie. This return shows for England
-and Wales the number of persons of each sex aged 65 years and upwards,
-and the number between 16 and 65, also the number of children under 16
-years of age, in receipt of relief (_a_) on January 1st, 1892, and (_b_)
-during the twelve months ended Lady Day 1892. As in Mr Burt's return,
-vagrants and lunatics are not included. The return differs from Mr
-Burt's, however, in distinguishing those persons in receipt of medical
-relief only.
-
-This return of Mr Ritchie's showed that while 700,746 paupers of all
-ages were in receipt of relief on January 1st, 1892, the number relieved
-during the year ended Lady Day 1892 was more than twice as great, viz.
-1,573,074.[60]
-
-Mr Ritchie's return relates to all paupers, whereas that of Mr Burt
-related to the aged only. It is difficult to say which fact in Mr
-Ritchie's return is the more saddening, the relief of 401,904 aged
-paupers in a single year, or that in the same period 553,587 _children
-under sixteen were pauperized_.
-
-The following table (p. 276) summarizes the facts elicited by the return
-as to the paupers relieved during twelve months. (It should be observed
-that, of the 1,573,074 persons enumerated, 211,082 were in receipt of
-medical relief only. Of the 401,904 paupers over 65, however, but 25,447
-were in receipt of medical relief only.)
-
- PAUPERS RELIEVED IN ENGLAND AND WALES DURING THE
- TWELVE MONTHS ENDING LADY DAY 1892
-
------------------+------------------------+--------------------------+
- | Indoor. | Outdoor. |
- Ages. +-------+--------+-------+-------+--------+---------+
- | Males.|Females.| Total.| Males.|Females.| Total.|
------------------+-------+--------+-------+-------+--------+---------+
-65 and over | 68,490| 45,654 |114,144| 95,140|192,620 | 287,760|
-16 to 65 |134,561| 97,723 |232,284|141,826|243,473 | 385,299|
-Under 16 | | |111,782| | | 441,805|
------------------+-------+--------+-------+-------+--------+---------+
- Totals | | |458,210| | |1,114,864|
------------------+-------+--------+-------+-------+--------+---------+
-
------------------+--------------------------
- | Total Paupers.
- Ages. +-------+--------+---------
- | Males.|Females.| Total.
------------------+-------+--------+---------
-65 and over |163,630| 238,274| 401,904
-16 to 65 |276,387| 341,196| 617,583
-Under 16 | | | 553,587
------------------+-------+--------+---------
- Totals | | |1,573,074
------------------+-------+--------+---------
-
-Comparing the number of paupers in England and Wales, as shown by the
-figures on p. 276 with the census population of 1891, we get:
-
- TOTAL PAUPERS IN 1891 COMPARED WITH TOTAL POPULATION
- (ENGLAND AND WALES ONLY)
-
-Total Paupers relieved 1,573,074
-Total Population, Census 1891 29,000,000
-Paupers per 1,000 54
-
-Thus the paupers of all ages relieved in 1891 amounted to one in every
-eighteen of the population of England and Wales.
-
-What of those over 65? The facts are:
-
- PAUPERS AGED 65 AND UPWARDS IN 1891 COMPARED WITH TOTAL POPULATION
- OF THAT AGE (IN ENGLAND AND WALES ONLY)
-
- Total Paupers aged 65 and over 401,904
- Total Population aged 65 and over 1,372,900
- Paupers per 1,000 292
-
-_Thus of the population of England and Wales aged 65 and over in 1891,
-one in every three was in receipt of poor relief!_
-
-In 1899, and again in 1900, the Local Government Board published returns
-relating to aged pauperism in those years, and Mr Burt, in 1903,
-obtained a second return in continuation of that of 1891. We are thus
-enabled to compare _one-day_ returns for five different periods and this
-is done in the following table:
-
- PAUPERS, INDOOR AND OUTDOOR, RELIEVED ON CERTAIN DAYS DURING A PERIOD
- OF THIRTEEN YEARS (ENGLAND AND WALES ONLY)
-
- Ratio of Paupers
- Paupers Paupers 65 and over to
- aged 16 aged 65 total population
- and over. and over. of that age.
- (Per Cent.)
- 1890 (1 Aug.) Not known 245,687 18.0
- 1892 (1 Jan.) 471,568 268,397 19.4
- 1899 (1 July) 469,939 278,718 18.7
- 1900 (1 Jan.) 494,600 286,929 19.2
- 1903 (1 Sept.) 490,513 284,265 18.3
-
- [_Note._—In the Returns for 1892, 1899 and 1900 the numbers include
- persons in receipt of relief constructively by reason of relief being
- given to wives or children. In the Returns for 1890 and 1903 (Mr Burt's
- returns) such persons are excluded.]
-
-Apart from seasonal changes—the number of paupers is, of course, always
-higher in the winter than in the summer—it will be seen that the
-proportion of paupers over 65 years of age to the total population of
-that age has not varied much. On August 1st, 1890, there were 245,687
-paupers of 65 years and upwards, or 18 per cent. of the total population
-of that age. On September 1st, 1903, there were 284,265 paupers of 65
-and upwards, or 18.3 per cent. of the population of that age.
-
-We have only the figures of the 1892 return to throw light upon the
-number of aged paupers relieved during one year. If we assume that still
-the same proportion of aged pauperism exists, viz.: 292 in each 1,000,
-then, in the present year, out of a total population in the United
-Kingdom aged 65 and upwards of about 2,100,000, as many as 613,200
-persons are pauperized.
-
-This number includes both indoor and outdoor paupers, and the ratio of
-indoor and outdoor paupers varies greatly in different places because of
-the varying policies of Boards of Guardians. But this point need not
-detain us. Outdoor relief may in some cases be injudiciously given and
-in other places most cruelly refused. The fact remains that, taking the
-country as a whole, we have the clearest evidence of the existence of
-613,000 exceedingly poor aged persons.
-
-More important it is to remember that, for one poor person who obtains
-either indoor or outdoor relief, several who justly might claim it
-refuse to avail themselves of the tender mercies of the Poor Law. The
-poor, as a rule, will exhaust every penny of their savings and pawn
-every stick of their furniture before they seek the workhouse door.
-Moreover, the amount of genuine charity bestowed by the poor upon the
-poor is wonderful. If, then, there are 600,000 aged paupers either
-inside workhouses or receiving outdoor relief in the course of the year,
-we may be quite sure that at least as many more are as urgently in need
-of succour, and obtain it by increasing the poverty of their poor
-friends rather than by seeking from the Guardians the loaf, the 2s. 6d.,
-and the insults which too often constitute outdoor relief.
-
-The reader will see how probable it is that, of the 2,100,000 persons
-aged 65 and upwards now living in the United Kingdom, fully 1,750,000
-are in a condition of poverty which at the worst is pauperism and at the
-best is sore need. Some 613,000 of them are certainly in receipt of poor
-relief during the year. Probably another 600,000 are only deterred by
-horror of the workhouse from recourse to the Guardians. For the
-remaining third, as for the other two-thirds, the life which has for
-three-score years been a constant struggle with poverty meets its
-hardest and cruellest phase at the close.
-
-A certain number of extraordinary men exist who contrive to rear a
-family upon 30s. a week, and to save enough to provide for their old
-age. These are the few who are not merely themselves of a most frugal
-disposition, but who have chanced to bestow their affections upon a girl
-as abstemious and as thrifty as themselves. A pair of such character,
-blessed with perfect health and not more than two or three healthy
-children, may contrive to meet first the fall of earnings after 45 or
-50, and finally old age itself, with a light heart. That such cases are
-rare will only surprise those who have never had occasion to practise
-thrift. Only a little less rare than the comfortable aged workmen are
-those who contrive to provide for themselves a tiny pension for their
-declining years, through the continuous sick pay of friendly society or
-trade union, or through the superannuation benefit of the latter. There
-are only 38 trade unions which provide a superannuation benefit, and
-these have a membership of about 600,000. They pay between them about
-£200,000 a year in old age pensions to about 25,000 members. How small
-this number appears when we compare it with the total number of persons
-over 65 in the United Kingdom, which is about 2,100,000 at the present
-time!
-
-The value of the practice and experience of Trade Unions is very great.
-Summing them up, I showed in "Riches and Poverty," edition 1905, that
-workmen who earn their living, not by the mere exercise of physical
-strength, but by skill, are usually used up by the age of 60, and not
-infrequently by the age of 55. The latter age may be regarded as the
-limit of full-earning capacity for the average skilled workman. After 55
-he is in the greatest danger of dismissal when trade becomes slack. From
-a considerable number of inquiries, I arrived at the conclusion that the
-full wage-earning capacity of the average skilled workman begins at
-25-30 and ends at 50-55. Before 25-30 a man is inexperienced and not
-valued so highly as after that age. After 50-55 the age factor again
-begins to tell, and the workman trembles at thought of the future. Each
-grey hair is a deadly enemy to his livelihood.
-
-If the skilled workman can hope to earn the full wages of his trade
-(full wages, it should be remembered, means about 40 to 46 weeks' pay
-per annum in most trades) for but 20 to 30 years, what of the men who
-are hewers of wood and drawers of water? The answer is that after 45
-good wages are difficult to obtain, and that for the rest of their
-lives, if not mercifully ended by death, the earnings are poor in the
-summer, and often at zero in the winter. If we look at the "occupations"
-(with what irony the term is used in this connexion) of the inmates of
-workhouses at the census of 1901 we find:
-
- WORKHOUSE INMATES (OVER 10 YEARS OF AGE) AT CENSUS OF 1901
-
- MALES
-
- Clerks 1,079
- Coachmen and grooms 1,848
- Carmen, carriers 1,546
- Seamen 2,052
- Dock labourers 2,355
- Agricultural labourers 9,469
- Gardeners 1,232
- Coal-miners 1,570
- Blacksmiths 1,381
- Carpenters, joiners 2,274
- Bricklayers 1,212
- Bricklayers' labourers 1,397
- Painters, glaziers 2,487
- Cotton operatives 1,218
- Tailors 1,594
- Shoemakers 3,061
- Costermongers 1,521
- General labourers 22,129
- Other occupations 31,287
- Without specified occupations or unoccupied 16,151
- -------
- 106,863
-
- FEMALES
-
- Domestic servants 15,630
- Charwomen 8,176
- Laundry and washing service 4,554
- Cotton operatives 2,128
- Tailoresses 1,245
- Milliners and dressmakers 1,642
- Shirtmakers, seamstresses 2,814
- Costermongers, hawkers 1,159
- Other occupations 7,681
- Without specified occupations or unoccupied 32,220
- -------
- 77,249
- -------
- Total male and female 184,112
- =======
-
-The large proportion of "general labourers" is very
-striking, while those describing themselves as dock, bricklayers' and
-general labourers together form one-fourth of the whole. It will also be
-noticed that 9,469 agricultural labourers "followed the plough to the
-workhouse door." In passing, I may remark that in the list of female
-"occupations" the presence of 15,000 domestic indoor servants should not
-go unnoticed.
-
-The almost universal approval which the proposal to grant Old Age
-Pensions elicited would probably have carried it to fruition long before
-the date of the Old Age Pension Act, 1908, but for one thing and one
-thing only—the question of cost. It is amusing to note that the "Small
-Committee of Persons Interested in the Controversy respecting Old Age
-Pensions,"[61] practically a Committee of the Charity Organization
-Society, who actively opposed Old Age Pensions in 1899-1902, placed in
-the forefront of their "objections" the following:
-
-"That the cost would be an insuperable difficulty, for to grant 5s. a
-week at age 65 in respect of the population of England and Wales only,
-would involve about £20,000,000 per annum for the present recipients,
-and by 1941 the figure would have risen to £36,000,000."
-
-In "Riches and Poverty," edition 1905, I said:
-
-"Our examination of the National Income and the manner of its
-distribution disposes of this objection. The question resolves itself
-into this—Ought the 5,000,000 persons who have an aggregate income
-approaching £900,000,000 to be taxed to the extent of £15,000,000 to
-provide pensions for the aged poor? If the facts illustrated in the
-frontispiece of this volume could be brought home to every elector there
-would be no doubt whatever as to the decision of the country on the
-subject. With the gross assessment to Income Tax at £900,000,000 the
-expenditure of £15,000,000 on a small provision for the aged strikes
-one, not as extravagant, but as an exceedingly modest proposal to
-mitigate the evils of the Error of Distribution.
-
-"I have named £15,000,000, and that is all that the scheme would cost.
-It is not a universal superannuation scheme that is wanted; I find it
-difficult to regard very seriously the proposal that, for fear of
-"pauperization" we should pay every person, rich and poor, aged 65 and
-upwards, the sum of 5s. per week. The idea appears to be that if the
-scheme is not made universal some stigma will attach to those who are
-pensioned. Surely this is an exaggerated view. The majority of those
-aged 65 are poor, just as the majority of the whole population are poor.
-If there is a stigma in such a case it attaches to those who go to form
-the top part of my diagram—to those whose absorption of an undue share
-of the national income connotes poverty for millions at the other end of
-the scale.
-
-"My own feeling is that we should make the pension, like the
-superannuation benefit of Trades Unions, _claimable_ by those aged 65
-and upwards who have not an income of more than £1 a week or property
-valued at more than £250. We should then probably have to provide for
-about 1,400,000 to 1,500,000 pensioners, at a cost of £18,000,000 to
-£20,000,000. Administration would cost about £500,000 and we should save
-about £4,000,000 in poor rates. Thus the net addition to taxation would
-be about £15,000,000."
-
-Mr Asquith's Old Age Pensions Act of 1908 made the receipt of an Old Age
-Pension a citizen right, claimable by every person filling certain
-statutory conditions. These conditions are:—
-
- (1) That the person must have attained the age of 70.
-
- (2) That he is a British subject.
-
- (3) That his yearly income does not exceed £31, 10s.
-
-The receipt of poor relief (medical relief excepted), habitual idleness,
-lunacy or conviction for crime, are statutory disqualifications.
-
-The amount of the pension varies from 1s. to 5s. per week according to
-the following sliding scale:
-
- Rate of
- Income of Pensioner. Pension
- per Week.
- £ _s._ _d._ _s._ _d._
- Not exceeding 21 0 0 5 0
- £ _s._ _d._
- Exceeds 21 0 0 but does not exceed 23 12 6 4 0
- " 23 12 6 " " 26 5 0 3 0
- " 26 5 0 " " 28 17 6 2 0
- " 28 17 6 " " 31 10 0 1 0
- " 31 10 0 No pension.
-
-It was expressly stated in the Act that the disqualification of those
-who had been in receipt of poor relief was to cease on December 31st,
-1910, and the Budget of 1910-11 accordingly made provision for the
-payment of the pensions to such paupers after that date.
-
-The following statistics show the payments under the Act at December
-31st, 1909 (the Act having come into force on January 1st, 1909):
-
- THE FIRST YEAR'S WORKING OF MR ASQUITH'S OLD AGE PENSION ACT
-
- Position at December 31st, 1909.
-
- Number of Amount Payable
- Pensioners. per Annum.
- England 405,755 £5,043,332
- Scotland 76,037 966,370
- Wales 26,972 337,254
- Ireland 183,976 2,335,764
- ------- ----------
- 692,740 £8,682,720
- ======= ==========
-
-It was a defect in the Act that the possession of a certain amount of
-property, as well as the possession of a certain income, was not made
-the disqualification that I suggested it ought to be. A man with £500 of
-property, yielding an income of £20 a year, ought _not_ to be qualified
-for an Old Age Pension.
-
-It is notable that, in introducing his Budget of 1908, Mr Asquith, in
-expounding his scheme of pensions, estimated that it would cost not more
-than £6,000,000 a year. As we have seen, the cost has proved to be very
-much greater. It is fortunate that the under-estimation was made. If
-Parliament had known that the cost would be £9,000,000 instead of
-£6,000,000 Old Age Pensions might not now be law, so slowly is the
-lesson learned that, to a nation of 44,000,000 people, with an aggregate
-income of nearly £2,000,000,000, an expenditure of £9,000,000 is a small
-matter, relatively as small as though the reader expended a few
-shillings.
-
-But it is, of course, a misnomer to speak of "expenditure" in this
-connexion. The National Dividend is not diminished by the transfer of
-£9,000,000 from the well-to-do to the poor. No more is _spent_ through
-the transfer; all that takes place is a transfer of the power of call
-for commodities, and a consequent change of the _form_ of a certain part
-of the National Dividend, not a change of its _size_. The production of
-luxuries is slightly—very slightly—stemmed; the production of
-necessaries is slightly—very slightly—increased.
-
-Mr Asquith's valuable Act needs to be amended by the reduction of the
-pensionable age to 65 and to be supplemented by a State scheme for
-sickness and invalidity insurance. (A minor defect which has revealed
-itself is the continued disqualification of a man whose wife is in
-receipt of relief.) The case for the amendment has been already
-discussed in these pages; the case for invalidity insurance is that old
-age is not the only determinant of dire poverty for the wage earner. The
-facts adduced in Chapter 10 are eloquent of the need for succour which
-exists in tens of thousands of cases.
-
-[Footnote 60: The Royal Commission on the Poor Laws called for a similar
-"year count" of paupers for 1907. It revealed that in that year of good
-trade 1,709,436 persons were relieved by the Guardians in England and
-Wales. This is 47.7 per 1,000 of the population. The later count fully
-confirms that of 1892.]
-
-[Footnote 61: This description is their own. See "Old Age Pensions"
-(Macmillan & Co.) Introduction.]
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XX
- ADAM SMITH'S FIRST MAXIM OF TAXATION
-
-
-Our next task shall be to examine the question of taxation in relation
-to the Error of Distribution.
-
-It is over one hundred and thirty years since Adam Smith penned his
-famous maxims of taxation, the first and most important of which ran as
-follows:
-
-"The subjects of every state ought to contribute towards the support of
-the government as nearly as possible in proportion to their respective
-abilities; that is, in proportion to the revenue which they respectively
-enjoy under the protection of the state."
-
-The first part of the proposition, which lays it down that contribution
-towards the support of government should be in proportion to ability, is
-interpreted by the second part to mean that contribution should be in
-proportion to income. The second half of the maxim is therefore
-subversive of the first.
-
-Let us compare the ability to bear taxation of three persons whose
-respective incomes are: A £50; B £500; and C £10,000. If we accept Adam
-Smith's explanation of his own maxim, we should apply taxation in
-proportion to income. Note the effect of a tax of 10 per cent. upon the
-three incomes:
-
- A £50 less 10 per cent. = £45
- B 500 " " = 450
- C 10,000 " " = 9,000
-
-Most clearly we see that to A, with £1 a week, the loss of 10 per cent.,
-or five week's income, is a most serious matter—a crushing burden. With
-£500 per annum, however, B, after the loss of 10 per cent. of his
-income, is still left with a revenue ten times as great as that of A.
-The taxation in B's case is serious but not overwhelming. C, after the
-loss by taxation of one-tenth of his income, is left with the handsome
-income of £9,000 a year, a sum which is more than sufficient to sustain
-him in luxury. The loss in the third case is clearly a shadowy one; a
-rich man has been rendered not quite so rich.
-
-Thus, by taxing in proportion to income, we impose upon the poor man a
-crushing burden; upon the small income a serious burden; upon the large
-income a burden scarcely to be felt.
-
-Obviously, then, the second part of Adam Smith's maxim is not a true
-illustration of the doctrine of equality of sacrifice which is involved
-in the use of the term "ability."
-
-This has been partially recognized in our present system of taxation.
-Those with incomes exceeding £160 per annum are made to pay a tax which
-is not imposed upon those with less than that income. Further, the
-income tax is roughly graduated. A graduated death duty is also imposed
-in order to obtain a larger contribution from the rich than from the
-poor.
-
-I now urge that the doctrine of equality of sacrifice, which has already
-been partially recognized, should be considered in relation to all the
-facts treated in Book I.
-
-We have seen that the great mass of the people, who do the greater part
-of the work of the nation, who produce the material commodities without
-which life could not be supported, receive so small a share of the total
-product that while 39,000,000 persons enjoy an income of £911,000,000,
-about 5,500,000 persons receive an income of £930,000,000. If then, we
-had to raise £200,000,000 per annum by taxation and were to raise the
-whole from the second class, the result would be:
-
- 5,500,000 would have £930,000,000, } £730,000,000 or
- less £200,000,000 } £133 per head.
-
- 39,000,000 would have { £911,000,000 or
- { £23 per head.
-
-The Error of Distribution is so great that, were the whole taxation
-levied upon those above the line of £160 per annum, the comfortable and
-rich classes would still be left about six times as rich as those below
-that line.
-
-An unanswerable case is thus made out for the repeal of the whole of the
-customs duties on tea, coffee, cocoa, dried fruits and sugar, which bear
-almost entirely upon the poorer classes. A heavy tax on tea or sugar is
-a matter of indifference to the rich; to the poor it means a
-considerable privation. Our indirect food taxes are a denial of the
-doctrine of ability.
-
-The customs and excise duties on alcoholic liquors must of course remain
-on moral grounds, and the tobacco duty might well remain for the
-present. We should thus tax the working classes through their luxuries
-alone, while the workman who dispensed with drink and smoked in
-moderation would be practically untaxed. The general recognition of this
-fact, combined with the cheapening of tea, coffee and cocoa, would not
-be without its effect upon the nation's drink bill, and in so far as its
-recognition reduced our revenue we could count it gain.
-
-Reverting to the facts illustrated in the frontispiece, the effect of
-the abolition of the food duties would be slight in relation to the
-extraordinary inequalities of income, but a just and certain step,
-nevertheless, in the direction of amelioration. Just as a small burden
-is great to a narrow income, so a small relief is a great boon, and
-fully 10,000,000 of our people would feel in an appreciable degree the
-removal of the food duties. The step has been urged by reformers for
-many years; considered in relation to the Error of Distribution it is
-seen to be an exceedingly small measure of justice, which needs little
-rhetoric to enforce its claims.
-
-To proceed with the application of the doctrine of ability to taxation
-in view of the facts as to the National Income, we come to the
-consideration of the Income Tax and Death Duties.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXI
- THE MAIN INSTRUMENT OF TAXATION
-
-
-Through the income tax we go directly to the person upon whom we desire
-to levy taxation, and take from him such portion of his earnings or
-other profits as we consider to be his just contribution to the revenue.
-Through the income tax we can, if we care to do so, cause each subject
-of the State to contribute towards the expenses of government according
-to his ability.
-
-It is the purpose of this chapter to show that the income tax could be
-so amended that, so far from being counted an obnoxious impost, it would
-be regarded as a just and proper instrument of taxation.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It is generally believed that the British Income Tax was originated by
-Pitt in 1798. As a matter of fact, however, the direct taxation of
-incomes in the United Kingdom dates back many hundreds of years. For the
-purposes of this work, I do not propose to trace the history of the
-subject to an earlier date than 1692.
-
-The Property and Income Tax imposed in that year is commonly known as
-the "Land-Tax," and this name has given rise to a great deal of
-misunderstanding.
-
-In their twenty-eighth report (1885) the Commissioners of Inland
-Revenue, in giving a detailed description of the Land-Tax of 1692, point
-out that the impost "was in fact a Property and Income Tax, and moreover
-that personal estate was quite as much the object of the charge as
-land." So few people are aware of these facts that it may be well to set
-out the actual provisions of the Act, as described by the Commissioners:
-
-It (the Act of 1692) is entitled "An Act for granting to their Majesties
-an aid of four shillings in the pound for one year for carrying on a
-vigorous war against France"; and the second section enacts, "That every
-person, body politic and corporate, etc., having any estate in ready
-monies or in any debts owing to them or having any estate in goods,
-wares, merchandise, or other chattels, or personal estate whatsoever
-within this realm or without shall pay yield and pay unto their
-Majesties four shillings in the pound according to the true yearly value
-thereof; that is to say, for every hundred pounds of such ready money
-and debts, and for every hundred pounds' worth of such goods, wares,
-etc., or other personal estate the sum of four and twenty shillings."
-
-The third section imposes a duty of four shillings in the pound upon the
-profits and salaries of all persons having any office or employment of
-profit (except naval and military officers).
-
-And then the fourth section proceeds thus, "And to the end a further aid
-and supply for their Majesties' occasions may be raised by a charge upon
-all lands, tenements, and hereditaments with as much equality and
-indifferency as is possible by an equal pound rate of four shillings for
-every twenty shillings of the true yearly value, be it enacted that all
-manors, messuages, lands and tenements, and all quarries, mines, etc.,
-tithes, tolls, etc., and all hereditaments, of what nature soever they
-be, shall be charged with the sum of four shillings for every twenty
-shillings of the full yearly value."
-
-The rules for assessments follow the same order, and show that the
-charge on personal estate was as much to be attended to as that on land.
-Thus the assessors are directed in the first place to bring in
-certificates of the names of every person dwelling within their
-districts, "and of the substance and values of them in ready money,
-goods, chattels, and other personal estate." Every person is to be rated
-for personal estate at the place where he shall reside, and, if not a
-householder, at the place where he resides at the execution of the Act,
-or if out of the realm, where he was last resident; "and for the better
-discovery of personal estates," every householder is to give an account
-of his lodgers.
-
-But although the Act of 1692 was the first of those so-called Land-Tax
-Acts, it was not until 1697 that the tax was imposed precisely in the
-form which has been preserved to the present day, that is to say, as a
-fixed sum for the whole kingdom, and to be raised in quotas specified in
-the Act for each county, city or borough therein named. That Act was
-renewed every year, with scarcely any difference in its provisions as to
-the mode of assessment, and although the amounts charged upon the
-counties, etc., varied according to the total sum required from the
-kingdom, they were always fixed in due proportions to the original
-quotas. The last annual Act, so far as land was concerned, was passed in
-1797.
-
-Now it is a remarkable circumstance that these Acts of 1697 and 1797
-appear to mark, more strongly than before, the taxation of personal
-estate as the primary object of the law.
-
-After the clauses imposing upon goods, wares, merchandise, etc., and
-upon pensions and offices, the fixed charge of four shillings in the
-pound towards raising the quotas, that relating to land appears to treat
-it as a subsidiary contributor, as it were, and for the purpose of
-making up the sum due to the Exchequer after exhausting the other
-resources. The words are: "And to the end the full and entire sums by
-this Act charged upon the several counties, etc., may be fully and
-completely raised and paid; be it enacted, that all lands, etc., shall
-be charged by a pound rate towards the said several sums by this Act
-imposed."
-
-How the duty on personal estate was levied, or what was its proportion
-in the quotas, we have no means of knowing. All that we do know is that
-in Mr Pitt's time it had dwindled nearly to nothing; and that the tax
-annually voted under the name of land tax had become a land tax in
-reality. Thus we find in an assessment for the Tower Division in 1799
-that the sum charged for personal estate was only £227, while the charge
-for lands, etc., is £29,964; and in one of the few accounts of later
-transactions which remain to us, that for the year 1823, we are
-presented with a return of £5,416, 10s. 0d. as the ludicrous result of a
-tax at one per cent. on the capital value of the personalty of Great
-Britain.
-
-The Commissioners go on to remark that it seems almost incredible that
-year after year an Act should have been passed containing the most
-minute directions for the assessment of personal estate, and yet that
-nothing which could be called an assessment should have been made. They
-suggest that "Perhaps the explanation may be found in another
-peculiarity in the administration of this tax, the tendency to regard it
-as a _fixed charge_ upon the subjects on which it was originally levied.
-That this has been the case with land, both before and since 1797, is
-well known, and if the same rule was applied to personalty it is easy to
-conceive that, as the persons originally charged moved out of the
-parish, or became destitute, or otherwise unassessable, their proportion
-of the tax was shifted to the land as the readiest means of collecting
-it."
-
-A certain amount of personalty was still assessed in the time of Pitt,
-however, as may be gathered from the following figures from the roll of
-the Tower Division.
-
- "LAND-TAX." ABSTRACT OF DUPLICATES FOR THE TOWER DIVISION
-
-------------------+-------------------+-------------------
- | Quotas for the |
- | respective |
- Charge for | years 1698 and |
- the year | 1699, under | Quota
- 1693. | 9 & 10 and | for 1702.
- 4s. Aid. | 10 & 11 |
- | William III. |
- | 3s. Aid. |
-------------------+-------------------+-------------------
- £ _s._ _d._ | £ _s._ _d._ | £ _s._ _d._
-34,057 5 5 | 25,542 19 0¾ | 34,041 12 10
-------------------+-------------------+-------------------
-
--------------------------------------------------------
-
- Quota for 1799.
-
-------------------+----------------+-------------------
- | |
- | Personal | Pensions
- Lands, etc. | Estate. | and
- | | Offices.
-------------------+----------------+-------------------
- £ _s._ _d._ | £ _s._ _d._ | £ _s._ _d._
-29,964 15 0½ | 227 15 5 | 2,320 2 4½
-------------------+----------------+-------------------
-
-This specimen also shows how the original assessments of 1692 were
-preserved until the time when, in 1798, over one hundred years after,
-Pitt made provisions for the redemption of the old tax, and
-simultaneously introduced a new Property and Income Tax based upon
-better assessments.
-
-Unaware of the real nature of the so-called "Land-Tax" and as it would
-also appear, of the present "Property and Income Tax," it is often
-suggested by fiscal reformers that the old Land-Tax of 1692 should be
-reimposed upon present land revenues. Those who make the suggestion do
-not realize that what they desire has already been done and is actually
-in practice at this moment.
-
-The old "Land-Tax" and the present "Income" Tax
-thus compare:—
-
-The "Land-Tax" of 1692.
-
- Section 2: Every Person ... having any estate in ready monies or in any
- debts owing to them or having any estate in goods, wares, merchandise
- or other chattels, or personal estate whatsoever ... shall yield and
- pay four shillings in the pound according to the true yearly value
- thereof.
-
- Section 3: All persons holding any public office or employment of
- profit (except military and naval officers) and their clerks, etc.,
- shall pay four shillings in the pound.
-
- Section 4: And to the End, a further aid and supply for their
- Majesties' occasions may be raised by a charge upon all lands,
- tenements and hereditaments ... by an equal pound rate of four
- shillings ... be it enacted that all manors, messuages, lands and
- tenements, and all quarries, mines, etc., tithes, tolls, etc. ... shall
- be charged with the sum of four shillings for every twenty shillings of
- the full yearly value.
-
-The Present "Property and Income" Tax.
-
- Schedule D taxes the profits of trades and professions and from various
- forms of personal property.
-
- Schedule E taxes the salaries of all who hold public offices or
- employments, whether they be officials or clerks.
-
- Schedule A taxes the income from "all manors, messuages, lands and
- tenements, and all quarries, mines, etc., tithes, tolls, etc."
-
-It is also remarkable that whereas Land and Houses are placed in
-Schedule A, the first branch of our Income Tax, the so-called Land-Tax
-of 1692 placed lands and houses in its third category. The Act of 1692,
-moreover, as we have seen, made the taxation of personalty its first
-aim, and brought in a charge on land, houses and other fixed property to
-make up any deficiency.
-
-With our modern Income Tax, fortunately, personalty does not escape as
-it seems to have done in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, but
-it is still true that a great deal of personal income evades taxation,
-while it is impossible for fixed property to elude the assessors.
-
-I have taken the trouble to set out the foregoing details at some length
-because the fact that Schedule A of the Income Tax, like Section 4 of
-the Act of 1692, is a Land-Tax, appears to have escaped the attention of
-many of those who desire to tax the unearned increment which so often
-accrues to the owners of land. At the present moment, the owners of land
-contribute 14 pence in the pound of its annual revenue to Imperial
-Taxation under Schedule A. In the case of a small landowner with an
-income of £750 a year that may be enough. In the case of a great
-landowner with a rent roll of £20,000 a year it is certainly too little.
-If, then, we would justly tax the income of those who derive unearned
-revenue from land, we must graduate our income tax. In doing so,
-fortunately, we shall not tax merely one form of unearned increment. The
-conclusive proof of unearned income is the possession of a great income.
-Whether it arises from rent, or from interest, or from the direct
-taxation of labour is a secondary consideration. Whether its owner has
-bought broad acres with profits drawn from the exertions of others, or
-whether he has bought railway stock or foreign investments with the
-proceeds of the sale of broad acres, we need not inquire. The great
-income, the fact that the individual who receives it is one of the small
-number of people who enjoy one-third of the entire income of the
-country, is sufficient proof of "ability" to contribute generously to
-the revenues of what should be the rich government of a rich State. And
-it is difficult to imagine a rich man so wanting in that social instinct
-which we call patriotism that, when once his extraordinary position in
-relation to his fellows is made clear to him, he will not consent freely
-to make such contribution.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Income Tax, as it now exists, is an instrument of extraordinary
-clumsiness and complexity. An intelligent foreigner, coming freshly to
-the examination of its curious provisions, would be driven to the
-conclusion that a junta of bureaucrats, intent upon hiding the mysteries
-of statecraft from the knowledge of the vulgar, had of set purpose
-wrapped its machinery and intention in every device of obscurement which
-perverted ingenuity could suggest.
-
-In "Riches and Poverty," edition 1905, I gave an account of the Income
-Tax as it then stood. I reproduce the account in order to make the
-subsequent alterations clearer.
-
-Incomes, from whatever source arising, which do not exceed £160 per
-annum, are entirely exempt from the tax.
-
-Incomes between £160 and £700 are allowed certain abatements which are
-equivalent to a rough graduation of the tax. The following table shows
-the nature of the abatements:—
-
- INCOME TAX ABATEMENTS
-
- Amount of Annual Income. Abatement.
- Between £160 and £400 £160
- " 400 " 500 150
- " 500 " 600 120
- " 600 " 700 70
-
-The following table shows how the abatements graduate the Income Tax
-when the nominal rate of tax is 1s. in the £.
-
- INCOME TAX. EFFECT OF THE ABATEMENTS ON INCOME TAX AT 1s.
-
- Actual Rate of
- Abatement Income after Taxation when
- Income. Allowed. Abatement. the Tax is
- 1s. in the £.
- £ £ £ Pence in the £
- 180 160 20 1.33
- 240 160 80 4.00
- 300 160 140 5.60
- 400 160 240 7.20
- 440 150 290 7.90
- 500 150 350 8.40
- 540 120 420 9.33
- 600 120 480 9.60
- 640 70 570 10.68
- 700 70 630 10.80
- 740 nil 740 12.00
-
-Thus, when the Income Tax is at 1s., an income of £180 pays less than
-1½d. in the £, an income of £300 pays less than 6d. an income of £500
-pays less than 8½d., and an income of £700 pays less than 11d.
-
-I now give an explanation of the various Schedules under which the tax
-is collected. The abatements, it should be understood, refer to all the
-Schedules.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Schedule A, sometimes called Property Tax or Landlords' Tax, is assessed
-upon the rents received by the owners of lands, houses, etc. It is
-directly assessed upon occupiers, who, if they are tenants, deduct the
-tax from their next payment of rent. Thus it is a Land and House Tax
-which the landowner or houseowner cannot possibly escape.
-
-It should also be explained that the term "Lands," as used in connexion
-with Schedule A, refers to Agricultural lands, and the farm-houses and
-farm buildings, etc., thereon. The term "Houses" refers to houses,
-business premises, etc., together with the gardens, pleasure grounds or
-yards upon which they stand.
-
-Owners of agricultural lands are allowed to deduct for repairs
-one-eighth of the rent. Owners of houses and other buildings are allowed
-to deduct for repairs one-sixth of the rent.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Schedule B covers profits from the _occupation_ of lands, and taxes the
-incomes of farmers, nurserymen, and market gardeners.
-
-Farmers' profits (unless farmers elect to be dealt with under
-Schedule D) are assumed to be one-third of the annual rent of their
-farms. Thus a farmer paying a rent of £480 or less is not subject to
-income tax, as one-third of £480 is £160, and incomes of £160 or less
-are not taxable. Nurserymen and market gardeners, however, are taxed on
-their profits in the same way as in the case of other business men.
-
-The chief point to which I direct attention is that very few farmers pay
-income tax at all.
-
-The arbitrary assessment of farmers at one-third the rent of their farms
-is an absurdity. A farmer paying a rental of £480 is usually a
-well-to-do man, but he escapes income tax because his income is assessed
-as £160. A farmer who pays a rental of £600 and who in an average year
-probably makes at least £400 a year, is, on the one-third basis,
-assessed at £200. The income tax of farmers is for the most part paid
-for them by the industrial classes, who are taxed _pro tanto_ to relieve
-agriculture.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Schedule C deals with profits from British, Indian, Colonial and Foreign
-Government Securities. So far as possible these profits are taxed "at
-the source." Thus the Bank of England, in paying Consols dividend,
-deducts income tax, and leaves the fundholder to claim repayment
-afterwards if his income should be less than £160 per annum.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We now come to that important branch of the tax known as Schedule D.
-
-The profits included in this Schedule consist of those from trade and
-industry, from professions, from all employments or vocations except
-public offices, from oversea investments which are not Government
-securities, and from interest on loans secured on the Public Rates, etc.
-
-In the case of income from trade, assessments are made upon the average
-profits of the past three years. Let us suppose that a merchant in the
-period, 1893-1902, made the following profits: 1893, £1,100; 1894, £900;
-1895, £1,200; 1896, £1,300; 1897, £1,400; 1898, £1,400; 1899, £1,500;
-1900, £1,600; 1901, £1,200; 1902, £1,200; 1903, £1,500; 1904, £1,600.
-The table on page 301 shows how the profits are assessed under Schedule D.
-
-Thus, while between 1893 and 1904, the income was in two years above
-£1,500, the assessment never rose above £1,500. The result, it will be
-seen, is to deprive the State of the advantage of the maximum income.
-
-It follows that the assessments under Schedule D, from this cause alone,
-are always something less than the actual income of the persons assessed.
-
- * * * * *
-
- ILLUSTRATION OF THE PRINCIPLE OF AVERAGING UNDER Schedule D
-
------------------+------------------------------------------------
- Profits. | Assessment.
--------+---------+-------------+-------------+--------------------
- | | Year of | Amount of |
- Year. | Amount. | Assessment. | Assessment. | Remarks.
--------+---------+-------------+-------------+--------------------
- | £ | | £ |
- 1893 | 1,100 | | |
- 1894 | 900 | | |
- 1895 | 1,200 | | |
- 1896 | 1,300 | 1896 | 1,066 | Average of £1,100,
- | | | | £900 and £1,200.
- | | | |
- 1897 | 1,400 | 1897 | 1,133 | Average of £900,
- | | | | £1,200 and £1,300.
- | | | |
- 1898 | 1,400 | 1898 | 1,300 | Average of £1,200,
- | | | | £1,300 and £1,400.
- | | | |
- 1899 | 1,500 | 1899 | 1,366 | Average of £1,300,
- | | | | £1,400 and £1,500.
- | | | |
- 1900 | 1,600 | 1900 | 1,433 | Average of £1,400,
- | | | | £1,400 and £1,500.
- | | | |
- 1901 | 1,200 | 1901 | 1,500 | Average of £1,400,
- | | | | £1,500 and £1,600.
- | | | |
- 1902 | 1,200 | 1902 | 1,433 | Average of £1,500,
- | | | | £1,600, and £1,200.
- | | | |
- 1903 | 1,500 | 1903 | 1,333 | Average of £1,600,
- | | | | £1,200 and £1,200.
- | | | |
- 1904 | 1,600 | 1904 | 1,300 | Average of £1,200,
- | | | | £1,200 and £1,500.
- | | | |
- | | 1905 | 1,433 | Average of £1,200,
- | | | | £1,500 and £1,600.
-
-We next come to Schedule E, which covers the salaries of all Government
-officials, and of the employees of Limited Liability Companies, County
-Councils, etc. For obvious reasons this branch of the tax is very easily
-assessed.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It is necessary also to remind the reader that a second form of
-income-tax is at present levied. I refer to the Inhabited House Duty,
-which is payable by all householders (in Great Britain only—not in
-Ireland) who live in houses of an annual value of £20 and upwards. The
-rates are graduated as follows:—
-
- Above £20. Above £40. Above £60.
- Rate in the £. Rate in the £. Rate in the £.
- Private dwelling-houses 3d. 6d. 9d.
- Business premises used
- residentially 2d. 4d. 6d.
-
-Houses used solely for purposes of trade, and in which no occupier
-resides, are not subject to the tax.
-
-In the last financial year of which we have record (1907-8) the duty
-yielded £1,900,000.
-
-The present Inhabited House Duty dates from 1851 when it was levied, to
-replace the stupid window-duty, by Sir Charles Wood. It can only be
-described as a clumsy income tax, and it bears very harshly upon poor
-Londoners, compelled by their circumstances to pay heavy rents to be
-near their work. To the heavy rent the State adds a second most unjust
-Income Tax.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In the above words the Income Taxes of 1905 were faithfully described in
-their essential details. In the years that have elapsed various reforms
-have been made.
-
-In the Finance Act of 1907 the principle of _differentiation as between
-earned and unearned incomes_ was introduced. Mr Asquith embodied the
-principle in the following words (Finance Act, 1907, clause 19, section
-1):
-
- "Any individual who claims and proves, in manner provided by this
- section, that his total income from all sources does not exceed two
- thousand pounds, and that any part of that income is earned income,
- shall be entitled, subject to the provisions of this section, to such
- relief from income tax as will reduce the amount payable on the earned
- income to the amount which would be payable if the tax were charged on
- that income at the rate of ninepence."
-
-As the nominal rate of tax was 1s., earned incomes thus enjoyed a
-substantial reduction. The abatement system, described on page 297,
-continued to apply to both earned and unearned incomes, so that two very
-roughly graduated scales of taxation came into existence, which are
-illustrated on page 304.
-
-The number of tax-payers who understood what had been done for them may
-be described as negligible. Without working out such a table as that on
-p. 304, the income tax payer remained in ignorance of what treatment had
-been meted out to him. The moral effect of a considerable reform was
-almost completely lost.
-
-In the famous Finance Act of 1909, which did not pass into law, owing to
-the action of the House of Lords, until the present year (1910), Mr
-Lloyd George, succeeding Mr Asquith as Chancellor of the Exchequer, made
-alterations in the Income Tax as excellent in principle and as obscure
-in operation as that just described.
-
-He raised the nominal rate of taxation to fourteen pence
-in the £, and left the rate for earned incomes at ninepence,
-thus increasing the differentiation between earned and
-unearned incomes. He also introduced a new step in
-differentiation by enacting that earned incomes exceeding
-£2,000 a year but not exceeding £3,000 a year should
-pay twelve pence instead of fourteen pence in the £.
-
- THE EFFECT OF MR ASQUITH'S DIFFERENTIATION OF THE INCOME TAX, 1907
-
--------+---------+-----------------------------------
- | | Income Tax on Earned Incomes.
-Income.|Abatement|-------------+----------+----------
- | allowed.| Tax payable.| Nominal | Virtual
- | | | Tax. | Tax.
--------+---------+-------------+----------+----------
- £ | £ | £ _s._ _d._|Pence in £|Pence in £
- 160 | 160 | ... | Exempt | ...
- 200 | 160 | 1 10 0 | 9 | 1.8
- 300 | 160 | 5 5 0 | 9 | 4.2
- 400 | 160 | 9 0 0 | 9 | 5.4
- 500 | 150 | 13 2 6 | 9 | 6.3
- 700 | 70 | 23 12 6 | 9 | 8.1
- 800 | Nil | 30 0 0 | 9 | 9.0
- 1,000 | " | 37 10 0 | 9 | 9.0
- 2,000 | " | 75 0 0 | 9 | 9.0
--------+---------+-------------+----------+----------
-
--------+---------+-----------------------------------
- | | Income Tax on Unearned Incomes.
-Income.|Abatement+-------------+----------+----------
- | allowed.| Tax payable.| Nominal | Virtual
- | | | Tax. | Tax.
--------+---------+-------------+----------+----------
- £ | £ | £ _s._ _d._|Pence in £|Pence in £
- 160 | 160 | ... | Exempt | ...
- 200 | 160 | 2 0 0 | 12 | 2.4
- 300 | 160 | 7 0 0 | 12 | 5.6
- 400 | 160 | 12 0 0 | 12 | 7.2
- 500 | 150 | 17 10 0 | 12 | 8.4
- 700 | 70 | 31 10 0 | 12 | 10.8
- 800 | Nil | 40 0 0 | 12 | 12.0
- 1,000 | " | 50 0 0 | 12 | 12.0
- 2,000 | " |100 0 0 | 12 | 12.0
--------+---------+-------------+----------+----------
-
-In order to give further effect to the principle of graduating the
-Income Tax, Mr Lloyd George at the same time imposed a Supplementary
-Income Tax, or Super-Tax, upon persons whose incomes exceeded £5,000 a
-year.
-
-The Super-Tax is nominally 6d. in the £, but in practice it is always
-less. For the Super-Tax of 6d. is payable only upon that part of the
-income which exceeds £3,000 a year. That, reflection will show, creates
-a _graduated_ Super-Tax, thus:
-
- THE LLOYD GEORGE SUPER-TAX AS IT REALLY IS
-
- ---------+-----------+--------+-----------------+------------+------------
- | Abatement | Income | | Nominal | Virtual
- Income. | on | really | Tax payable. | Rate of | Rate of
- | Income. | Taxed. | | Super-Tax. | Super-Tax.
- ---------+-----------+--------+-----------------+------------+------------
- £ | £ | £ | £ _s._ _d._ | Pence in £ | Pence in £
- 5,000 | Exempt | ... | ... | ... | ...
- 5,001 | 3,000 | 2,001 | 50 0 6 | 6 | 2.4
- 10,000 | 3,000 | 7,000 | 175 0 0 | 6 | 4.2
- 50,000 | 3,000 | 47,000 | 1,175 0 0 | 6 | 5.6
- 100,000 | 3,000 | 97,000 | 2,425 0 0 | 6 | 5.8
- ---------+-----------+--------+-----------------+------------+------------
-
-It will be seen that it is a great gain under this system to have £5,000
-a year rather than £5,001. The extra £1 of income costs the tax-payer
-£50, 0s. 6d. Thus a premium is placed by the State upon false
-declarations, for if a Government is so unfair as to tax £1 of income
-£50, 0s. 6d, who can blame a tax-payer who retorts in kind?
-
-It will be seen that it is impossible for the alleged 6d. Super-Tax to
-reach 6d. It can at the highest reach 5.9 pence.
-
-But while the Super-Tax is so unfortunate in method it is excellent in
-principle, and largely carries into effect the suggestions made in
-"Riches and Poverty," edition 1905. It effects a rough graduation in the
-taxation of incomes over £5,000 a year, and extends the gamut of the
-Income Tax scale from zero at £160 a year to 19.8 pence in the £ at
-£100,000 a year.
-
-I am now able to show the total effect of all the obscure provisions
-which it has been my misfortune to attempt to describe in plain
-language. The table on page 307 gives a faithful picture of the Income
-Tax, as graduated and differentiated by all the reforms made down to
-1910. The table is the expression of the following provisions, existing
-in 1910, which I recapitulate for its better elucidation.
-
-_Incomes not exceeding £160 a year pay no tax. Small and moderate
-incomes are relieved from taxation by being only taxed in part, i.e.
-"abatements" are allowed according to the size of the income. Over £700
-a year there are no abatements. Unearned incomes are taxed at the
-nominal rate of fourteen pence in the pound. Earned incomes not
-exceeding £2,000 a year are taxed ninepence in the pound. Earned incomes
-over £2,000 a year, but not over £3,000 a year, are taxed one shilling
-in the pound. Finally comes what is called the "Super-Tax." Incomes,
-whether earned or unearned, over £5,000 a year are taxed an extra
-sixpence in the pound on such part of the income as exceeds £3,000._
-
- EFFECT OF THE INCOME TAX IN 1910
-
- -------+---------+--------------------------------------
- | | Earned Incomes.
- Income.|Abatement+----------------+----------+----------
- |allowed. | Tax payable. | Nominal | Virtual
- | | | Rate. | Rate.
- -------+---------+----------------+----------+----------
- £ | £ | £ _s._ _d._ |Pence in £|Pence in £
- 160| 160 | | Exempt |
- 200| 160 | 1 10 0 | 9 | 1.8
- 300| 160 | 5 5 0 | 9 | 4.2
- 400| 160 | 9 0 0 | 9 | 5.4
- 500| 150 | 13 2 6 | 9 | 6.3
- 700| 70 | 23 12 6 | 9 | 8.1
- 800| Nil | 30 0 0 | 9 | 9.0
- 1,000| " | 37 10 0 | 9 | 9.0
- 2,000| " | 75 0 0 | 9 | 9.0
- 2,100| " | 105 0 0 | 12 | 12.0
- 3,000| " | 150 0 0 | 12 | 12.0
- 3,100| " | 180 16 8 | 14 | 14.0
- 5,000| " | 291 13 4 | 14 | 14.0
- 5,100| " | 350 0 0 | 14 + 6 | 16.5
- 10,000| " | 758 6 8 | 14 + 6 | 18.2
- 50,000| " |4,091 13 4 | 14 + 6 | 19.6
- 100,000| " |8,258 6 8 | 14 + 6 | 19.8
- -------+---------+----------------+----------+----------
-
- -------+---------+--------------------------------------
- | | Unearned Incomes.
- Income.|Abatement+----------------+----------+----------
- |allowed. | Tax payable. | Nominal | Virtual
- | | | Rate. | Rate.
- -------+---------+----------------+----------+----------
- £ | £ | £ _s._ _d._ |Pence in £|Pence in £
- 160| 160 | | Exempt |
- 200| 160 | 2 6 8 | 14 | 2.8
- 300| 160 | 8 3 4 | 14 | 6.5
- 400| 160 | 14 0 0 | 14 | 8.4
- 500| 150 | 19 8 4 | 14 | 9.8
- 700| 70 | 36 15 0 | 14 | 12.6
- 800| Nil | 46 13 4 | 14 | 14.0
- 1,000| " | 58 6 8 | 14 | 14.0
- 2,000| " | 116 13 4 | 14 | 14.0
- 2,100| " | 122 10 0 | 14 | 14.0
- 3,000| " | 175 0 0 | 14 | 14.0
- 3,100| " | 180 16 8 | 14 | 14.0
- 5,000| " | 291 13 4 | 14 | 14.0
- 5,100| " | 350 0 0 | 14 + 6 | 16.5
- 10,000| " | 758 6 8 | 14 + 6 | 18.2
- 50,000| " |4,091 13 4 | 14 + 6 | 19.6
- 100,000| " |8,258 6 8 | 14 + 6 | 19.8
- -------+---------+----------------+----------+----------
-
-The table on p. 307 shows, as the mere relation of the complicated
-provisions does not show, both the virtues and the faults of Mr Lloyd
-George's Income Tax. There is graduation, but it is effected so clumsily
-that it positively bristles with anomalies. Consider, for example, the
-gross anomaly of making a man with £3,000 a year pay only £150, while a
-man with £3,100 a year must pay £180. Or, again, of asking from the
-£5,000 man a £291 tax, and demanding £350 from the £5,100 man. Perhaps
-the worst feature in the scale, however, is the fact that unearned
-incomes from £701 to £5,000 pay the same rate.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Now let us consider the reform of the Income Tax.
-
-In the first place it is suggested that the Inhabited House Duty should
-be entirely abolished. As has been already pointed out, it is a clumsy
-second Income Tax and its incidence is most unequal. It is not paid in
-Ireland, and too much of it falls upon poor clerks and tradesmen in
-London and other big towns. It is urged here that if we properly reform
-the Income Tax it should not be necessary to levy a second one under
-another name.
-
-It must be frankly recognized that, in principle, the Income Tax reforms
-urged in "Riches and Poverty," edition 1905, have been largely conceded.
-Method is so important in this connexion, however, that it is necessary
-to insist that the Income Tax still needs serious revision.
-
-Why is it that so much misplaced ingenuity has been applied to our
-Income Tax law by successive Chancellors of the Exchequer? Why these
-alleged rates of Income Tax, which on inquiry prove to be nominal, and
-the enactment of a clumsy Super-Tax to amend a sufficiently clumsy
-Income Tax? Why should it be necessary to arrive at a "sort of"
-graduation by a series of provisions, which few men, inside or outside
-the legislature, pretend to understand?
-
-The explanation is that we have not a complete Census of Incomes. The
-point is of the first importance. The establishment, within the limits
-of a very small possible margin of error, of the number of British
-Income Tax payers in 1903, which I effected by a careful examination of
-so far uncorrelated facts in "Riches and Poverty," edition 1905, brought
-to light the then unsuspected fact that about 750,000 out of about
-1,000,000 Income Tax payers actually declared their individual aggregate
-incomes from all sources for the purposes of Income Tax.
-
-These declarations, as already explained, were made by the smaller
-Income Tax payers in order to avail themselves of the abatement system,
-the abatements being granted only to those persons with incomes not
-exceeding £700 a year _who made declarations_. _In effect, those of this
-class who do not declare are heavily fined._
-
-The number of the declarants was further increased in 1907 by Mr
-Asquith's differentiation of the Income Tax.
-
-Mr Asquith enacted, as we have seen, that persons who earned their
-incomes, and whose incomes did not exceed £2,000 a year, should enjoy a
-lower rate of taxation _if they declared their incomes_.
-
-This led to declarations by a fresh batch of Income Tax payers, and it
-became possible for Somerset House to collect and publish a new set of
-most valuable statistics. Unfortunately, the precise facts of the case
-have neither been collected nor published, important as the knowledge of
-them is if we are to tax wisely and justly. Nevertheless, there is
-little doubt that the new batch of declarations between £700 and £2,000
-a year raised, or will soon raise, the proportion of Income Tax payers
-making personal declarations to over nine out of eleven of the whole
-body.
-
-The question immediately suggests itself: Why should not the balance of
-two out of eleven, or thereabouts, be compelled to fall into line with
-the majority? This balance consists, of course, of the well-to-do and
-rich, chiefly those who derive their incomes from property. These
-persons are not taxed directly at all. The State relies upon what is
-called "taxing at the source." That is, dividends are taxed at the
-company's offices before they are distributed, and rents are taxed
-through the occupier, the occupiers being left to recover the Schedule A
-tax from the landlords and houselords.
-
-This reliance upon an indirect form of "direct" taxation leads, of
-course, to much income escaping tax, for rich people, it will be seen,
-have not to make a return of their incomes, but are in the happy
-position of letting the State catch them when it can. No other country
-levying an Income Tax does this thing; yet we perversely maintain that
-there is no system so effective as ours. Happily, the Finance Act of
-1909 (passed in 1910) still further increases the number of those who
-are to declare.
-
-First, as to earned incomes, as noted above, Mr Lloyd George enacted
-that earned incomes over £2,000 but not over £3,000 are to continue to
-pay one shilling in the £, and that those over £3,000 are to pay
-fourteen pence. It follows that a new batch of declarations will be
-forthcoming from those, or most of those, between £2,000 and £3,000, in
-order to get the shilling rate.
-
-Again, a Super-Tax is to be levied upon all those whose incomes exceed
-£5,000 a year, of whom there are not less than 14,000 or 15,000. This
-Super-Tax is to be collected by Special Commissioners. How will these
-Special Commissioners know to whom to apply? Obviously they have not a
-list of the fortunate 15,000. They will doubtless go to work by sending
-a form asking for a return of total income to all people who _appear_ to
-be very rich.
-
-All the inhabitants of big houses, and, indeed, all the obviously rich,
-will receive a declaration form to fill up. And, of course, in order to
-catch the 15,000 the Commissioners will have to send notices to many
-times that number of people, for it is really exceedingly difficult to
-decide by appearance or reputation whether a man has £2,500 or £5,000 a
-year. The Budget provides that every person sent a form must fill it up,
-whether or not he has £5,000 a year. Consequently, at the very top of
-the scale, the Income Tax Commissioners will come into possession of
-personal declarations relating to 50,000 or more of our moneyed
-citizens.
-
-And yet we shall not arrive at complete declarations from all Income Tax
-payers. Nearly all persons who earn their incomes will declare, but as
-to unearned incomes there is a big hiatus.
-
-Small unearned incomes up to £700 a year will be mostly declared in
-order to get the abatements.
-
-Very big unearned incomes must be declared, as we have seen, through the
-demands for Super-Tax.
-
-_But, between £700 a year and £5,000 a year, the unearned scale is
-ungraduated, and, save for the people with less than £5,000 a year,
-asked in error to declare by the Super-Tax Commissioners, there will be
-no personal declarations._
-
-Surely this ought not to be. If the poor are to declare and the very
-rich are to declare, why should not the middle incomes be declared? Why
-should the State continue to rely, in respect of the considerable amount
-of income concerned, upon taxation at the source? The question becomes
-the more urgent when we reflect that the fresh batch of declarations
-brought in by Mr Asquith's differentiation scheme of 1907, noted above,
-brought to light many millions of "new" income (see p. 14). Every new
-revelation of existing income, of course, lowers taxation _pro tanto_.
-
-Perhaps the final argument for universal personal declaration of income
-is furnished by the following enactment of the Budget of 1907:
-
-Finance Act (1907), Section 21.
-
-"Every employer, when required to do so by notice from an assessor,
-shall, within the time limited by the notice, prepare and deliver to the
-assessor a return of the names and places of residence of any persons
-employed by him."
-
-We thus go behind the backs of small tax-payers to their employers, and
-compel the divulgence of incomes which are usually the _total_ incomes
-of the employed. Yet the employer who, by our direction, hands his
-employee over to the tax-collector, is not compelled by us to declare
-his own total income, unless (1) he has no other income than his
-Schedule D income, or (2) he is a payer of Super-Tax.
-
-Given a Census of Incomes it would become possible to arrive at a
-practical and just Income Tax.
-
-We could set up a plain graduated scale of taxation, differentiated up
-to a certain point as between earned and unearned incomes, making it
-quite clear to the tax-payer what is demanded from him and revealing to
-him the justice or injustice of our methods by enabling him to compare
-his rate of taxation with that of those richer or poorer than himself.
-
-We need not abandon taxation "at the source." We could levy on property
-incomes at the source a certain rate of tax, say 1s. in the £. Then when
-the total income was declared, the tax-payer would point out upon what
-items, if any, 1s. in the £ had been deducted at the source and pay the
-balance of the tax.
-
-Let us take a hypothetical case—that of a barrister earning £2,000 a
-year, and deriving a further £1,000 from rents and a further £300 from
-Consols. The total income, £3,300, let us suppose taxed under the
-graduation scheme at 14d. in the £. The Income Tax on the £1,000 of
-rents would be paid by his tenants and deducted from the rents paid him,
-while the Bank of England would deduct 1s. in the £ from the interest on
-the Consols. Declaring his total income at £3,300 he would pay the
-balance due, thus:—
-
- Total Declared Income. £ _s._ _d._
- £3,300 at 14d. 192 10 0
-
- Taxed at the source:—
- (1) Schedule A. 1s. in the £ on
- £1,000 of rent, deducted by
- tenants £50
- (2) Schedule C. 1s. in the £ on
- £300 of interest deducted
- by Bank of England £15
- --- 65 0 0
- ------------
- Balance of Tax Payable-- £127 10 0
- ============
-
-If, upon the introduction of such a system, local assessors were
-empowered to ask every householder assessed for local rates at £20 a
-year and upwards _to declare his income in the place where he resides_,
-there would undoubtedly be a great increase in the Income Tax
-assessments. A great part of the evasion of Income Tax results from
-persons being taxed at their places of business, where there is often
-little evidence of means. In a man's own neighbourhood it is difficult
-grossly to understate income.
-
-For several years I put down in the House of Commons the following
-suggested amendment to the Finance Bill:
-
-Every person upon whom notice is served in manner prescribed by section
-forty-eight of The Income Tax Act, 1842 (which section relates to the
-delivery of notices by assessors), requiring him to make a return of his
-income chargeable to duty under any and every schedule of the Income
-Tax, shall make a return, in the form required by the notice, which
-shall show the amount of his aggregate income from all sources, whether
-he is or is not chargeable with duty, and upon what part or parts of
-such aggregate income, if any, Income Tax has already been paid under
-the Income Tax Acts by deduction at the source, and in default shall be
-liable to a penalty under section fifty-five of The Income Tax Act,
-1842.
-
-On one occasion some twenty Members of Parliament consented to put down
-this amendment with me, but every attempt to obtain its enactment has
-failed. Until it is obtained there can be no just graduation of the
-Income Tax, and tax-payers who declare their incomes under the existing
-law will continue to pay too much because others pay too little.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Some smaller matters claim our attention.
-
-A minor but not unimportant reform, for which we have to thank Mr Lloyd
-George, is the concession made to small Income Tax payers who have young
-children, a concession which the present writer believes he was the
-first to urge in the House of Commons. The Finance Bill of 1909 (Sect.
-68) provided that Income Tax payers with incomes not exceeding £500
-should be entitled to exemption from taxation to the amount of £10 for
-each child under the age of 16 years. The effect of this provision is
-far-reaching. A clerk with £200 a year and three young children gets the
-£160 abatement and £30 abatement in respect of his children. His
-_taxable_ income is thus reduced to £10 and his payment of Income Tax to
-7s. 6d.
-
-On the same ground, respect for the principle of ability to pay, the
-Income Tax law should provide for special abatements in case of the
-illness of salary earners, special misfortunes, the support of poor
-relatives, etc. It is found possible to work such provisions in Prussia;
-it ought to be found possible to do so here.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The importance of a thorough revision of the Income Tax law is growing.
-The view urged here is that the citizen's subscription to the National
-Club should not only be justly proportioned to his means, but presented
-to him intelligibly, and collected without waste or undue interference
-with business.
-
-The phenomenon of an annual Budget debate has come to be regarded as a
-necessary Parliamentary evil, but is there any justification for it?
-
-When the nation has decided, through its representatives, for good
-reasons or for bad reasons, that a certain sum of money must be raised
-for public purposes, it is not the function of the Chancellor of the
-Exchequer _qua_ Chancellor of the Exchequer to decide whether the
-purposes are good or bad, or whether the sum is too large or too small.
-As a member of the Government, the Finance Minister has, of course, a
-voice in deciding what sums should be spent and upon what purposes, but,
-as Chancellor of the Exchequer, his duty is not to reason why but to
-find the money. In the finding of the money, ought there to be, year by
-year, a long and painful discussion as to how it should be done?
-
-We have also become accustomed to regarding the Budget as a great and
-glorious secret, to be carefully guarded until the Chancellor of the
-Exchequer makes his annual speech. Does the tradition of secrecy rest
-upon necessity? For my part, I call the necessity in question. I affirm
-that our annual Budget need present no difficulties; that it is not
-inherently a difficult thing to accomplish; and that the conception of a
-Budget as a great secret, to be carefully hidden until Budget Day, is an
-altogether childish conception. There is some excuse for reserving a
-child's Christmas presents until he wakes up and finds the gifts of
-Santa Claus in his stocking on the morning of December 25th, but there
-is no excuse whatever for the ridiculous secrecy with which tradition
-shrouds the annual Budget statement.
-
-I do not deny that secrecy has been necessary in connexion with such
-Budgets as have been put on record in the past. Of what have these
-Budgets consisted? Year by year, a number of clumsy, inefficient and
-indefensible taxes have been tinkered by successive guardians of the
-national purse. Tea taxes, coffee taxes, beer taxes, sugar taxes,
-alleged income taxes, double inheritance duties, have had bits carved
-off them, or bits attached to them, without rhyme or reason. Year after
-year, Mincing Lane has been in throes of excitement as to whether there
-was to be a penny on tea, or a penny off tea. Cunning gentlemen have
-rushed in tea to evade a suspected inclination to tax that article
-further, or sugar brokers have been excited at the prospect of making
-something, or losing something, over a little less or a little more on
-sugar. We are a grave and respectful people, or assuredly we should
-laugh at this annual exhibition of mingled greed and incompetency. If as
-much intelligence were put into the making of boots, none of us would be
-able to walk.
-
-The subject is made additionally interesting by the fact that all along
-men have known perfectly well how taxes ought to be levied. It is 130
-years since Adam Smith wrote his first maxim of taxation, which I have
-already quoted:
-
- "The subjects of every State ought to contribute towards the support of
- the government as nearly as possible in proportion to their respective
- abilities; that is, in proportion to the revenue which they
- respectively enjoy under the protection of the State."
-
-As long ago as 1848 John Stuart Mill wrote ("Principles of Political
-Economy," Book V. Chapter 2):
-
-"As, in a case of voluntary subscription for a purpose in which all are
-interested, all are thought to have done their part fairly when each has
-contributed according to his means, that is, has made an equal sacrifice
-for the common object; in like manner should this be the principle of
-compulsory contributions: and it is superfluous to look for a more
-ingenious or recondite ground to rest the principle upon.... To take a
-thousand a year from the possessor of ten thousand would not deprive him
-of anything really conducive either to the support or to the comfort of
-existence: and if such _would_ be the effect of taking five pounds from
-one whose income is fifty, the sacrifice required from the last is not
-only greater than, but entirely incommensurable with, that imposed upon
-the first. The mode of adjusting these inequalities of pressure, which
-seems to be the most equitable, is that recommended by Bentham, of
-leaving a certain minimum of income, sufficient to provide the
-necessaries of life, untaxed.... The exemption in favour of the smaller
-incomes should not, I think, be stretched further than to the amount of
-income needful for life, health, and immunity from bodily pain."
-
-In passing, this quotation may be commended to those who regard the
-exemption of very small incomes from taxation as a tenet of modern
-Socialism. Here we have it propounded in 1848 by John Stuart Mill, who
-got it from Jeremy Bentham.
-
-It is in spite of such admired utterances as these that we have still,
-in the year 1910, such outrages upon common sense as taxes upon sugar,
-taxes upon petrol, taxes upon cocoa, taxes upon business contracts,
-taxes upon marriage certificates, and a great party in the State is at
-this hour ardently desirous of adding to the number of such stupidities
-by thousands or even tens of thousands.
-
-When we inquire for the reason for the existence of such unbusinesslike
-and costly stupidities, we find a simple explanation. It has been held
-in the past universally, and is held in the present by many, that the
-Government has no business to inquire into the incomes of the people it
-governs. Lacking knowledge of incomes, it has been obviously impossible
-for Governments to tax people according to their ability to bear
-taxation. Consequently, Chancellors of the Exchequer have had to devise
-all sorts of trumpery and costly expedients to get by indirect means
-what should have been got honestly and directly.
-
-In short, the first condition of fair budgeting is a Census of Incomes.
-Given that, we are able to throw away all the lumber of indirect
-taxation and of inefficient taxation. And it should be observed that
-fair budgeting means simple budgeting—budgeting admitting of no annual
-argument. The annual budget wrangle is the effect of our devious methods
-of taxation.
-
-Given universal declarations of income, and an end could speedily be
-made of our present array of taxes. We could decide upon some minimum of
-income which should be totally exempt from taxation on the ground that
-it represented the smallest sum upon which a family can be sustained in
-health and decency. Above that margin, we could arrange a graduated
-scale of taxation which should present to each citizen a fair bill for
-public expenses. That bill could be made payable in two or even four
-instalments, to make the payment an easy matter for the tax-payer. This
-arrangement once made, any increase of taxation would simply call for a
-proportionate increase from each tax-payer. Argument would not lie in
-the province of the Chancellor of the Exchequer, for the matter would be
-finally settled. Argument would begin and end with the decision of
-Parliament to spend certain moneys; _that would not be a_ _Budget
-argument, but an argument upon public policy in expenditure_. And the
-plainer the bill for taxes, the more closely expenditure would be
-scanned.
-
-My remarks, of course, must not be taken to condemn taxes upon alcohol
-or taxes upon inheritances. And beyond lies the question of the
-acquisition of monopolies by the State, and the consequent reduction of
-taxation by reason of the State carrying on revenue-producing
-undertakings.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXII
- THE DEATH DUTIES
-
-
-In "Riches and Poverty," edition 1905, it was urged that the then
-existing Estate Duties, ranging from 1 per cent. to 8 per cent., might
-be sensibly increased. The revisions which have been made since 1905 are
-clearly shown in the comparative table given on the next page, which
-reviews in part the Estate Duties of the Budgets of 1894, 1907 and 1909.
-
-The rates of Death Duty have been thus raised to about the level
-suggested in "Riches and Poverty," edition 1905.
-
-The scale does not represent the whole of the Death Duties. Not only is
-the corpus of the property taxed under the scale, but the remainder,
-after such taxation, is taxed again under separate scales of Legacy and
-Succession Duties. I do not enter into the details here, but, generally,
-such complications are to be deprecated. Let the State take its
-equitable toll, but let it do so on a single progressive scale, and not
-tax, and tax again, first taking a percentage from the estate, and next
-taking a further percentage from the bit of the estate taken by a
-brother or cousin or aunt of the deceased.
-
-As will have been gathered from Chapter 4 the increase of the duties on
-estates over £10,000 was more than justified. The great bulk of the
-national wealth is held in estates of over £10,000 each. The following
-facts (see Chapter 4) relating to the estates which pass in an average
-year should never be lost sight of:
-
- THE HARCOURT (1894), ASQUITH (1907), AND LLOYD GEORGE (1909)
- DEATH DUTIES
-
- -----------------------+---------+--------------------
- | |
- Value of Estate. |Harcourt,| Asquith, 1907.
- | 1894. |
- | |
- -----------------------+---------+--------------------
- Exceeds But not over |Per cent.| Per cent.
- £ £ | |
- 100 500 | 1 | 1
- 500 1,000 | 2 | 2
- 1,000 10,000 | 3 | 3
- | |
- 10,000 25,000 | 4 | 4
- 25,000 50,000 | 4½ | 4½
- 50,000 75,000 | 5 | 5
- 75,000 100,000 | 5½ | 5½
- 100,000 150,000 | 6 | 6
- 150,000 250,000 | 6½ | 7
- 250,000 500,000 | 7 | 8
- | |
- 500,000 750,000 | 7½ | 9
- 750,000 1,000,000 | 7½ | 10
- | |/--------^---------\
- | |On First On
- | |Million. Remainder.
- 1,000,000 1,500,000 | 8 | 10 11
- 1,500,000 2,000,000 | 8 | 10 12
- 2,000,000 2,500,000 | 8 | 10 13
- 2,500,000 3,000,000 | 8 | 10 14
- 3,000,000 | 8 | 10 15
- -----------------------+---------+--------------------
-
- -----------------------+-------------+---------------
- | | Rates
- Value of Estate. |Lloyd George,| suggested in
- | 1909. | "Riches and
- | |Poverty," 1905.
- -----------------------+-------------+---------------
- Exceeds But not over| Per cent. | Per cent.
- £ £ | |
- 100 500 | 1 | 1
- 500 1,000 | 2 | 2
- 1,000 5,000 | 3 | 3-4
- 5,000 10,000 | 4 | 5-6
- 10,000 20,000 | 5 | 7
- 20,000 40,000 | 6 | 8
- 40,000 70,000 | 7 | 9
- 70,000 100,000 | 8 | 10
- 100,000 150,000 | 9 | 11
- 150,000 200,000 | 10 | 12
- 200,000 400,000 | 11 |}
- 400,000 600,000 | 12 |} 13
- 600,000 800,000 | 13 | 14
- 800,000 1,000,000 | 14 | 15
- | |
- | |
- | |
- 1,000,000 | 15 | 16
- | |
- | |
- | |
- | |
- -----------------------+-------------+---------------
-
- DEATHS AND ESTATES IN THE UNITED KINGDOM
-
- About 700,000 persons, including children, die every year.
-
- Of these, about 620,000 die almost or quite penniless.
-
- The balance of 80,000 persons leave £300,000,000.
-
- Of these, 4,000 persons leave £200,000,000.
-
-It is only necessary to state these extraordinary facts to show the
-justice of Mr Lloyd George's reform of the Death Duties.
-
-It is of interest and importance to show what a small proportion of the
-capital passing at death is actually taken by the State. The following
-figures show, for the years 1894-5 to 1908-9, the total amount of all
-the Death Duties (i.e. not only the principal "Estate Duty," the rates
-of which are given on p. 321, but of the Legacy and Succession Duties,
-Settlement Estate Duty, etc.), received during the year, the total
-estates upon which the duties were paid and the average aggregate rate
-per cent. of the whole of the duties:
-
- DEATH DUTIES PAID: 1894-5 TO 1908-9
-
- Average
- Fiscal Year. Total Total Estates. Aggregate
- Death Duties. Rate of Duty
- per cent.
- £ £
- 1894-5 10,894,385 194,465,000 5.61
- 1895-6 14,088,608 249,942,000 5.63
- 1896-7 13,878,274 245,883,000 5.64
- 1897-8 15,449,190 270,326,000 5.71
- 1898-9 15,732,578 271,901,000 5.78
- 1899-1900 18,409,293 312,819,000 5.88
- 1900-1 16,721,129 284,884,000 5.87
- 1901-2 18,513,714 295,829,000 6.26
- 1902-3 17,913,177 296,382,000 6.04
- 1903-4 17,326,137 291,161,000 5.95
- 1904-5 17,258,431 284,309,000 6.07
- 1905-6 17,344,925 296,233,000 5.85
- 1906-7 18,958,763 319,579,000 5.93
- 1907-8 19,108,256 304,093,000 6.28
- 1908-9 18,310,280 294,662,000 6.21
-
-These figures were prepared by Somerset House and given to the House of
-Commons in September 1909 in answer to a question of Mr Thomas Gibson
-Bowles.
-
-In 1908-9, in spite of the increase of rates in 1907, the Death Duties
-took but £18,300,000 or a little over 6 per cent. of property worth
-£294,600,000.
-
-But this is a partial statement of the facts. There is little doubt that
-the estates passing yearly are worth nearer £400,000,000 than the
-£300,000,000 which is officially reviewed and taxed. So that the total
-burden of the Death Duties in 1908-9 was really about 4½ per cent.
-
-There has been some talk in this connexion of diminishing and wasting
-the national capital. The national capital was conservatively estimated
-in Chapter 5 as about £13,000,000,000. The Death Duties are now taking
-about £20,000,000 a year. £20,000,000 is contained just 650 times in
-£13,000,000,000, so that, even if the £20,000,000 a year were wasted,
-the national capital would waste away in six and a half centuries. But
-the £20,000,000 a year is not lost: it is transferred from private
-pockets to the State and used a hundredfold for the better advantage of
-the nation than if it were not so transferred. One may go further and
-say that if it were not taken and used for the furtherance of reform,
-the national capital would cease to make increase. Expenditure upon
-Education alone needs to be doubled if British work is to fructify in
-the near future.
-
-Some attention was given on page 76 to the question of the avoidance of
-Death Duties by gifts _inter vivos_. The Finance Act of 1909 increased
-to three years the period before death during which gifts passing _inter
-vivos_ should be liable to Death Duties. It will be of interest to see
-whether this checks the avoidance of Death Duties which has given us
-such remarkable statistics as those recorded on page 76-77.
-
-It is not necessary to dwell at length in this chapter upon
-considerations connected with the dangers to Society involved in the
-monopolization of wealth by a few people, for they were treated at some
-length in earlier pages. I may usefully direct attention, however, to a
-speech made by the President of the United States of America, Mr Taft,
-in September 1909, in which he said:
-
- "Let the State pass inheritance laws which shall require the division
- of great fortunes among the children of descendants, and shall not
- permit the multi-millionaire to leave his fortune in a mass. Make more
- drastic the rule against perpetuities which obtain at common law, and
- then impose a heavy graduated inheritance tax enabling the State to
- share largely in the proceeds of such large accumulations of wealth
- which would hardly have been brought about save under its protection
- and aid. Thus gradually and effectively the concentration of wealth in
- one or few hands will be neutralized, and the danger to the Republic
- obviated."
-
-These are the words, not of a Socialist, but of the elected of the
-Conservatives of the United States. They may fittingly end our
-consideration of the revised Death Duties.
-
-The reformed Income Tax and Death Duties of 1909 will furnish, with all
-their faults, a handsome revenue, and it may already be claimed that
-what was urged in "Riches and Poverty," edition 1905, as to the means of
-national regeneration, has been amply verified by accomplished facts.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIII
- OF REVENUE WITHOUT TAXATION
-
-
-After dealing at some length with the details of British taxation it is
-well to point out why it is necessary for the British Government to
-raise so much revenue by taxes.
-
-It appears to be commonly taken for granted that in the matter of
-national ways and means a source of revenue is the same thing as a
-source of taxation. Perhaps it is not surprising that this idea is
-prevalent in Britain, for of a truth we have scarcely any national
-revenue save what is derived from the more or less just taxation of
-British citizens.
-
-Save in its power to levy taxes, the United Kingdom, as a State, is one
-of the poorest in the world.
-
-The British Government, as compared with many other governments, is
-singularly lacking in property. It follows that it is singularly lacking
-in natural State revenue. As a matter of fact, the only items of British
-State property worth mentioning are (1) the Post Office, which brings in
-about £5,000,000 a year; (2) a few Crown lands, which bring in about
-£500,000 a year; and (3) The Suez Canal shares, bought by Lord
-Beaconsfield, which bring in about £1,000,000 a year.
-
-The total British State revenue from property is thus about £6,500,000,
-and that is all. If the Government wants any more money it has to tax
-the governed, a fact which arouses various emotions.
-
-The consequence is that, as public expenses increase, our taxes
-constantly swell. The items of natural State revenue are too small, even
-if elastic, to meet the growing bills. This is found out by all parties.
-A politician out of office may, and usually does, denounce new taxes,
-but we never find the same politician, after taking office, taking off
-the taxes he has denounced; he simply cannot do it. The Conservatives,
-it will be remembered, were unfriendly to Sir William Harcourt's Death
-Duties, but when they came into power they not only did not repeal them,
-but it is a fact that they seriously considered increasing them.
-
-I do not think it can be reasonably alleged that taxation has yet
-reached an intolerable level, indeed the facts on that head are
-sufficiently made plain in these pages. At the same time, I suppose that
-none of us desires to increase the burden of taxation more than is
-necessary.
-
-Is it not well, then, to ask ourselves whether taxation need be the only
-hope of State revenue? Here comes in a rather curious fact. We have
-passed through troubled days in which additional taxation has been
-denounced as "Socialistic," and the "Observer" newspaper tells its
-readers constantly that modern Socialism simply means taxation.
-
-_As a matter of fact, it is because the British Government has been one
-of the least Socialistic in the world that it finds itself in 1910
-raising so much of its revenue from taxation._
-
-The Germans are heavily taxed, but they are so much poorer than the
-British people that the sum they raise in taxes is much smaller than the
-sum raised here. It should not be forgotten that, in considering German
-taxes, we have to add the taxes raised by the governments of its various
-kingdoms and States to the taxes raised by the German Imperial
-Government. When that is done it will be found that the total amount so
-raised, although considerable, is not nearly enough to meet the Imperial
-and national expenditure. What is the explanation? I commend it most
-earnestly to the politicians and publicists who fill the air with
-clamour about Socialism.
-
-Consider the following extract from the official description of German
-Taxation in Blue Book, Cd. 4,750:
-
- To make any profitable comparison of direct taxation in England and
- Germany, it is necessary to take into consideration in the case of the
- latter not merely the Imperial taxes, but also the taxes levied by the
- Federal States. It is also important to remember that a _large portion
- of the States' expenditure, in Prussia as much as 47 per cent., is
- covered by the profits of railways and other industrial undertakings,
- the State being thus enabled_, pro tanto, _to dispense with taxation_.
-
-Varying, but usually considerable, proportions of the State revenues of
-the kingdom of Bavaria, the kingdom of Saxony, the kingdom of
-Wurtemberg, the six Grand Duchies, the five Duchies, and the seven
-Principalities, not to mention the free cities, are derived similarly
-from State undertakings, ranging from railways to forests, and from
-mines to china factories.
-
-I beg the reader to realize that but for these enormous State natural
-revenues the Germany of to-day would not be able to build Dreadnoughts
-or to sustain the greatest army in the world. Successful State Socialism
-has been the backbone of German finance, and the secret of a big
-expenditure and the maintenance of the greatest army in the world and
-the second largest navy in the world by a poorer country than ours, in
-which (basing ourselves on the official Income Tax Statistics of
-Prussia) we are able to affirm that one-half of the people are under the
-income line of £45 a year (17s. 3d. per week).
-
-Germany derives from her Customs Duties, believed by ill-informed people
-here to be the chief feeder of her revenues, about £30,000,000 a year.
-This may be contrasted with a single item of German State Socialist
-revenue:
-
- NET PROFITS OF THE PRUSSIAN STATE RAILWAYS
-
- £
- 1906 33,480,000
- 1907 34,323,000
- 1908 31,180,000
-
-Surely it is worth the gravest consideration here that one-half the
-State revenue of Prussia, the chief State of the German Empire, is
-derived from the ownership of railways, forests, mines, and other
-national undertakings. And there can be little doubt that Germany will
-soon own and control her Power supply. _In 1910 the State railways of
-the entire German Empire will yield a net profit of about £50,000,000,
-meeting, in effect, the bill for German armaments._
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIV
- CONCLUSION
-
-
-Lest there be any lack of perspective in our view of the distribution of
-wealth and of the material progress of the working classes, I preface
-this concluding chapter with a note upon former investigations of the
-national income.
-
-In 1868, Dudley Baxter, in his classical paper on the National Income
-read to the Royal Statistical Society, estimated that in 1867, the
-population being 30,000,000, the manual workers, then estimated to
-number 10,960,000, took £325,000,000 out of a total national income of
-£814,000,000. Thus the average wage of the manual workers (men, women
-and children) was estimated at nearly £30 per head per annum.
-
-Professor Leone Levi estimated the amount of wages taken by the manual
-labourers in 1866 at £418,000,000, but he allowed for "play" only four
-weeks in the year, whereas Baxter, for very excellent reasons which he
-stated in his paper, allowed for 20 per cent. of lost time. Thus a great
-part of the difference in the two estimates is accounted for.
-
-In the "Economic Journal" for Sept. 1904, Professor A. L. Bowley, basing
-his calculations of the total amount paid in wages largely upon the
-figures of the Board of Trade Wages Census of 1886, making allowance for
-enforced leisure, and also for the army of casuals and incompetents,
-arrived at £350,000,000 as the sum paid in wages in 1867. This is a
-striking confirmation of Dudley Baxter's estimate, for it is arrived at
-by an entirely different route.
-
-If, then, we adopt the estimate of Baxter we shall probably be as near
-the truth as is now possible. Accepting it, we find that the manual
-workers in 1867 took about 40 per cent. of the national income.
-
-The manual workers in our present population of 44,000,000 maybe
-estimated at 15,000,000 and they take, as we have seen, about
-£700,000,000 out of a total estimated income of £1,840,000,000, or less
-than 40 per cent. of the whole.
-
-Thus the position of the manual workers, in relation to the general
-wealth of the country, has not improved. They formed, with those
-dependent upon them, the greater part of the nation of 1867,—forty-three
-years ago,—and they enjoyed but about 40 per cent. of the national
-income according to the careful estimate of Dudley Baxter. To-day, with
-their army of dependents, they still form the greater part of the
-nation, although not quite so great a part, and, according to the best
-information available, they take less than 40 per cent. of the entire
-income of the nation.
-
-But, as will be seen from the figures given, the actual income of the
-manual workers has increased. In 1867 it amounted to about £30 per head.
-At the present time it amounts to about £46, 15s. per head.
-
-And not only have money wages thus risen, but the purchasing power of
-money has considerably increased in the last generation. The retail cost
-of food, clothing, and furniture has fallen; but, on the other hand,
-coal and rents have risen.
-
-Between the increase in money wages and the increase in the purchasing
-power of money there can be no question that the actual position of the
-wage-earner has considerably improved in the last forty years. Amongst
-other results, the death-rate has fallen, paupers have decreased, and
-criminals have decreased. These and other important facts are shown in
-the table on page 332.
-
- SOME ITEMS IN MATERIAL PROGRESS 1867-1908
-
- ------------------------------+-----------------+------------
- | 1867. | 1908.
- ------------------------------+-----------------+------------
- Population | 30,500,000 | 44,500,000
- | |
- Average earnings of manual | |
- workers (men, women and | |
- children) | £30 | £46, 15s.
- | |
- Consumption of imported | |
- food per head: | |
- (_a_) Wheat per head, lbs.| 140 | 272
- (_b_) Sugar " " lbs.| 44 | 76
- (_c_) Rice " " lbs.| 6 | 18
- (_d_) Tea " " lbs.| 3¾ | 6
- | |
- Consumption of Beer | |
- (Gallons per head) | 27.78 26.62 |
- | (1881 earliest |
- |figure available)|
- | |
- Deaths | 634,008 | 676,634
- | |
- Death-rate (per 1,000) | 20.8 | 15.2
- | |
- Criminals convicted | 19,450 | 15,500
- | |
- Paupers (England and Wales) | |
- Jan. 1st | 958,824 | 911,588
- | |
- Deposits in Post Office and | |
- Trustee Savings Banks | £46,283,132 |£245,600,000
- | |
- Price of bread per 4 lb. loaf | 8d. | 5.8d.
- | |
- Board of Trade consumption | |
- Index number (prices of | |
- 45 commodities expressed | |
- as percentages of those of | |
- 1900) | 136.0 | 102.8
- | (1871) |
- ------------------------------+-----------------+------------
-
-With our knowledge of the conditions of the present, these facts are
-only relatively satisfactory, and serve but to fill us with horror of
-the past. We see that more bread is consumed to-day than in 1867, but
-remember that 40 persons perish from exposure and starvation in the
-streets of London year by year.[62] We see that the death-rate has
-declined from 20.8 per 1,000 to 15.2 per 1,000 between 1867 and 1908,
-but remember that in the latter year as many as 113,000 children
-perished in England and Wales under the age of twelve months. We see
-that the average wage has risen, but also that it now amounts to but
-£46, 15s. per annum on a liberal estimate. We see that prices have
-fallen, but remember that, in 1908, one-third of our population, in
-spite of lower prices, have not sufficient means to command a proper
-supply of the common necessaries of existence, no matter how severe
-their thrift.
-
-Writing in 1868, in the paper already referred to, Baxter wrote, in
-dealing with the question of real earnings as distinguished from nominal
-rates of wages, a passage which strikingly illustrates the conditions of
-labour in his day:[63]
-
- "Another point is the age at which a manual labourer ceases to be an
- effective. I am afraid that 60 years is about the average; six or seven
- years earlier than the Middle Classes. After that age a man becomes
- unfit for hard work; and if he loses his old master, cannot find a new
- one. In some trades, a man is disabled at 55 or 50. A coal-backer is
- considered past work at 40. I have endeavoured to be on the safe side
- by taking 65 as the termination of their working life, and have
- excluded all above that age from my calculation of wages.
-
- "But the most important point of all is the allowance which must be
- made for what workmen call 'playing'; that is to say, being 'out of
- work,' from whatever cause, whether forced or voluntary. It is here
- that I am at issue with Professor Levi. He estimates the lost time at
- no higher average than 4 weeks out of the 52, and thinks it
- sufficiently covered by omitting from the wage-computation all workmen
- above 60 years old, i.e. the non-effectives. If this were the real
- state of things, England would be a perfect Paradise for working men!
- If every man, woman, and child returned as a worker in the census had
- full employment, at full wages, for 48 weeks out of the 52, there would
- be no poverty at all. We should be in the Millennium! Far other is the
- real state of affairs; and a very different tale would be told by
- scores and even hundreds of thousands, congregated in our large cities,
- and seeking in vain for sufficient work.
-
- "I will take a good average instance (and a very large one) of the way
- in which wages are earned in the building trades. These trades form a
- whole, and include carpenters, bricklayers, masons, plasterers,
- painters, and plumbers, and number in England and Wales, about 387,000
- men above 20 years of age. In London their full time wages average 36s.
- a week. In the country they are lower, 30s. to 28s. or 26s.; growing
- less the farther we go northward. The full-work average may be taken at
- 30s. But it is only the best men, working for the best masters, that
- are always sure of full time. These trades work on the hour system,
- introduced at the instance of the men themselves, but a system of great
- precariousness of employment. The large masters give regular wages to
- their good workmen, but the smaller masters, especially at the East End
- of London, engage a large proportion of their hands only for the job,
- and then at once pay them off. All masters, when work grows slack,
- immediately discharge the inferior hands, and the unsteady men, of whom
- there are but too many even among clever workmen, and do not take them
- on again till work revives. In bad times there are always a large
- number out of employment. In prosperity much time is lost by keeping
- Saint Monday, and by occasional strikes. There are also 40,000 men
- between 55 and 65 years of age, who, in the building trade, are
- considered as past hard work, and who suffer severely by want of
- employment....
-
- "Let us turn to another great branch of industry, the Agricultural
- Labourers: whose numbers are, men, 650,000; boys, 190,000; women,
- 126,000; and girls, 36,000. Continuous employment has largely increased
- since the New Poor Law of 1834, and good farmers now employ their men
- regularly. But in many places such is not the custom. Near Broadstairs,
- in Kent, I was told that, on an average, labourers are only employed 40
- weeks in the year.... Turn next to the cotton manufacture, including
- 143,000 men, 82,000 boys, 150,000 women, and 121,000 girls; altogether,
- 496,000. We all know their periodical distresses. It may be said that
- these were accidents. They are not mere accidents, but incidents,
- natural incidents, of our manufacturing economy. They are sure to recur
- under different forms; either from gluts, or strikes, or war; and they
- must be allowed for in computations of earnings.
-
- "I come lastly to instances from trades at the East End of London,
- where I have lately had a great deal of experience. It is there that
- the struggle for existence is most intense, from London being the
- resort and refuge of the surplus population of other parts of the
- country. The London Dock Labourers earn, when on full time, 15s. a
- week; but so great is the competition that even in ordinary years they
- are employed little more than half their time. During the past year 5s.
- a week has been considered tolerably lucky....
-
- "Cabinet-makers stand well in the lists of trades, their nominal wages
- for the Kingdom being set down at 30s. a week. But the cabinet-makers
- at the East End, a very numerous body, are in what is called the 'slop
- trade,' and are ground down by the dealers, who own what are called
- 'slaughter-houses,' in which they take advantage of the necessities of
- the small manufacturers (expressively called 'garret masters') and
- compel them to sell their upholstery at little above the cost of
- materials. Between dealers and want of work, I am told that numbers of
- the 'slop' cabinet-makers are not earning 7s. 6d. a week.
-
- "None but those who have examined the facts can have any idea of the
- precariousness of employment in our large cities, and the large
- proportion of time out of work, and also, I am bound to add, the loss
- of time in many well paid trades from drinking habits. Taking all these
- facts into account, I come to the conclusion, that for loss of work
- from every cause, and for the non-effectives up to 65 years of age, who
- are included in the census, _we ought to deduct fully 20 per cent. from
- the nominal full time wages_.
-
- "I will cite one more fact in confirmation. The average number of
- paupers at one time in receipt of relief in 1866 was 916,000, being
- less than for any of the four preceding years. The total number
- relieved during 1866 may, on the authority of a Return of 1857, be
- calculated at 3½ times that number, or 3,000,000.[64] All these may be
- considered as belonging to the 16,000,000 of the Manual Labour Classes,
- being as nearly as possible 20 per cent. on their numbers. But the
- actual cases of relief give a very imperfect idea of the loss of work
- and wages. A large proportion of the poor submit to great hardships,
- and are many weeks, and even months, out of work before they will apply
- to the Guardians. They exhaust their savings, they try to the utmost
- their trade unions or benefit societies; they pawn little by little all
- their furniture; and at last are driven to ask for relief. I am not
- astonished at their reluctance, for what do they get? After waiting in
- a crowd and in the most humiliating publicity, they get an order for
- the stoneyard, with 6d. a day, and a loaf per week of bread for each of
- their family. Sometimes, rather than accept the relief, they die of
- starvation."
-
-These words were written over forty years ago, but it would need little
-emendation to give them application to-day. The growing strenuousness of
-modern industry makes it more and not less difficult for the ageing to
-earn a living. The increased use of machinery and the greater division
-of labour have made experience of less value than of yore. The ageing
-man resorts to hair dye to conceal the honourable age which is to rob
-him of his livelihood. Baxter's remarks about the building trades are
-absolutely true of to-day, but they now apply not to 400,000 men, but to
-1,000,000. "All masters, when work grows slack, immediately discharge
-the inferior hands.... In bad times there are always a large number out
-of employment." The position of agricultural labourers has improved, but
-chiefly because their rapidly decreasing numbers have placed a premium
-upon their services. Even so, in parts of the country removed from
-coal-mines, the most pitiable conditions prevail. Kettle broth is still
-part of the menu of the Wiltshire labourer.
-
-In the East End of London the economic position of the dock and
-riverside labourers is much the same as Baxter described it, while in
-the furniture trade the "garret masters" are still with us. True—most
-honourably true—it is also that still the workers endure great hardships
-before they will apply to the Guardians. "They exhaust their savings,
-they try to the utmost their trade unions or benefit societies; they
-pawn little by little all their furniture; and at last they are driven
-to ask for relief."
-
-The Board of Trade, after a careful examination of the question of
-unemployment in 1904, arrived at the general conclusion that "The
-average level of employment during the past four years has been almost
-exactly the same as the average of the preceding forty years" (Cd.
-2,337). The conditions of employment, the want of security of tenure,
-are very much what they were in 1867.
-
-As for pauperism, it is difficult to congratulate ourselves upon
-improvement since 1867 when we remember that in England and Wales alone
-1,500,000 to 2,000,000 persons are in receipt of relief in the course of
-a single year. This statement rests upon ascertained facts, as will be
-found by reference to the statistics given in our examination of the
-question of Old Age Pensions. The population of England and Wales being
-about 36,000,000 (1910) this means that _one person in every twenty_ has
-recourse to the Poor Law Guardians during a single year.
-
-If our national income had but increased at the same rate as our
-population since 1867 it would, in 1908, have amounted to but about
-£1,200,000,000. As we have seen, it is now about £1,840,000,000. Yet the
-Error of Distribution remains so great that while the total population
-in 1867 amounted to 30,000,000, we have to-day a nation of 30,000,000
-poor people in our rich country, and many millions of these are living
-under conditions of degrading poverty. Of those above the line of
-primary poverty, millions are tied down by the conditions of their
-labour to live in surroundings which preclude the proper enjoyment of
-life or the rearing of healthy children. The comparatively high wages of
-London are accompanied by rents high in proportion and frequently by
-waste of income and time upon travelling expenses. In so far as the
-manual labourers have been reduced in proportion to population it has
-been to swell the ranks of black-coated working men, clerks, agents,
-travellers, canvassers, and others, whose tenure of employment is
-precarious, whose earnings are very low, and whose labour as we have
-already noted is largely waste.
-
-We have won through the horrors of the birth and establishment of the
-factory system at the cost of physical deterioration. We have purchased
-a great commerce at the price of crowding our population into the cities
-and of robbing millions of strength and beauty. We have given our people
-what we grimly call elementary education and robbed them of the elements
-of a natural life. All this has been done that a few of us may enjoy a
-superfluity of goods and services. Out of the travail of millions we
-have added to a landed gentry an aristocracy of wealth. These, striding
-over the bodies of the fallen, proclaim in accents of conviction the
-prosperity of their country.
-
-There leaps to the mind the mordant lines in which Ruskin, thirty years
-ago, wrote a "modern version" of the Beatitudes[65]:—
-
- Blessed are the Rich in Flesh, for theirs is the Kingdom of Earth.
-
- Blessed are the Proud, in that they _have_ inherited the Earth.
-
- Blessed are the Merciless, for they shall obtain Money.
-
-There is no whit of exaggeration in these lines. The passage of thirty
-years has but added to their sting. Thirty years of accumulation of the
-results of toil in hands other than those of the toilers have had for
-consummation the accusing series of facts which are examined in the
-early chapters of this book. Deprivation for the many and luxury for the
-few have degraded our national life at both ends of the scale. At the
-one end, "thirteen millions on the verge of hunger," physically and
-morally deteriorated through poverty and unloveliness. At the other, the
-inheritors of the earth, "senseless conduits through which the strength
-and riches of their native land are poured into the cup of the
-fornication of its capital."
-
-Blessed indeed are the Rich, for theirs is the governance of the realm,
-theirs is the Kingdom. Theirs is a power above the throne, for it has
-been a maxim of British politics that our government should be a poor
-government, and a poor government cannot contend in the direction of
-affairs with the imperium of wealth. This may be illustrated by our
-attempts to "educate" the mass of the people. For a few brief years the
-government, with small funds raised with timorous hands, does a little
-to form the mind and character of the child. Even in these early years
-it consents that the future proud citizen of Empire shall be improperly
-fed and badly housed. These early moments passed, the mockery of
-"education" ceases, and the child, taught by the State to read, to
-write, and to cipher, becomes a unit of industry. At this point begins
-the serious training of the citizen. Forthwith he is inducted into some
-more or less worthy employment, that employment, as we have seen,
-resulting from the great expenditure of the few and the poor expenditure
-of the many. Careers are thus chiefly shaped by the wealthy, for theirs
-is the greatest call. The demand for luxuries is too great; the demand
-for necessaries is too small; the unit of industry is fortunate,
-therefore, if he is inducted into useful service. The State washes its
-hands of his development. The educational sham over, the real education
-of life begins. So far as the State calls for privates of industry it is
-chiefly to make them soldiers, sailors, makers of guns, builders of
-battleships. The development of all things useful, of railways, of
-canals, of roads, of cities, of houses, is resigned to the blind call
-for commodities and the intelligence of individuals who, in search of
-private gain, seek, without regard to the national well-being, to profit
-by that blind call.
-
-Yet the manner in which its people are employed matters everything to a
-nation. It is not sufficient to give the child a smattering of
-knowledge. We need to take a collective interest in the general
-education of our citizens, and that education is the result of
-expenditure. The consumer gives the order. Given a fairly equable
-distribution of income, the call will be as to the greater part for
-worthy things, as to the smaller part for luxuries. Given a grossly
-unequal distribution, and the call for luxuries will be so great as to
-divert a considerable part of the national labour into channels of waste
-and degradation.
-
-To keep a government poor is to keep it weak. The poor government may
-resolve to educate, but it will have no means to carry out its resolve;
-its teachers will be underpaid; its schools inefficient. The poor
-government may pass Housing Acts; it will but call for better houses
-that will not come when it does call for them. The poor government may
-piously resolve to create small holdings; there will be no means to
-carry out the pious resolve. The poor government may, at periodic
-intervals, look the question of Unemployment in the face; its
-legislation will but reflect its poverty, and be in its provisions an
-acknowledgment that the power to employ, the power to govern, is in
-other hands.
-
-Even those who have striven to hold fast the curious faith that
-civilization comes, not through collective service, but through
-individual strife, are constrained to admit that much waste is going on.
-It is noteworthy that Sir Robert Giffen, in one of his last essays on
-Taxation, said:[66]
-
-"When the proportion (of income appropriated by the state) becomes
-one-tenth or less it is doubtful whether the state can do best for its
-subjects by making the proportion still lower, that is, by abandoning
-one tax after another, or whether equal or greater advantage would not
-be gained by using the revenue for wise purposes under the direction of
-the state, such as great works of sanitation, or water supply or public
-defence. In other words, when taxes are very moderate and the revenue
-appropriated by the state is a small part only of the aggregate of
-individual incomes, it seems possible that individuals in a rich country
-may waste individually resources which the state could apply to very
-profitable purposes. The state, for instance, could perhaps more
-usefully engage in some great works, such as establishing reservoirs of
-water for the use of town populations on a systematic plan, or making a
-tunnel under one of the channels between Ireland and Great Britain, or a
-sea-canal across Scotland between the Clyde and the Forth, or purchasing
-land from Irish landlords and transferring it to tenants, than allow
-money to fructify or not fructify, as the case may be, in the pockets of
-individuals. Probably there are no works more beneficial to a community
-in the long run than those like a tunnel between Ireland and Great
-Britain, which open an entirely new means of communication of
-strategical as well as commercial value, but are not likely to pay the
-individual _entrepreneur_ within a short period of time."
-
-Here we have a reflection of the uneasy feeling that all is not well in
-the disposition of the income of the community. Very true it is that
-"individuals in a rich country may waste individually resources which
-the State could apply to very profitable purposes." Even were the means
-by which "Captain Roland fills his purse" moral, we should need to look
-to Captain Roland's expenditure. The effects of the robbery do not end
-with the impoverishment of the despoiled. The despoiler proceeds to
-spend the contents of his fat purse, and in spending he buys bodies and
-souls, and builds up vested interests in degrading occupations.
-
-In the foregoing pages I have pointed both to mere palliatives of
-existing evils and to real remedies which go to the root of things. Our
-attempts to reform, our strivings towards organization, must in practice
-have regard both to palliatives and to remedies. We have to keep in mind
-both the impoverished and sometimes degraded creatures which are effects
-of past and existing causes, while dealing drastically and radically
-with the causes themselves. At present the greater part of the labours
-of social reformers are directed to dealing with a succession of
-distressful effects. Here are slums; how shall we rehouse their inmates?
-Here are paupers; what shall we do with them? Here are unemployed; how
-shall we keep them going until they find employers? Here are aged poor;
-can we, should we, give them pensions? We owe a present duty in all
-these and many other matters. The effects must be dealt with and
-ameliorated. It is beyond question that there is a clear call to succour
-the aged, to care for the weak, to aid poor women in their time of
-trouble. The sufferer, the affected individual, the disease, must be
-dealt with. But ever we must keep before us the causes which bring into
-being the raw material of our social problems; ever we must have clear
-vision of the crime of poverty in a wealthy country; ever we must seek
-to come to grips with the original sin.
-
-To deal with causes we must strike at the Error of Distribution by
-gradually substituting public ownership for private ownership of the
-means of production. In no other way can we secure for each worker in
-the hive the full reward of his labour. So long as between the worker
-and his just wage stands the private landlord and the private
-capitalist, so long will poverty remain, and not poverty alone, but the
-moral degradations which inevitably arise from the devotion of labour to
-the service of waste. So long as the masses of the people are denied the
-fruit of their own labour, so long will our civilization be a false
-veneer, and our every noble thoroughfare be flanked by purlieus of
-shame.
-
-There is already a beginning made. A few hundred millions have been
-applied as public capital in the ownership by many municipalities of
-such services as tramways, gasworks, and waterworks. As we saw in our
-examination of the national wealth, such capital is yet but a tiny
-fraction of the whole, and it still bears a great mortgage and pays
-interest to private hands. That interest, in process of time, will
-disappear through the operation of sinking funds, and then, as to
-certain services, the community will enter into its own with no tribute
-to pay to private usurers. From the small beginnings made we must seek
-to advance, nor need we be deterred by those who implore us to hasten
-slowly. If Rome was not built in a day, Washington was built in not many
-days, and the factory system itself is little more than a century old.
-The lapse of a single generation might see well advanced the building of
-our new city.
-
-It would be a great pity if anyone were to imagine that the changes
-necessary to secure the just reward of all forms of labour are either
-difficult to effect or likely to cause dislocation in the making. As has
-been pointed out, the greater number of our industrial concerns are
-already shaped in the form of limited liability companies, the
-shareholders in which are dumb, while the management is in the hands of
-paid officials. In 1902-3, while private firms were assessed to Income
-Tax on £193,000,000, public companies were assessed on £239,000,000. In
-1907-8 the respective figures were £183,000,000 and £259,000,000. The
-re-shaping proceeds apace. The reform which needs to be effected is to
-substitute the community at large for the dumb shareholders. Management,
-ability, invention, would be properly rewarded, as they are now rewarded
-in some cases, and as they are not now rewarded in many cases. The only
-change would be the gradual substitution of the community for the
-shareholders, and the consequent disappearance of unearned incomes. Such
-portions of the product as were necessary for application as new capital
-would be so applied by the community. For the rest, the whole of the
-product would go to labour. Saving, the necessary saving, without which
-labour would go without tools, would be simply and automatically
-effected, and capital would take its true and rightful place as the
-handmaiden of labour.
-
-Let us not go further without a vision and a hope. That vision, that
-hope, is not of a regimented society, but of a community relieved from
-nine-tenths of its present irksome routine and carking care. If the
-individual is to be set free it can only be in a society so organized as
-to reduce the labour employed in the production of common necessaries to
-a minimum. That minimum cannot be secured without the organization of
-each of the great branches of production and distribution. Common needs
-can be satisfied with little labour if labour be properly applied. The
-work of a few will feed a hundred or supply exquisite cloth for the
-clothing of fifty. The work for a few hours per day of every adult
-member of the community will be ample to supply every comfort in each
-season to all. Thus set free, the lives of men will turn to the
-uplifting, individual work which is the pride of the craftsman. The
-dwellings of men will contain not only the socialized products within
-common reach, but the proud individual achievements of their inmates.
-The simple and beautiful clothing of the community will chiefly be made
-of fabrics woven in the socialized factories, but it will often be
-worked by the loving hands of women. A happy union of labour economized
-in routine work and labour lavished upon individual work will uplift the
-crafts of the future and the character of those who follow them. The
-abominations of machine-made ornament will disappear, and art be wedded
-to everyday life. Each new invention to save labour in mining, or
-tilling, or building, or spinning, will be hailed with joy as a release
-from toil and a gift of more time in which to do individual work. The
-inventor, the originator, now unhappily compelled to hunt for a
-capitalist and bow low his genius before some individual distinguished
-only for that gift of acquisitiveness, that business ability, which is
-the lowest attribute of mankind, will see his idea put to the test and
-reap not unholy gains, but the honour of his fellows if it is not found
-wanting. The painter, no longer compelled to paint the portraits of the
-rich and not necessarily beautiful, will ally his gifts with the common
-life of men and be carried in triumph before the enduring monuments of
-his genius. The organizer, the man of arrangement, will be invited to
-exercise his talent, not in over-reaching and despoiling his fellows,
-but in planning their welfare in a thousand new schemes of development.
-No host of wasteful workers will be found in the industrial camp.
-Accounts will be simple and clerks few. No travellers, agents or touts
-will be needed to push doubtful commodities. The sham and the substitute
-will be found only in museums. It will be obviously ridiculous to employ
-any but good materials, for labour can only be economized by producing
-the things which are the best of their kind. Policies of insurance,
-those typical documents of a community of prey, will be read in the
-public archives with much the same feelings as we now read a warrant for
-the burning of a Bruno. The young men who now waste their time in ruling
-up books in banks and insurance offices or in serving writs will find
-manly and useful work. The production of commodities will be
-commensurate with the labour put forth, unemployment will be one of the
-few crimes known to the statute-book, and last, but not least, the
-economic dependence of woman will cease.
-
-The attainment of such ends will only be difficult as long as we refuse
-to apply scientific methods to the ordering of common affairs. It is in
-the domain of politics alone that men refuse to apply first principles
-to the solution of problems. The mental daring which has accomplished so
-much in engineering, in astronomy, in surgery, in every department of
-science, is replaced in the sphere of politics by a timorous tinkering
-with admitted evils. With things the scientist has worked marvels in a
-single century. With those marvels the politician has done little. The
-scientist has applied his skill to locomotion; the politician has
-refused to avail himself of that skill in order to distribute the
-population healthily. The scientist has stated the conditions of health;
-the politician has refused to create those conditions. The scientist has
-supplied the tools; the politician has neglected to take them up.
-
-The problem of riches and poverty is of the simplest. It presents none
-of the difficulties which attach to the measurement of the mass of the
-sun, or the treatment of such a disease as cancer. Science has presented
-us with such instruments that we can easily create a tremendous
-superfluity of commodities if we choose to do so. We know how to
-produce; we know how to transport the results of our production. The
-appliances at our command, wielded by the labour of 44,000,000 people,
-could furnish many more foot-tons of work than are needed to give proper
-housing, suitable clothing and good food to every unit of the community.
-There is here no impenetrable secret; we have read enough in the book of
-Nature to control her forces to effect; our power of production is not
-too small, but already greater than our need. As I have pointed out in
-an earlier page, if invention went no further if science now came to a
-standstill, we should have tools more than adequate to abolish poverty.
-
-Unfortunately the politicians and the economists have never discussed
-the question of poverty from this point of view. They have found men
-buying and selling, and as buyers and sellers hunting for profits they
-have discussed them. Volumes have been written on such subjects as
-"rent," "interest," or "value," but nothing has been done to inquire how
-much work is needed to feed, clothe and house a community, and how best
-that work may be accomplished. In designing an engine, the man of
-science considers the work to be done and the known means to do it. Is
-it too much to ask that in ordering the affairs of a nation, statesmen
-should consider the quantity of commodities needed to give material
-happiness and the known means to produce and distribute them? To make
-the best use of our energies, to profit fully by the discoveries and
-inventions of the living and the dead, we must come to a common
-agreement as to the work which needs to be done and determine that that
-work shall be accomplished. For want of that agreement and
-determination, for want, that is, of a wise collectivism, the greater
-number of our people are poor.
-
-It is probable that the earliest readers of this book will be of those
-who, like myself, are amongst the favoured few whose work brings them
-pleasure and the means of happiness. To these the first appeal. Is it a
-good thing, is it an honourable thing, to be one of the few whose bark
-is borne upon the waters of wretchedness, whose fortunes float upon a
-sea of unfathomable depths of despair? Look downwards and you shall see
-monsters that once were human, frailties that once were women, devils
-that once were children. These are the product of the individual strife
-in which it is not always the noblest thing to succeed, but in which it
-is ever a terrible thing to fail. Is success worth having which is
-purchased at such a price?
-
-The last appeal shall be to the poor. It is no escape from labour which
-the thinking man offers the people. There are no honourable avenues to
-ease and luxury in the organization which would abolish poverty. It is a
-world of service which a civilization would substitute for a world of
-serfdom and pain. But if, realizing that the world has no room for the
-idle, the people would rise to a freedom only bounded by the knowledge
-of, and necessity for, collective decision, then there is the broadest
-avenue for hope and the clearest call to action. The achievements of
-those who are gone, these are the inheritance of the people. The only
-true riches of the nation, men and women, these are the people
-themselves. The people have but to will it, and we set our faces towards
-a civilization.
-
-[Footnote 62: "Deaths from Starvation or Accelerated by Privation
-(London)." Issued Sept. 14th, 1904.]
-
-[Footnote 63: Quoted from Dudley Baxter's "The National Income," by kind
-permission of the publishers, Messrs Macmillan & Co.]
-
-[Footnote 64: In saying this Dudley Baxter committed one of the few
-errors which can properly be laid to his charge. See Chapter 19.]
-
-[Footnote 65: "Usury," a preface re-published in "On the Old Road."]
-
-[Footnote 66: "Encyclopædia Britannica," Volume 33, page 200.]
-
-
-
-
-INDEX
-
-
-Abatements, Income Tax, 36, 297
-
-Accidents, Industrial:
- Engineering Works, 137
- Factories and Workshops, 127, 128
- Mines, 133
- Railways, 136
- Ships, 137
- Total, all Trades, 138
-
-Advertising, 253
-
-Afforestation, 248
-
-Aged Poor, 272
-
-Agricultural Labourers' Wages, 109, 155
-
-Agricultural Land, Value of, 62, 68
-
-Agriculture, as Field for Employment, 240
-
-Anderson, Miss A. M., on Maternity Funds, 180
-
-Andrew, George, Report on German Schools, 192
-
-Anthrax, 130
-
-Area, Control of, 242
-
-Area, Distinguishing Attribute of Land, 81
-
-Area of United Kingdom, 81
-
-Army Material, Value of, 66
-
-Ashby, Dr Hy., on Poor Mothers, 174
-
-Asquith, H. H., Death Duties, 321
- Differentiates Income Tax, 303
- Old Age Pensions Act, 284
-
-Average Wage, 29
-
-
-Back-to-Back Houses, 214
-
-"Back to the Land," 242
-
-Bateman, John, on Landowners, 82
-
-Bathing in Schools, 193
-
-Baxter, Dudley, on Conditions of Labour in 1868, 333
- On Income Tax Evasion, 13
- On Loss of Wages, 26
- On National Income in 1867, 330
-
-Beaulieu, M. Leroy, on Eliminating Middlemen, 254
-
-Beer Consumption, 332
-
-Belgian State Railways, Success of, 265
-
-Bentham, Jeremy, Suggested Exemption of Small Incomes from Taxation, 317
-
-Births, in United Kingdom, 173
-
-Board of Trade, Estimate of Wages, 30
- Wage Census, 21
-
-Boot Trade, 147, 156
-
-Bournville Garden City, 223
-
-Bowley, A. L., Estimate of Wages, 30
- On Loss of Wages, 26
- On Wages in 1867, 330
-
-Boy Labour in Mines, 136
-
-Bradford School Children, Condition of, 194
-
-Bread, Fall in Price of, 332
-
-Bricklayers' Wages, 108
-
-British Association, Committee on Small Incomes, 21
-
-British Government, Poverty of, 326
-
-Budget, Is an Annual Debate Necessary?, 315
- Tradition of Secrecy Unnecessary, 315
-
-Building Societies' Funds, 56
-
-Burns, John, Housing Act, 221
-
-
-Campbell-Bannerman, Sir H., on Poverty, 5
-
-Canals, Value of, 64
-
-Capital, In Few Hands, 79
- In Relation to Housing, 229
- Of United Kingdom, 62
- Of Working Classes, 57, 80
- Waste of, 158
-
-Capitalization of Usury, 101
-
-Carpenters' Wages, 108
-
-Casual Workers, Earnings, 27
-
-Census, Inadequacy of, 123
- Of Incomes, Importance of, 308, 312, 315
- Of Wages, 21
-
-Charity Organization Society, Thought Old Age Pensions Too Costly, 283
-
-Children, National Responsibility for, 173
- Should be the Chief Care of the Reformer, 173
- Underfed, 196
-
-Clerks, 18
- Number of, 253
-
-Coal Distribution, should be Municipal, 269
- Miners, Number of, 268
- Production, 267
-
-Collectivism, Assisted by Joint-Stock Principle, 344
- By Economizing Labour Creates Individual Freedom, 345
- Necessity of, 343
- And Revenue, 326
-
-Combination Accentuating Error of Distribution, 269
-
-"Comfortable" Persons, Number of, 48
-
-Commercial Travellers, 19
- Number of, 252
-
-Commons, Value of, 66
-
-Company Promotion, 166
-
-Competition Disappearing, 269
- Waste through, 255
-
-Compositors' Wages, 109
-
-Consumption of Food, Growth of, 332
-
-Continuation Schools Advocated, 204
-
-Co-operative Societies' Funds, 56
-
-Cost of Living, 115
-
-Cotton Trade, 143
-
-Criminals, Decline of, 332
-
-Crowley, Dr R. H., on Bradford School Children, 193
-
-Cunningham, Professor D. J., on Physical Deterioration, 173
-
-Customs Duties, 3
-
-
-Death Duties:
- And Length of Life, 73
- Assessments, Stationariness of, 76
- Avoidance of, 53, 54, 77
- Described, 320
- Do they Waste Capital?, 323
- Still Low, 323
-
-Death-rate, Fall of, 332
-
-Deaths from Mining Accidents, 132
-
-Deaths in United Kingdom, 54
-
-Declaring Incomes, Importance of, 308
-
-Differentiation of Income Tax, 303
-
-Diseases of Occupations, 129
-
-Distribution, Combination in, 256
- Of Capital, 79
- Of Income, 32, 47, 48
- Of Land, 82, 83
- Of Wealth in Practice Illustrated, 94
-
-Doctor, in the School, 193
-
-Dressmaking, 151
-
-Dundee, Physical Deterioration, 139
-
-
-Education, 181, 190
- Children should be Trained in Expression, 201
- Continuation Schools Necessary, 204
- Importance of Training in Observation, 199
- Science Teaching, 202
-
-Education (Provision of Meals) Act, 198
-
-Eichholz, Dr A., on Poor Children, 174
-
-Electricity Should be Publicly Controlled, 257
-
-Employers Compelled to Disclose Employees' Incomes, 311
-
-Engineers, Unemployment amongst, 28
- Wages, 109
-
-Estate Duties. See Death Duties
-
-Estates, 1904-1908, 52
- Classified by Nature, 78
- Classified by Size, 52, 74
- Passing Per Annum, 52, 55
- Of Rich and Poor, 51
-
-Expectation of Life, 211
-
-Expenditure Directs Labour, 141
-
-
-Factories, Accidents in, 127
-
-Factory and Workshop Act, 125
- And Maternity, 178
-
-Factory Inspection, 126
-
-Farmers' Capital, 63, 69
- Profits, 19
-
-Finance Act, 1907, 14, 302
-
-Fiscal Policy, 3
-
-Food, Consumption, Growth of, 332
- Duties for Revenue, 289
- Expenditure on, 154
- Price of, 115
-
-Foreign Competition and Education, 202, 204
-
-Foreign Investments, 14
-
-Fox, Arthur Wilson, on Agricultural Wages, 155
-
-Friendly Societies' Funds, 56
-
-Furniture, Value of, 64, 70
-
-
-Gas Companies' Profits, 105
-
-Gas Works, Value of, 64
-
-Genius not a Class Possession, 191
-
-George, Henry, on Necessary Monopolies, 255
-
-Germany, Large Revenue from Socialism, 328
-
-Giffen, Sir Robert, Estimate of Aggregate Wages, 1886, 25
- On Wages, 22
- On Waste of Capital, 341
-
-Government by the Rich, 270
-
-Growth of National Income, 17
-
-
-Hackney, Unemployed in, 119
-
-Harcourt, Sir Wm., Death Duties, 321
-
-Horsfall, T. C., on Town Planning, 221
-
-Houses, Clue to Income Tax Payers, 42
- In Great Britain, 40, 43
- Value of, 62, 68
-
-Housing, 88, 209
- Loans Proposed, 231
-
-Hunter, Robert, on American Poverty, 5
-
-Hygiene Should be Taught in Schools, 181
-
-
-Income, Average in 1908, 32
-
-Income Tax, Abatements, 36, 297
- As it is, Illustrated, 307
- Assessments, 12, 33
- Assessments, 1893-1908, 10
- Chapter on, 291
- Differentiation, 14, 303
- Evasion, 13
- Graduation Advocated, 312
- History of, 291
- Origin of Schedules, 292
- Payers, Growth of, 37, 112
- Payers Measured by House Rent, 42
- Payers, Number of, 44
- Payers over £700, 44
- Provisions Summarized, 306
- Reaches Unearned Increment, 296
- Reforms Advocated, 308
- Schedule A Described, 298
- Schedule B Described, 299
- Schedule C Described, 300
- Schedule D Described, 300
- Schedule E Described, 302
- Successor of "Land Tax," 291
-
-Incomes, between £160 and £700, 39
- Of Lower Middle Classes, 20
- Of Middle Classes, 36
- Revealed by Employers, 311
-
-Individual Freedom through Collectivism, 345
-
-Industrial Accidents, 125
-
-Infant Mortality, 177
-
-Inhabited House Duty, 40, 89
- Described, 302
-
-_Inter Vivos_ Avoidance of Death Duties, 77
-
-Interest and Distribution, 93
-
-Invalidity Insurance, 286
-
-Inventions, Foreign Progress, 202
-
-Iron Works, Value of, 64
-
-Ironfounders' Wages, 109
-
-
-Jews and Maternity, 185
-
-
-Labour Exchanges, 124
-
-Labour Party and Unemployment, 124
-
-Land, and Town Planning, 218
- Nationalization, 242
- Of United Kingdom, 81
- Recovery in Agricultural Values, 246
-
-Land-Tax, was an Income Tax, 292
-
-Land Values, 86
-
-Landowners, 82, 83
-
-Lead Poisoning, 130
-
-Legal Profession, Persons Employed, 254
-
-Levi, Leone, on Manual Labourers' Earnings in 1866, 330
- On Unemployment, 25
-
-Living, Cost of, 115
-
-Lloyd George, D., Death Duties, 321
- Grants Special Abatement in Respect of Children, 314
- Income Tax Reforms, 303
-
-Local Loans, 62, 67
-
-London, Area of, 92
-
-Lower Middle Classes, Incomes of, 17
-
-Luxuries, Expenditure on, 160
-
-
-McCleary, Dr G. F., on Milk Supply, 260
-
-Mackenzie, Dr Leslie, on Milk Supply, 260
-
-Malins, Dr E., on Poor Children, 174
-
-Manual Workers, Number of, 21
-
-Marshall, Professor A., on Waste, 158
-
-Maternity amongst Poor, 178
-
-Maternity Fund, Suggestion for a National, 184, 185
-
-Medical Officers of Health, 183
-
-Middle Classes, Small Incomes of, 36
-
-Middlemen, Waste through, 253
-
-Milk Distribution, Waste in, 259
-
-Milk Supply, Should be Publicly Owned, 261
-
-Mill, John Stuart, on Principle of Graduation, 317
-
-Miners' Wages, 108
-
-Mines, Value of, 64
-
-Mining, Accidents, 130
- Employment, 268
- Royalties, 85
-
-Misdirection of Labour, 150
-
-Monopoly, Economy of, 256
-
-Monopoly of Capital, 72
-
-Monopoly of Wealth a Danger to the State, 141, 158, 324
-
-Multiple Shops, 19, 254
-
-Municipal Trading, Case for, 264
- Success of, 262
-
-
-National Capital, 61
-
-National Debt, 62, 63, 67
-
-National Dividend, how Distributed, 47, 48
-
-National Housing Loans Proposed, 231
-
-National Income, Growth of, 50
- How Distributed, 47, 48
- In 1908, 31
- What it is, 8
-
-National Medical Service, 183
-
-National Property, 62, 65
-
-Nationalization of Land, 219, 242
-
-Navy, Value of, 66
-
-Notification of Births, 184
-
-
-Occupations Influenced by Wealth Distribution, 141
-
-Old Age Pensioners, Number of, 285
-
-Old Age Pensions, 272
- Cost of Not "Expenditure," 286
-
-Old Age Pensions Act, 284
-
-Organization of Industry, 124, 250
-
-Overcrowding, 212
-
-Oversea Investments, 14, 65, 160
-
-
-Paupers, Day Counts of, 274
- Decline of, 332
- Relieved in a Year, 275, 276
-
-Physical Deterioration, 139
-
-Physical Training, 192
-
-Poor, Property of, 57
-
-Population, Growth of, 332
-
-Poverty, Campbell-Bannerman quoted, 5
- In Old Age, 272
- Line, 153
- Measured, 49, 50
- Now Unnecessary, 347
- Of British Government, 340
- Shortens Life, 211
-
-Power Supply, Should be National, 256
-
-Prices, Fall of, 332
- Index Number, 332
-
-Production, Combination in, 256
-
-Production and Waste, 251
-
-Profits Examined, 94
- Growth of, 111, 112
-
-Progress since 1867, 332
-
-Prosperity and Fiscal Policy, 3
-
-Prussian State Railways, 329
-
-Public Ownership, the only Path to Equitable Distribution, 262
-
-Public Works and Unemployment, 124
-
-
-Railway Capital, Watering of, 102
- Fares under Nationalization, 266
- Servants, Accidents, 136
-
-Railways, Value of, 63
-
-Rates, in Nature of Rent-charge, 90
-
-Rent, and Profit, 97
- Estimate of Aggregate, 84, 85, 86
- Why Small Relatively to Profits, 86
-
-Revenue without Taxation, 326
-
-Rich, Estates of, 58
- Number of, 48, 50
-
-Right to Work Bill, 123
-
-Roads, Value of, 66
-
-Rowntree, Poverty Line, 153
-
-Rural Depopulation, 234
-
-Ruskin, John, His modern version of the Beatitudes, 339
-
-
-Savings, 55, 56, 80
- Growth of, 332
-
-Savings Banks' Funds, 56
-
-Science, Important to Teach, 202
-
-Seamen, Accidents, 137
-
-Segregation of Unfit, 187
-
-Shop Assistants, 18
-
-Shopkeepers, 18, 254
-
-Site Value, 87
-
-Smith, Adam, on Taxation, 287
-
-Socialism, Reduces Taxation, 328
-
-Super-Tax, 305
-
-
-Taft, President, on Inheritance Duties, 324
-
-Taxation and Distribution, 289
- Direct, Advocated, 318
- Doctrine of Ability, 288
- Indirect, Deprecated, 317
- Not the Only Means of Revenue, 326
- Should be Simplified, 318
-
-Teachers, 18
-
-Thrift Institutions, 56
-
-Town Planning, 217, 221
-
-Trade Capital, Value of, 63, 69
-
-Trade Unions, Expenditure on Unemployment, 121
- Funds, 56
- Superannuation, 280
- Unemployment, 116
-
-Tradesmen, 254
-
-Transport should be a National Function, 256
-
-Trust Rule, 269
-
-
-Unemployed, Probable Number of, 122
-
-Unemployment, 28, 107
- Amongst Trade Unionists, 116
- Cost of, 121
- During 40 Years, 337
- In America, 5
- In Middle Classes, 122
- Insurance, 123
- Only to be Remedied by Public Ownership, 270
- "Remedies" for, 123, 124
-
-Unfit, Segregation of, 187
-
-United Kingdom, Area, 81
-
-United States, Industrial Fatalities, 6
- Poverty of, 5
-
-Usury, 101
-
-
-Wage Census, 21
-
-Wage Earners, Number of, 21
-
-Wage, Average, 29, 331
- Growth of, 332
-
-Wages, 115
- Aggregate in 1908, 29
- Average in 1908, 27
- In 1886, 23
- Movement of, 27, 108, 111, 112
- Not Raised by High Profits, 101
- Stationariness of, 50
-
-Waste of Labour, 251
-
-Waterworks, Value of, 64
-
-Wheat, Imports of, 245
-
-Wheat Prices, 247
-
-Whitehaven Colliery Explosion, 131
-
-Woollen Trade, 145
-
-Women Health Inspectors, 182
-
-Women Workers in America, 6
-
-Workhouse Inmates Classified, 281
-
-Working Class "Capital," 80
-
-Working Classes, Material Progress of, 330
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-
-<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Riches and Poverty, by Leo George Chiozza Money</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online
-at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
-are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<table style='min-width:0; padding:0; margin-left:0; border-collapse:collapse'>
- <tr><td>Title:</td><td>Riches and Poverty</td></tr>
- <tr><td></td><td>(1910)</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Leo George Chiozza Money</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: February 23, 2021 [eBook #64616]</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Character set encoding: UTF-8</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Produced by: Turgut Dincer, Chris Pinfield and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)</div>
-
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK RICHES AND POVERTY ***</div>
-
-<div id="tnote">
-
-<p>Transcriber's Note:</p>
-
-<p>Obvious printer errors have been corrected. Hyphenation has been
-rationalised.</p>
-
-<p>Wider tables have been split into two.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="section" style="font-family:sans-serif">
-
-<p class="gap-above2 center">BRITISH INCOMES <small>IN</small> 1908-9</p>
-
-<table class="frontisp" summary="frontisp">
-
-<tr>
- <td class="center small" style="width:25%">RICH<br />
- 1,400,000&nbsp;persons<br />
- £634,000,000</td>
- <td class="center" style="width:75%">COMFORTABLE<br />
- 4,100,000 persons<br />
- £275,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="center large" colspan="2">POOR<br />
- 39,000,000 persons<br />
- £935,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="noborder" colspan="2"><i>The Aggregate Income of the 44,600,000 people of the United Kingdom
- in 1908-9 was approximately £1,844,000,000. 1,400,000 persons took
- £634,000,000; 4,100,000 persons took £275,000,000; 39,000,000 persons
- took £935,000,000. (See Chapters 2 and 3.)</i></td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="section front">
-
-<h1 style="font-size:125%">RICHES AND POVERTY</h1>
-
-<p class="large">(1910)</p>
-
-<p><span style="font-size:50%">BY</span><br />L. G. CHIOZZA MONEY, M.P.</p>
-
-<p style="font-size:50%">ELEVENTH EDITION</p>
-
-<p style="font-size:80%">METHUEN &amp; CO. LTD.<br />36 ESSEX STREET W.C.<br />LONDON</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<table class="editions" summary="editions">
-
-<tr>
- <td>First Published (5s. net)</td>
- <td>October</td>
- <td>1905</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Second Edition</td>
- <td>December</td>
- <td>1905</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Third Edition</td>
- <td>July</td>
- <td>1906</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Fourth and Cheaper Edition (1s. net)</td>
- <td>January</td>
- <td>1908</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Fifth Edition (1s. net)</td>
- <td>February</td>
- <td>1908</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Sixth and Seventh Editions (1s. net)</td>
- <td>March</td>
- <td>1908</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Eighth Edition (1s. net)</td>
- <td>May</td>
- <td>1908</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Ninth Edition (1s. net)</td>
- <td>December</td>
- <td>1909</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Tenth Edition, Revised (5s. net)</td>
- <td>March</td>
- <td>1911</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>New and Cheaper Issue (1s. net)</td>
- <td>June</td>
- <td>1913</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Eleventh Edition (5s. net)</td>
- <td>March</td>
- <td>1914</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p class="gap-above2 center">TO MY WIFE</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_ix" id="Page_ix">{ix}</a></span>
-
-<h2>PREFACE TO THE TENTH (REVISED) EDITION, 1910</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">THE present edition of "Riches and Poverty" revises
-my estimates of the distribution of the wealth of the
-United Kingdom down to the year 1908. The effect of
-the revision is to show that in the five years that have
-elapsed since this work was first published, the distribution
-of wealth has grown even more unequal. The comparative
-stationariness of money wages of late years is a fact
-upon which the labourers themselves, and not less the
-nation of which they form by far the greater part, are to
-be commiserated. I write at a time when a great deal
-of discontent is becoming evident amongst large masses
-of the population; it may be well for those, and they
-are many, who have written in condemnation of that
-discontent, to ponder the following pages, and in particular
-to compare the profits recorded by the Inland
-Revenue Commissioners with the evidence as to wages
-collected by the Labour Department of the Board of
-Trade.</p>
-
-<p>My own view of the subject is, that the massing of
-capital in large units has so considerably strengthened the
-hand of capital in its dealings with labour that in recent
-years Trade Unions have comparatively lost much ground.
-To-day the masters in many of our industries can exercise
-collective powers much more effectively than Trade Unions.
-Combination amongst employers in some trades has
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_x" id="Page_x">{x}</a></span>
-reached a point at which it has become possible to rule
-alike the price of products and the price of labour.</p>
-
-<p>While since 1900 nominal or money wages have been at
-a standstill, the cost of living has continued to rise. The
-retail cost of food in London rose 9 per cent. in 1900-1908.
-Therefore British real or commodity wages have fallen
-heavily since 1900. A London platelayer, when he has
-the privilege of working seven days a week, can earn 21s. a
-week in 1910 as in 1900, but the real value of the 21s. has
-fallen by about 9 per cent.; in effect, that is, he earns
-1s. 10d. a week less than in 1900. Now 19s. 2d. is not a
-just wage for a London platelayer.</p>
-
-<p>The statements which were made in the 1905 edition of
-"Riches and Poverty" proved to be uncomfortable reading
-for many, and I have now a great many books on my
-shelves in which they have been discussed. The attempts
-to refute them have entirely failed. It is now generally
-accepted that the number of Income Tax payers is
-approximately what I stated it to be, and the increase of
-Income Tax assessments indicates that my estimates of
-the income of the rich did not err on the side of liberality.</p>
-
-<p>Work such as is attempted in these pages ought, of
-course, to be entrusted to the hands of a permanent
-Census Department, empowered to collect information,
-and instructed to analyse and diffuse it. In the absence
-of such a Department, and in the lamentable condition
-of our national statistical records, the conclusions of a
-private investigator are only too likely to be called in
-question by those who do not stomach what he has to say.
-It may be said that the disagreeable estimates I have presented
-in the frontispiece of this volume rest upon private
-authority, and that they cannot be accepted without great
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xi" id="Page_xi">{xi}</a></span>
-reservation. I should like to direct attention, therefore, to
-a series of facts which <i>are</i> official, which <i>cannot</i> be denied,
-and which rest upon the basis that they <i>represent masses
-of property actually taxed</i>.</p>
-
-<p>I refer to the estates which pass at death in the United
-Kingdom year by year, and which are valued for the purposes
-of the death duties. The following facts, to which
-I called attention for the first time in "Riches and
-Poverty," can be easily memorized, and every one ought
-to know them.</p>
-
-<p>Year by year, as regularly as the seasons, properties
-pass at death in the United Kingdom, free of all debts,
-absolutely net, to the value of, in round figures,
-£300,000,000. Of this £300,000,000, the aggregate of
-approximately 80,000 separate estates, as much as
-£200,000,000, or thereabouts, is left by about FOUR
-THOUSAND (4000) PERSONS.</p>
-
-<p>I repeat that these figures are not my estimates, but the
-official figures ascertained and published by the Inland
-Revenue Commissioners. They can be verified by any
-reader of this book by reference to the latest Official Report
-of the Commissioners of His Majesty's Inland Revenue
-(Cd. 4868. Price 1s. 7d.).</p>
-
-<p>Those who are acquainted with the facts know, as Mr
-Balfour recognized in reply to me in a debate in the
-House of Commons on September 13th, 1909, that the official
-figures I have quoted would be larger but for the passing
-of property <i>inter vivos</i> in avoidance of the death duties.
-But, to take the figures as they are, an under statement of
-the wealth of the rich, I put this question to those who
-come to consider the estimates I have made:</p>
-
-<p><i>If, in the United Kingdom, out of £300,000,000 a year
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xii" id="Page_xii">{xii}</a></span>
-passing at death, as much as £200,000,000, or two-thirds of
-the whole, is left by only 4000 persons, does it not follow, as
-the night the day, that the distribution of the national income
-must necessarily proceed on some such lines as those estimated
-in the frontispiece to this volume?</i></p>
-
-<p>And with that question I once more issue these pages
-to the public.</p>
-
-<div class="foot">
-<div class="right1">L. G. CHIOZZA MONEY</div>
-<div class="left1"><span class="smc">Chaldon, Surrey</span></div>
-<div class="left2"><i>October 1910</i></div>
-</div>
-
-<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
-
-<table class="toc" summary="toc">
-
-<tr>
-<td></td><td class="pag x-small">PAGE</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td colspan="2" class="chap">BOOK I<br />
- <small>THE ERROR OF DISTRIBUTION</small></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td colspan="2" class="chap">CHAPTER I<br />
- <span class="smc">Thoughts arising out of a Great Controversy</span></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The false assumption that customs duties can determine prosperity</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_3">3</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Evidences of riches and poverty as "arguments"</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_4">4</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">"Thirty per cent. of our population underfed"</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_5">5</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">A question of distribution</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_7">7</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td colspan="2" class="chap">CHAPTER II<br />
- <span class="smc">The National Income</span></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The total product consists of goods and services</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_8">8</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The exchanged product can be measured</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_9">9</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Income Tax assessments; my 1905 estimate confirmed</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_11">11</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The income eluding taxation</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_13">13</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Income from abroad</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_15">15</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Aggregate of incomes exceeding £160 per annum</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_16">16</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Growth of Income Tax income in five years</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_17">17</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Aggregate of small incomes lying between Income Tax payers and wage-earning classes</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_20">20</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Aggregate of incomes of manual workers</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_29">29</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Aggregate of the national income</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_31">31</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The Income Tax exemption limit bisects the total product</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_31">31</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td colspan="2" class="chap">CHAPTER III<br />
- <span class="smc">Distribution of the National Income</span></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The average family income</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_32">32</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Investigation of number of Income Tax payers</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_33">33</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Number of incomes under £700</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_39">39</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Number of incomes over £700 measured by number of large houses</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_43">43</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Approximate number of Income Tax payers</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_44">44</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Persons with respectively more and less than £160 per annum</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_47">47</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">One-half of entire product taken by 12 per cent. of the population</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_47">47</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">One-third of entire product taken by one-thirtieth of population</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_48">48</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">A poor people thinly veneered by the well-to-do</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_49">49</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The movement in 1903-1908</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_50">50</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td colspan="2" class="chap">CHAPTER IV<br />
- <span class="smc">The Estates of Rich and Poor</span></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The graduated Estate Duty of Sir William Harcourt</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_51">51</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Deaths per annum in the United Kingdom</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_54">54</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Numbers and values of estates passing at death in recent years</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_55">55</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Savings of the poor</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_57">57</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Rich and poor estates in an average year</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_59">59</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td colspan="2" class="chap">CHAPTER V<br />
- <span class="smc">The National Accumulation</span></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Estimate of the accumulated wealth of the United Kingdom</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_62">62</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Public property, Imperial and local</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_62">65</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The national and local debts private mortgages upon public assets</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_67">67</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">British wealth in private hands</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_68">68</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Foreign wealth in British hands</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_71">71</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Average wealth per head</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_71">71</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td colspan="2" class="chap">CHAPTER VI<br />
- <span class="smc">The Monopoly of Capital</span></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Living property owners estimated from Death Duty records</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_73">73</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Growing avoidance of Death Duties</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_77">77</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">120,000 persons own two-thirds of the national capital</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_79">79</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The alleged "capital" of the working classes</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_80">80</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Those rule who own</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_80">80</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td colspan="2" class="chap">CHAPTER VII<br />
- <span class="smc">The Area of the United Kingdom</span></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Area the fundamental attribute of land</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_81">81</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Almost the entire area in private hands</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_82">82</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">One-half the area owned by 2,500 persons</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_83">83</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The number of landlords</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_84">84</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Estimate of land rents</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_86">86</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Why the aggregate of land rents is relatively small</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_87">87</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The cheapening of food</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_87">87</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The small areas of the town</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_88">88</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The rent-charge formed by local rates</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_90">90</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td colspan="2" class="chap">CHAPTER VIII<br />
- <span class="smc">Those who Work and whose who Wait</span></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Effect of congestion of capital upon distribution</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_93">93</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Practical examples of the distributive process</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_94">94</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Capital largely divorced from business ability</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_99">99</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Schedule D profits compared with paid-up capitals</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_100">100</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Effect of appreciation of securities upon position of the wage-earners</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_101">101</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Railway profits and railway wages</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_102">102</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Calculating the labour factor</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_103">103</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Capital takes the lion's share</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_106">106</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td colspan="2" class="chap">CHAPTER IX<br />
- <span class="smc">Profits, Bad Trade and Unemployment</span></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Growth of profits in recent years</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_107">107</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Rise and fall of wages in recent years</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_108">108</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Growth of profits compared with rise and fall in wages</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_110">110</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Labour bears the brunt of depression</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_115">115</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Records of unemployment of Trade Union members</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_116">116</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The Trade Union unemployment rate probably representative</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_119">119</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">How Trade Unions keep the tools sharpened</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_121">121</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The great majority of the British people lack security of tenure of employment</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_122">122</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">"Remedies" for unemployment</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_123">123</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Insurance against unemployment</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_123">123</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Labour Exchanges no remedy</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_124">124</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td colspan="2" class="chap">CHAPTER X<br />
- <span class="smc">Part of their Wages</span></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Accident and disease concomitants of wages</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_125">125</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Laxity of factory inspection</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_127">127</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Accidents in factories and workshops</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_127">127</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Diseases of occupations in factories and workshops</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_129">129</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Accidents in mines and quarries</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_130">130</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Accidents on railways</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_136">136</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Accidents on ships</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_137">137</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Accidents in certain engineering works</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_137">137</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Aggregate of reported accidents and cases of industrial disease</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_138">138</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Phthisis as an industrial disease</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_139">139</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Physical deterioration not an accident</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_140">140</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td colspan="2" class="chap">CHAPTER XI<br />
- <span class="smc">Consequences</span></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The governance of the rich</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_141">141</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The direction of life and labour through expenditure</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_143">143</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The cotton trade and the fate of its products</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_144">144</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The demand for woollens</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_145">145</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The call for boots</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_147">147</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The waste of labour of nominally useful workmen</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_149">149</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The parable of the temporary supper-room</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_149">149</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The parable of the Ascot frock</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_151">151</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Mr Rowntree's primary poverty line</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_153">153</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The possible call for commodities by the poor</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_154">154</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The agricultural labourer's call</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_155">155</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The boot employee as a customer for the textile employee</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_156">156</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The Error of Distribution connotes the misdirection and degradation of labour</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_156">156</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td colspan="2" class="chap">CHAPTER XII<br />
- <span class="smc">The Waste of Capital</span></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The national accumulations small in relation to the national income</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_159">159</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">More evidences of poverty than of wealth</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_159">159</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The moral of oversea investments</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_160">160</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Six thousand millions of capital wasted in forty years</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_163">163</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The demand for luxuries misdirects capital</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_164">164</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The waste of capital in the game of competition</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_166">166</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The waste of capital in weak and bogus company promotion</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_166">166</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td colspan="2" class="chap">BOOK II<br />
- <span class="smc">TOWARDS ORGANIZATION</span></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td colspan="2" class="chap">CHAPTER XIII<br />
- <span class="smc">The Golden Key</span></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">More trade and a better distribution</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_171">171</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The social problem must be discussed with reference to the Error of Distribution</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_172">172</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td colspan="2" class="chap">CHAPTER XIV<br />
- <span class="smc">The Nation's Children</span></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The renewal of the race</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_173">173</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The verdict of anthropology</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_173">173</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Injustice before birth and after</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_176">176</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The innocence of the Factory Act</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_178">178</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The Physical Deterioration Committee on reasonable care of the infant</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_180">180</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The mothers of the future</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_181">181</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The mothers of the present</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_181">181</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Women health inspectors</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_182">182</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The public medical service</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_183">183</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The small cost of a public maternity fund</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_184">184</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">A Jewish example</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_185">185</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The birth of a child a matter of national moment</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_187">187</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Neglectful parents must be punished</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_187">187</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The segregation of the unfit</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_187">187</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Twenty-five million births in twenty years</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_189">189</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td colspan="2" class="chap">CHAPTER XV<br />
- <span class="smc">The School</span></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The Error of Distribution and the heritage of the child</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_191">191</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The nation loses the bulk of its intelligence and genius</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_191">191</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The school must be a preparation for life</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_192">192</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The doctor in the school</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_193">193</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The school children of Bradford</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_194">194</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">"The child has got to be fed"</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_196">196</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Observation and expression</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_199">199</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The study of systematized knowledge</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_202">202</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The teaching of hygiene and temperance</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_204">204</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Compulsory continuation schools for both boys and girls</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_204">204</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Can we afford to make our schools what we desire them to be?</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_207">207</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td colspan="2" class="chap">CHAPTER XVI<br />
- <span class="smc">The Home</span></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">An increasing population in a diminishing number of centres</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_209">209</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Our many poorhouses</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_210">210</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The years taken from the lives of the poor</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_211">211</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Crowding and overcrowding</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_212">212</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Tenement statistics</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_212">212</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Overcrowding on area has increased</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_213">213</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Not only death and disease but ugliness to be fought</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_215">215</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Where further building should be prevented</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_217">217</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The housing question as a land question and as a capital question</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_218">218</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The community should be landlord</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_218">218</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The taxation of land on its selling value would assist in municipalizing area</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_219">219</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The small area needed to rehouse our city populations</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_220">220</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The municipality must plan its extensions in advance</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_221">221</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Some examples from Germany</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_222">222</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">An example in the United Kingdom</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_223">223</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">How land and capital enter into the housing problem</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_229">229</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">National housing loans needed</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_231">231</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td colspan="2" class="chap">CHAPTER XVII<br />
- <span class="smc">The Empty Country</span></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The migration from the country to the towns</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_234">234</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The decrease in agricultural employment and its causes</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_240">240</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Agriculture must be an increasingly limited field for employment</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_240">240</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The cheap land outside the towns</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_243">243</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Is control of area worth half a year's income?</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_243">243</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The community can acquire cheap land and make it valuable</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_244">244</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Rising food prices</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_247">247</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Neglected afforestation</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_248">248</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Imperial questions must be treated on an Imperial scale</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_249">249</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td colspan="2" class="chap">CHAPTER XVIII<br />
- <span class="smc">Organization</span></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">An insufficient production of ponderable commodities</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_250">250</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The small stream of ponderable things is made the subject of unnecessary services</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_251">251</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Present production is wasteful</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_252">252</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The waste of labour in competition</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_252">252</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The waste of labour in distribution, etc</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_253">253</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">So called "natural" monopolies</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_255">255</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Monopoly necessary if labour is to be fully economized</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_256">256</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Power distribution and public control</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_256">256</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The problem of monopoly illustrated by the milk trade</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_259">259</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The milk trade typical of many other services</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_262">262</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Municipal and joint-stock direction contrasted</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_263">263</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The management of our railway companies</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_263">263</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The prevalence of nepotism in private enterprise</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_264">264</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The Belgian State railways</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_265">265</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Coal production and distribution</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_267">267</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The private trust the only alternative to public ownership</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_269">269</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Public ownership of capital the only remedy for unemployment</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_270">270</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Those govern who employ</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_271">271</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td colspan="2" class="chap">CHAPTER XIX<br />
- <span class="smc">The Aged Poor</span></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Two million persons over 65 years of age and most of them poor</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_272">272</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Mr Thomas Burt's return of aged paupers</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_273">273</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Mr Ritchie's return of number of paupers relieved during a year</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_275">275</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Of the population aged 65 and over, one in three is a pauper</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_277">277</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Probable number of aged paupers</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_278">278</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Length of the working life</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_280">280</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The Charity Organization Society and cost</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_283">283</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Mr Asquith's Old Age Pension Act</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_284">284</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">First year's working of Old Age Pensions</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_285">285</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Old Age Pensions at 65</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_286">286</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj"></td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_286">286</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td colspan="2" class="chap">CHAPTER XX<br />
- <span class="smc">Adam Smith's First Maxim of Taxation</span></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The famous first maxim self-contradictory</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_287">287</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Taxation in relation to the Error of Distribution</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_288">288</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The doctrine of equality of sacrifice</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_288">288</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">An unanswerable case for repeal of all food duties</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_289">289</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The duties on liquors and tobacco should remain</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_289">289</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td colspan="2" class="chap">CHAPTER XXI<br />
- <span class="smc">The Main Instrument of Taxation</span></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Through an Income Tax taxation can be applied according to "ability"</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_291">291</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The British Income Tax an ancient impost</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_291">291</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The so-called "Land" Tax of 1692 was an income tax</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_292">292</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The "Land" Tax of 1692 and the present Income Tax compared</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_295">295</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">A graduated Income Tax taxes unearned increment</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_296">296</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The Income Tax in 1905 described</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_297">297</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The "Abatements"</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_297">297</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Schedule A described</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_298">298</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Schedule B described</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_299">299</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Schedule C described</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_300">300</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Schedule D described</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_300">300</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Schedule E described</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_302">302</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The Inhabited House Duty a second Income Tax</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_302">302</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The Finance Act of 1907 introduced differentiation between earned and unearned income</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_303">303</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The Finance Act of 1909. Mr Lloyd George's reform of the Income Tax</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_303">303</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Mr Asquith's differentiation illustrated</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_304">304</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The Super-Tax</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_305">305</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The Super-Tax as it really is</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_305">305</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The Income Tax summarized</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_306">306</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The Income Tax in effect</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_307">307</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The Inhabited House Duty should be abolished</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_308">308</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Simplification needed</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_308">308</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Without a Census of Income the Income Tax cannot be properly enforced</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_310">310</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Masters compelled to reveal employees' incomes</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_311">311</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Taxation at the source might remain </td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_312">312</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The family man's allowance</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_314">314</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Is an annual Budget debate necessary?</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_315">315</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Mill and Bentham on Ethics of Taxation</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_317">317</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">A Plain Bill for the citizens' subscription to the National Club</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_318">318</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td colspan="2" class="chap">CHAPTER XXII<br />
- <span class="smc">The Death Duties</span></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The Death Duty Reforms of 1907-9</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_320">320</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">My suggestions of 1905 now law</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_321">321</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The plain justice of the Lloyd George Scale</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_322">322</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The alleged burden of the Death Duties</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_323">323</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Do our Death Duties waste the national capital?</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_323">323</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Gifts <i>inter vivos</i></td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_324">324</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">President Taft on the dangers of wealth monopoly</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_324">324</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td colspan="2" class="chap">CHAPTER XXIII<br />
- <span class="smc">Of Revenue without Taxation</span></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">A source of revenue not necessarily a source of taxation</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_326">326</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">A State without revenue</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_327">327</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Socialism and revenue and taxation</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_327">327</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The German Governments rich are Governments</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_328">328</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Half the revenue of Prussia is derived from Socialism</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_328">328</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Yield of Prussian State Railways</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_329">329</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td colspan="2" class="chap">CHAPTER XXIV<br />
- <span class="smc">Conclusion</span></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Progress in 40 years</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_330">330</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Some items in material progress, 1867-1903</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_332">332</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">What Dudley Baxter wrote in 1867</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_333">333</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The poor within our borders to-day are as large in number as the entire population in 1867</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_338">338</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The employer the effective schoolmaster</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_340">340</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">A poor government is a weak government</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_341">341</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Sir Robert Giffen on taxation</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_341">341</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">We must have regard to both palliatives and remedies</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_342">342</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">Public ownership of capital must replace private ownership</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_343">343</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The substitution of the public shareholder for the private shareholder not difficult</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_344">344</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The uplifting of work through the reduction of toil</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_345">345</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The statesman must take up the tools of the scientist</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_346">346</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The appeal to the few</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_348">348</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj">The appeal to the people</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_348">348</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td colspan="2" class="chap"></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="subj smc">Index</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_351">351</a></td></tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p class="gap-above2 center large">RICHES AND POVERTY</p>
-
- <h2>BOOK I<br />
- <small>THE ERROR OF DISTRIBUTION</small></h2>
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">{3}</a></span>
-
- <h3>CHAPTER I<br />
- <small>THOUGHTS ARISING OUT OF A GREAT CONTROVERSY</small></h3>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">DURING recent years a considerable share of the
-thoughts of men has been devoted to the consideration
-of one part of our fiscal policy,—that part
-which is concerned with Customs duties. In public and
-in private, on hundreds of platforms and in thousands of
-homes, the ancient issue has been debated between those
-who hold that Customs duties should be imposed for revenue
-purposes only and those who contend that Customs duties
-may be used as instruments with which to direct wisely
-the agricultural, industrial and commercial development
-of a nation. In the arguments which have been adduced
-by both sides in this controversy a large part has been
-taken by evidence of the prosperity or want of prosperity
-of the United Kingdom, as though Customs policy
-were the sole factor in determining the wealth and
-progress of a people. Blind to the fact that a wise
-Customs policy can at best enable a nation to make the
-most of its natural advantages, extreme disputants have
-been engaged on the one side in piling up incontestable
-evidences of British wealth and on the other side
-in producing equally incontestable evidences of British
-poverty. The Free Trader has revelled in import and
-export, shipping, banking and revenue statistics, while
-the Protectionist has reminded us of the existence of
-millions on the verge of hunger, of hundreds of thousands
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">{4}</a></span>
-of paupers, and of tens if not hundreds of thousands
-of unemployed. The Free Trader has demonstrated
-that, as a whole, we are a wealthy and a prosperous
-people. The Protectionist has been able to throw
-doubt upon that wealth and prosperity chiefly because
-it is an indisputable fact that, whatever may be true
-of our accumulated wealth and total income, every
-British city has its slums, its paupers and its out-of-works.
-The Protectionist has been unable to resist the
-Free Trade evidence as to the magnificence of our
-commerce and shipping and the increasing national income
-recorded by the Inland Revenue Commissioners.
-The Free Trader has had reluctantly to admit the
-existence, in our wealthy country, of social disorders and
-masses of extreme poverty which are terrible blots upon
-our prosperity. If one side has dwelt almost exclusively
-upon signs of wealth and the other side almost exclusively
-upon evidences of poverty, what else could be expected
-when a highly complicated problem became the shuttlecock
-of faction? Even honest politicians become afraid
-to make statements which may be treated as "admissions"
-when party feeling runs high. The more should we welcome
-the notable utterance of Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman
-at Perth on June 5th, 1903:</p>
-
-<p>"But I take it (the Chamberlain policy of 'Preference')
-as confined to food, and it amounts to this, that the cost of
-the necessaries of daily life is to be raised to the people of
-this country in order that the Colonial producer may do
-more business, make larger profit, and the landowner get
-better rents. Now the pinch of this does not fall upon the
-well-to-do. It may be an inconvenience to a great number
-of people, but the real pinch of it falls upon a needier class
-altogether, who are sadly large among us. What is the
-population of the Colonies which I have named? About
-thirteen millions. This is the population who will share
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">{5}</a></span>
-more or less the benefit of this new arrangement. In this
-country we know, thanks to the patience and accurate
-scientific investigations of Mr Rowntree and Mr Charles
-Booth, that there is about 30 per cent. of our population
-underfed, on the verge of hunger. Thirty per cent. of 41
-millions comes to something over 12 millions—almost
-identical as you see with the whole population of the
-Colonies. So that it comes to this, that for every man in
-the Colonies who is benefited, one head is shoved under
-water in this country. I think I might set down that fact
-as almost enough of itself to condemn any scheme, however
-plausible. Surely the fact that about 30 per cent. of the
-population is living in the grip of perpetual poverty is, or
-ought to be, a sufficient answer to the Prime Minister's
-complacent suggestion that we can now afford to try experiments
-which fifty years ago were not to be thought of."</p>
-
-<p>These words have been widely used as a reply to the
-assertion that we are a prosperous people. Their true
-meaning is, that while we have acquired great wealth,
-and enjoy a considerable national income, that wealth and
-that income are not so distributed as to give a sufficiency
-of material things to all our population. As for their use
-as an "argument" for Protection, we have but to turn to
-that land favoured of nature, the United States of America,
-to find records of poverty fully as distressing as our own.</p>
-
-<p>Mr Robert Hunter, the American sociologist, thus
-summarises the poverty of the United States of America:
-"There are probably in fairly prosperous years no less than
-10,000,000 persons in poverty; that is to say, underfed,
-underclothed, and poorly housed. Of these about 4,000,000
-persons are public paupers. Over 2,000,000 working men
-are unemployed from four to six months in the year.
-About 500,000 male immigrants arrive yearly and seek
-work in the very districts where unemployment is greatest.
-Nearly half of the families in the country are propertyless.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">{6}</a></span>
-Over 1,700,000 little children are forced to become wage-earners
-when they should still be in school. About
-5,000,000 women find it necessary to work, and about
-2,000,000 are employed in factories, mills, etc. Probably
-no less than 1,000,000 workers are injured or killed each
-year while doing their work, and about 10,000,000 of the
-persons now living will, if the present ratio is kept up,
-die of the preventable disease, tuberculosis."</p>
-
-<p>We have, then, to thank the fiscal controversy for this:
-In the belief that evidence of prosperity, or the reverse of
-prosperity, is a proof or disproof, as the case may be, of
-the wisdom of a particular Customs policy, we have been
-reminded at once of our riches and of our poverty.
-Through the controversy over that absurd phrase the
-"balance of trade," worthy landsmen have been reminded
-that the United Kingdom possesses half the world's seagoing
-ships, and poor clerks have learned with astonishment
-that our oversea investments produce over
-£100,000,000 of profits per annum. The unemployed
-workman, drawing from his beneficent trade union the
-small allowance with which his own thrift has provided
-him, and which barely keeps the wolf from his door, has
-learned that our imports of food—"chiefly from foreign
-countries"—are worth £200,000,000 per annum. Millions—other
-people's millions—have become common objects
-of the newspaper column, and it is probable that a great
-part of our population is now acquainted with the fact
-that the gross income brought under the review of the
-Income Tax Commissioners is about £1,000,000,000
-per annum. It has also, alas, become familiar that our Poor
-Law expenditure reaches £17,000,000 a year, and that,
-even in our best years of trade, many of our skilled workmen
-are denied the means of earning their livelihood.
-While demonstrating our prosperity the good Free Trader
-has paused to write a cheque for a West Ham Distress
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">{7}</a></span>
-Fund, or subscribed some shillings for a children's slum
-party.</p>
-
-<p>The object of these pages is to help the reader to form an
-accurate idea of the distribution of the wealth which results
-from our industries and commerce. 44,000,000 people in
-the United Kingdom work to produce certain commodities,
-and a part of this output is exchanged for commodities
-produced in other lands. We produce, we export, and we
-import, and our home production increased by our imports
-and decreased by our exports constitutes a great income
-which is divided up amongst us in such manner that
-some of us are rich and some of us are poor. Let us
-endeavour to make concrete our ideas on the subject of
-riches and poverty, that we make quite sure what we
-mean when we speak of the wealth and prosperity of the
-United Kingdom.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">{8}</a></span>
-
-<h3>CHAPTER II<br />
-<small>THE NATIONAL INCOME</small></h3>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">IN considering and estimating the national income it is
-necessary to remind ourselves, in the first place, that
-our production, our exports and our imports, alike consist of
-both goods and services. The processes of thought and
-action result in the conception, production, distribution
-and use of ponderable and imponderable commodities. In
-an advanced community the greater part of the material
-and immaterial productions which are the expressions of
-its various activities becomes the subject of exchange.
-The many exchanges are made by reference to a common
-standard, and thus we are enabled to measure, in terms of
-money, the greater part of the national income. There
-remains a not inconsiderable production of ponderable and
-imponderable things which it is difficult or impossible
-to measure in terms of money, but upon which largely
-depends the happiness of a people. The material produce
-which does not become the subject of exchange, includes
-several very important items, amongst which may be
-mentioned the produce of the gardens or allotments of
-many agricultural labourers, and the production of clothing
-and the cooking of food by the women of the middle
-and lower classes. The immaterial things which do not
-come into the market are exceedingly important, especially
-to the poor. The household work of a poor woman with
-a husband and several children, if it could be measured in
-terms of money, would be worth a considerable sum. The
-imponderable part, the managing, the careful buying, the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">{9}</a></span>
-arranging, the cleaning, the serving, added to the manufacturing
-part, the cooking and the stitching, go often to
-make a sixteen-hours' working day, and who shall place a
-market price upon each of the sixteen hours? In the well-to-do
-household we also find the woman active for some
-fourteen or sixteen hours a day, but the product of the hours
-is more often immaterial than in the poor man's home.
-Thus the care of servants has been known to cause the
-expenditure of much time and anxiety by women of large
-income. A rich woman who has studied under Marchesi
-may exercise in private, to solace her father or lover, a
-soprano worth one shilling per note in the public concert-room.
-It is worth no less in the drawing-room, but in
-estimating the national income we have to neglect its
-market value just as we must neglect that of the poor
-woman's apple-pie.</p>
-
-<p>With this reminder as to the production of unexchanged
-commodities, which, while important, are yet but an
-exceedingly small part of the product of the entire
-activities of our people, I proceed to an examination of
-the money value of that greater part of the product which
-is bought and sold.</p>
-
-<p>The collection of the Income Tax makes a more or less
-complete inquisition into the profits or salaries received or
-earned by those whose incomes exceed £160 per annum.
-Below that limit income tax is not payable, but a small
-amount of the income of persons with less than this £3 per
-week does actually come under the review of the Commissioners.</p>
-
-<p>If we take the figures of the latest period of which we
-have record, we find that in the financial year 1908-9 (<i>i.e.</i>
-the twelve months ended March 31st, 1909) the following
-particulars of gross incomes were ascertained by the
-Inland Revenue Officials (fifty-third Report of the Commissioners
-of Inland Revenue, Cd. 5308, p. 105):—</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">{10}</a></div>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">GROSS AMOUNT OF INCOME BROUGHT UNDER REVIEW IN 1908-9</p>
-
-<table class="gt1" summary="gt1-1">
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">Schedule A. Profits from the ownership of lands,
- houses, railways, mines, etc.</td>
- <td class="numb">£269,900,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">Schedule B. Profits from the occupation of lands (Farmers' Tax)</td>
- <td class="numb">17,400,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">Schedule C. Profits from British, Indian, Colonial and Foreign
- Government Securities</td>
- <td class="numb">47,500,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">Schedule D. Profits from Businesses, Concerns, Professions, Employments, etc.,
- including certain profits from places abroad</td>
- <td class="numb">565,600,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">Schedule E. Salaries of Government, Corporation,
- and Public Company Officials</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">109,600,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj"></td>
- <td class="numb ulin">£1,010,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>The following table shows the growth of the aggregate
-during the past fifteen years:—</p>
-
-<div class="section">
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">GROSS PROFITS ASSESSED TO INCOME TAX<br />
-(<i>From Inland Revenue Report</i>)<span class="fnanchor"><a
-name="Ref_1" id="Ref_1" href="#Foot_1">[1]</a></span></p>
-
-<table class="gt1" style="max-width:15em" summary="gt1-2">
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">1893-4</td>
- <td class="numb">£673,700,000</td>
- <td class="foot"></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">1894-5</td>
- <td class="numb">657,100,000</td>
- <td class="foot"></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">1895-6</td>
- <td class="numb">677,800,000</td>
- <td class="foot"></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">1896-7</td>
- <td class="numb">704,700,000</td>
- <td class="foot"></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">1897-8</td>
- <td class="numb">734,500,000</td>
- <td class="foot"></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">1898-9</td>
- <td class="numb">762,700,000</td>
- <td class="foot"></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">1899-1900</td>
- <td class="numb">791,700,000</td>
- <td class="foot"></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">1900-1</td>
- <td class="numb">833,300,000</td>
- <td class="foot"></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">1901-2</td>
- <td class="numb">867,000,000</td>
- <td class="foot"></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">1902-3</td>
- <td class="numb">879,600,000</td>
- <td class="foot"></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">1903-4</td>
- <td class="numb">902,800,000</td>
- <td class="foot"><span class="fnanchor"><a
- name="Ref_2" id="Ref_2" href="#Foot_2">[2]</a></span></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">1904-5</td>
- <td class="numb">912,100,000</td>
- <td class="foot"></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">1905-6</td>
- <td class="numb">925,200,000</td>
- <td class="foot"></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">1906-7</td>
- <td class="numb">943,700,000</td>
- <td class="foot"></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">1907-8</td>
- <td class="numb">980,100,000</td>
- <td class="foot"></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">1908-9</td>
- <td class="numb">1,010,000,000</td>
- <td class="foot"></td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">{11}</a></span>
-It should be observed that these figures are for gross income,
-and some adjustments have to be made before we can
-arrive at the total income of that part of the nation which
-has the mingled pleasure and pain of paying Income Tax.</p>
-
-<p>From the £1,010,000,000 brought under review in
-1908-9, the Inland Revenue authorities allowed the following
-deductions before arriving at taxable incomes:—</p>
-
-<table class="gt1" summary="gt1-3">
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cate"><i>(a)</i></td>
- <td class="subj">Exemptions in respect of incomes under £160 per annum</td>
- <td class="numb">£58,400,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cate"><i>(b)</i></td>
- <td class="subj">Abatements on incomes ranging from £160 per annum to £700 per annum</td>
- <td class="numb">120,300,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cate"><i>(c)</i></td>
- <td class="subj">Life Insurance Premiums</td>
- <td class="numb">10,500,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cate"><i>(d)</i></td>
- <td class="subj">Charities, Hospitals, Friendly Societies, etc.</td>
- <td class="numb">11,800,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cate"><i>(e)</i></td>
- <td class="subj">Repairs to Lands and Houses</td>
- <td class="numb">40,100,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cate"><i>(f)</i></td>
- <td class="subj">Wear and tear of Machinery and Plant</td>
- <td class="numb">22,900,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cate"><i>(g)</i></td>
- <td class="subj">Other Allowances</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">52,700,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cate"></td>
- <td class="subj">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Total Deductions</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">£316,700,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p class="nodent">So that Income Tax in 1908-9 was actually collected
-not upon £1,010,000,000 but upon £693,300,000.</p>
-
-<p>But we have not to make all the above deductions in
-arriving at the actual income of the income tax paying
-class. We have only to deduct those items which are not
-the real income of that class, viz.:—</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">{12}</a></div>
-
-<table class="gt1" summary="gt1-4">
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cate"><i>(a)</i></td>
- <td class="subj">Exemptions in respect of incomes under £160 per annum</td>
- <td class="numb">£58,400,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cate"><i>(d)</i></td>
- <td class="subj">Charities, Hospitals, Friendly Societies, etc.</td>
- <td class="numb">11,800,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cate"><i>(e)</i></td>
- <td class="subj">Repairs to Lands and Houses</td>
- <td class="numb">40,100,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cate"><i>(f)</i></td>
- <td class="subj">Wear and tear of Machinery and Plant</td>
- <td class="numb">22,900,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cate"><i>(g)</i></td>
- <td class="subj">Other Allowances</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">52,700,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cate"></td>
- <td class="subj"></td>
- <td class="numb ulin">£185,900,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>Deducting these items we get:—</p>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">GROSS ASSESSMENTS TO INCOME TAX
-CORRECTED<span class="fnanchor"><a
-name="Ref_3" id="Ref_3" href="#Foot_3">[3]</a></span></p>
-
-<table class="gt1" style="max-width:15em" summary="gt1-5">
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">Gross Assessments 1908-9</td>
- <td class="numb">£1,010,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">Less Deductions as above</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">185,900,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj"></td>
- <td class="numb ulin">£824,100,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>This figure may be compared with the £719,500,000
-given on page 11 of "Riches and Poverty" (1905) for the
-fiscal year 1902-3. The increase is no less than
-£104,600,000 in five years, and this increase is especially
-commended to the notice of those critics who have worked
-so hard to whittle away a little from my estimates of
-1903-4. The onward sweep of the figures has been
-magnificent; and accomplished facts now provide the
-apologists of the rich with the task of explaining away
-another £100,000,000 or so per annum.</p>
-
-<p>To resume, the £824,100,000 arrived at above, handsome
-figure as it is, is certainly not complete. There
-is unquestionably still a considerable amount of evasion
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">{13}</a></span>
-under Schedule D of the Income Tax. The landlords of
-Schedule A cannot escape assessment because the tax is
-paid by occupiers and deducted from rent, but there is
-a certain amount of under-assessment. Under Schedules
-B, C and E evasion is, for the most part, difficult or impossible.
-Under Schedule D,<span class="fnanchor"><a
-name="Ref_4" id="Ref_4" href="#Foot_4">[4]</a></span> however, a large number
-of incomes are understated and many which ought to be
-assessed escape altogether. It is almost as true to-day as
-it was in 1861 that, in the words of Mr Lowe's Draft
-Report to the Income Tax Committee of that year,
-"Schedule D depends on the conscience of the tax-payer
-who often, it is to be feared, returns hundreds instead of
-thousands, and who is certain to decide any question that
-he can persuade himself to think doubtful, in his own
-favour." It is recorded by the Income Tax Commissioners
-in their Twenty-Eighth Annual Report that when, in 1803,
-taxation at source was substituted for self-assessment in
-the case of all income but business profits, the effect was
-to make the produce of the tax at 5 per cent. in 1803
-almost equal to that of 10 per cent. in 1799, showing that
-in the earlier year those who assessed themselves unaccountably
-overlooked one-half of their incomes. Dudley Baxter
-reminds us in his classical paper on the National Income<span class="fnanchor"><a
-name="Ref_5" id="Ref_5" href="#Foot_5">[5]</a></span>
-that in his Budget Speech in 1853 Mr Gladstone quoted
-a remarkable instance of evasion. When Cannon Street
-Station was constructed, twenty-eight persons claimed compensation
-for the loss of annual profits which they estimated
-at £48,000. The jury, after considering their case,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">{14}</a></span>
-awarded them £27,000. They had returned their profits
-to the Income Tax Commissioners at £9,000! In recent
-years the formation of limited liability companies has
-frequently revealed profits far in excess of those previously
-stated under Schedule D. Whatever figure we allow for
-such evasion must, in the nature of the case, be conjectural.
-In "Riches and Poverty" (1905), p. 13, I estimated
-evasion and avoidance as 20 per cent. of the declared
-profits. Twenty per cent. of £365,000,000 (the profits of
-"Businesses, Professions, etc," assessed under Schedule D)
-in 1902-3 was £73,000,000. We have since had remarkable
-proof of the reasonableness of this estimate. In
-1907-8 the gross assessments to Income Tax rose by
-£36,000,000 (see p. 11). There is little doubt that part
-of the rise was due to Mr Asquith's enactment (Finance
-Act, 1907, Clause 19) differentiating between earned and
-unearned incomes <i>on the condition that earned or partly
-earned incomes up to £2,000 a year were declared by their
-owners</i>. For the financial year 1907-8 does not include
-the profits of the good year 1907 which (see Chap. 21)
-were not assessed under our averaging system until 1908-9.
-It was the new personal declarations which led to the
-revelation of income hitherto escaping tax, and part of the
-£36,000,000 rise in assessments in 1907-8 is undoubtedly
-part also of the estimate of £73,000,000 escaping tax
-which I made in "Riches and Poverty" (1905). For
-1908-9, therefore, I reduce my estimate of income escaping
-tax accordingly. I now take it as £60,000,000 in 1908-9.</p>
-
-<p>Another point for consideration is the amount of profit
-received by persons in this country from places abroad.
-It is exceedingly difficult to tax the whole of such profits.
-In 1908-9, £88,800,000, made up as follows, was ear-marked
-by the Commissioners as profit received from
-abroad:—</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">{15}</a></div>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">ASSESSED PROFITS EAR-MARKED AS RECEIVED FROM ABROAD, 1908-9</p>
-
-<table class="gt1" summary="gt1-6">
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cate">(1)</td>
- <td class="subj">India Government Stocks, Loans and Guaranteed Railways</td>
- <td class="numb">£9,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cate">(2)</td>
- <td class="subj">Colonial or Foreign Government Securities</td>
- <td class="numb">23,200,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cate">(3)</td>
- <td class="subj">Colonial or Foreign Securities, other than Government,
- Coupons, and Oversea Railways other than those in (1)</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">56,600,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cate"></td>
- <td class="subj"></td>
- <td class="numb ulin">£88,800,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>The total profit received or receivable yearly in this
-country from oversea investments it is impossible to estimate
-precisely, but there is good reason to believe that it
-is not less than £140,000,000. It should not be imagined,
-however, that the whole of the difference between this sum
-and that ear-marked by the Commissioners escapes assessment.
-Undoubtedly some of it eludes taxation, but a considerable
-sum, it should be remembered, is included with
-ordinary business profits under Schedule D. A few illustrations
-will make this clear. Messrs Armstrong, Whitworth
-&amp; Co. have a shipyard in Italy the profits of which are
-received in this country, but are not distinguished from
-the ordinary profits of the company in the income-tax
-assessment. The same is true of such a firm as Lipton Ld.
-which owns extensive tea plantations in Ceylon. The
-profits made in Ceylon and remitted to this country are
-included in and assessed with the general profits of the
-business. There are a large number of firms which
-similarly own foreign or colonial property or branches
-which are organic parts of their businesses and are often
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">{16}</a></span>
-the sources of their materials. When allowance is made
-for these facts it is probable that some £115,000,000 of
-oversea profits (including the nearly £90,000,000 or so
-actually ear-marked) are assessed to income tax, leaving
-but about £25,000,000 unassessed.</p>
-
-<p>Accepting these figures, we arrive at the following estimate
-of the total income enjoyed by those persons who
-have over £3 per week:—</p>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">INCOME OF PERSONS ENJOYING OVER £160
-PER ANNUM, 1908-9</p>
-
-<table class="gt1" summary="gt1-7">
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="subj">Gross Assessments to Income Tax Schedules A, B, C, D, and E</td>
- <td class="numb">£1,010,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cate"></td>
- <td class="subj">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>Deduct</i></td>
- <td class="numb"></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="subj">Items not representing real income, etc. (see page 12)</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">185,900,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cate"></td>
- <td class="subj"></td>
- <td class="numb">£824,100,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cate"></td>
- <td class="subj">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>Add</i></td>
- <td class="numb"></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cate"><i>(a)</i></td>
- <td class="subj">For under-assessment under Schedule D</td>
- <td class="numb">60,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cate"><i>(b)</i></td>
- <td class="subj">Foreign profits escaping tax</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">25,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cate"></td>
- <td class="subj"></td>
- <td class="numb ulin">£909,100,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>The foregoing figures relate to the fiscal year ended
-March 31st, 1909, the latest period for which detailed
-figures are available.</p>
-
-<p>It is necessary to point out again that while this fiscal
-year 1908-9 covered the assessment of the calendar year
-1907, which was a year of great profit-making, it did
-not fully assess the profits of that boom year. Under
-Schedule D of the Income Tax the profits assessed in
-1908-9 were the profits of the three years 1905, 1906,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">{17}</a></span>
-and 1907. That is to say, the figures just arrived at,
-£909,100,000, <i>are an understatement of the true aggregate
-incomes of those having upwards of £160 a year in 1907</i>.
-The actual income of the income tax payers in 1907
-greatly exceeded £909,000,000.</p>
-
-<p>In "Riches and Poverty" (1905) my equally conservative
-estimate of the income tax payers' aggregate
-income for 1903-4 was £830,000,000. We therefore
-get the following comparison:—</p>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">GROWTH OF AGGREGATE INCOME OF PERSONS
-ENJOYING OVER £160 A YEAR</p>
-
-<table class="gt1" summary="gt1-8">
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cate" style="width:4.5em">1903-4.</td>
- <td class="subj">Estimate of "Riches and Poverty" (1905)</td>
- <td class="numb">£830,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cate" style="width:4.5em">1908-9.</td>
- <td class="subj">Estimate of this Edition (1910)</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">909,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cate" style="width:4.5em"></td>
- <td class="subj">Increase</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">£79,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>And this remarkable growth in five years is shown in
-spite of the fact that I have allowed for £13,000,000 of
-income tax assessment as being due to increased severity
-of collection, for I have assumed that £13,000,000 more
-of existing home profits were revealed in 1908-9 than in
-1903-4.</p>
-
-<p>Now let us turn to the incomes which do not exceed
-£160 a year, and which, therefore, are not assessable to
-income tax.</p>
-
-<p>First of all, we have the class of small incomes which
-lie between the manual workers and the income tax
-payers. We cannot hope, in view of the poverty of the
-information which our present Census methods place at
-our disposal, to estimate this part of the national income
-with any degree of confidence, and we can at best arrive
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">{18}</a></span>
-at a rough approximation. I estimate that in 1908, of
-our "occupied" population, about 3,100,000 were neither
-income tax payers on the one hand nor manual labourers
-on the other hand. That is to say, they were petty tradesmen,
-civil servants, clerks, shopmen, travellers, canvassers,
-agents, teachers, farmers, inn-keepers, lodging-house-keepers,
-pensioners, and so forth, whose profits or salaries
-are below £3 per week. At what rate can we estimate
-their average income?</p>
-
-<p>The total includes a very considerable number of young
-persons between 10 and 20 years of age. The teachers,
-some 250,000 in number, include pupil teachers of both
-sexes whose remuneration begins at a few shillings per
-week, and as a whole the teaching profession is wretchedly
-paid. The commercial and law clerks, some 500,000 in
-number, include juniors, office boys, and poorly paid girl
-typists. As to shopkeepers, there is an exceedingly large
-number of these distributing agents whose incomes are of
-the slenderest dimensions. Unfortunately we do not know
-how many shops in the United Kingdom have an annual
-value of less than £20, but their number must be very
-great, and the petty tradesmen who keep them have to
-work hard for poor returns. We have also to remember
-the quite considerable number of shops which are branches
-of great distributive firms and managed by shopmen with
-small salaries. As to shop assistants in general, their
-salaries are exceedingly small. I am informed by the
-National Amalgamated Union of Shop Assistants, Warehousemen
-and Clerks that the average male assistant
-"living in" gets from £25 to £30 per annum plus
-"premiums" and board and lodging, while "living out"
-the average is about £74. Grocery and boot salesmen
-in the shops of big distributing companies, who often are
-not required to "live in," get from 20s. to 30s. per week.
-The wages of the "managers" of shops are sometimes as
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">{19}</a></span>
-low as 25s. per week. As for the value of the "living in,"
-this may be illustrated by the fact that in a certain West
-of London house, where "living in" is the rule, a man
-applied for permission to "live out." He was told that
-he could do so, but that only £5 per annum extra could
-be allowed him. In a return to the Board of Trade for
-the purpose of statistics, the same employer would doubtless
-value the same "truck" at £30 or £40 per annum.
-I have before me the wages paid to the young women
-who work for a great multiple shop firm with 200 shops;
-they range from 3s. to 11s. per week!</p>
-
-<p>Passing to the class of commercial travellers and
-canvassers, there is perhaps no calling in which earnings
-vary so greatly. While there are a number in the income-tax
-class, there are thousands of men included in the class
-we are now considering who live on "commission only,"
-and thousands more who are paid by generous employers
-15s. to 25s. per week plus a small commission. Advertisement
-and book canvassers are engaged upon widely
-varying terms, and many of them have a very precarious
-livelihood.</p>
-
-<p>In "Riches and Poverty," edition 1905, I wrote:
-"Nearly the whole of the farmers of the United Kingdom
-earn less than £160 per annum. Out of a total profit of
-£17,500,000 as much as £11,000,000 is excused on the
-ground that income is below £160. This £17,500,000
-is the annual income of an uncertain number of the larger
-farmers, probably as many as 300,000, which gives an
-average income of about £60 per annum! In 1902-3,
-302 farmers elected to have their actual profits assessed
-under Schedule D. They were assessed at £10,974,
-which gives an average of only £37 per annum. These
-302 farmers paid an aggregate rental of £116,259!"</p>
-
-<p>These remarks did not take sufficient account of the
-under-assessment of farmers' profits under Schedule B.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">{20}</a></span>
-It would probably have been nearer the mark to take one-half
-of the rental paid rather than the official one-third as
-representing farmers' profits. If we did so, the profits of
-300,000 farmers would come out at say £26,000,000 instead
-of £17,500,000, and the average profit would run to £87
-per annum. Even this correction, however, would leave the
-great majority of our farmers under the £160 income tax line.</p>
-
-<p>These notes on some of the largest classes of persons
-which go to make up the order of incomes immediately
-under consideration will serve to show that we are dealing
-with working men and working women whose earnings
-are exceedingly small. It should also be remembered
-that many of them are subject to losses from terms of
-unemployment. Clerks and the poorer travellers have
-little security of tenure, and at any given time there are
-many out of work. Hundreds of applications are commonly
-received in reply to single advertisements for clerks and
-travellers. To the petty tradesman bad trade does not
-spell "unemployment," but it often spells keeping a shop
-which does not keep its proprietor for many months.</p>
-
-<p>Taking everything into consideration, and remembering
-that no large incomes are introduced to weight the average,
-the upper limit being as low as £160 per annum, I do not
-think we can estimate the average income of the 3,100,000
-persons at more than £75 per annum, and I should put
-the figure lower if I did not assume that a certain amount
-of interest is drawn by some members of the group. This
-estimate gives £232,000,000 as the annual income of
-those who are not "manual" workers, but whose incomes
-are not assessed to income tax because they are less than
-£3 per week.</p>
-
-<p>I have thus assigned to these members of the lower
-middle classes no greater earning power than they
-possessed in 1903. I think I am well advised in this.
-As will be seen later, wages have been almost stationary
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">{21}</a></span>
-of late, and there is no reason to believe that clerks,
-commission men, etc., have fared better. Even as I
-write there comes to me a letter from a man whom I
-employed when editing a newspaper some years ago.
-He says (August 1910), "My present wage is 25s. per
-week, with no allowance for lodging out when doing
-country work. It is easily understood that this is not a
-sum which allows of luxuries for the present or provision
-for the future." He is now a directory canvasser, one of
-thousands in the employ of a large firm of publishers.</p>
-
-<p>Since these pages went to the printer, a Committee of
-the British Association has issued a Report (1910) on
-the group of incomes just referred to which largely confirms
-the conclusions I presented in 1905. The Committee
-arrive at an average earned income of £71 against
-the £75 which I consider to cover both earned and
-unearned incomes. They treat of 4,000,000 people where
-I treat of 3,100,000, but that is because, while I exclude
-manual labourers as a class, the Committee include many
-manual labourers. Thus the Committee include sweeps
-in this intermediate class, while I include them with the
-manual workers whose earnings we shall next consider.</p>
-
-<p>We now come to the largest class of the working population,
-the "manual workers" commonly so called.</p>
-
-<p>Including persons of both sexes and all ages, I estimate
-from the census returns the number of manual workers in
-our population of 44,500,000 at 15,500,000. This number
-includes, in addition to all those engaged in industrial,
-agricultural, and domestic service, soldiers, sailors, policemen,
-and postmen.</p>
-
-<p>In 1886 the Board of Trade conducted the only
-Census of Wages made in the United Kingdom prior
-to 1907. (We have not yet had a report on the later
-Census.) Sir Robert Giffen, who in his then capacity as
-Assistant Secretary of the Board of Trade in charge of the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">{22}</a></span>
-Commercial Department, directed the Census, describes in
-his General Report issued in 1893 (C. 6889) the method
-adopted. Schedules were sent out to employers, after
-careful consideration of the circumstances of each industry,
-specifying the various occupations of each trade and asking
-for details as to rates of wages, the numbers employed at
-each rate, the hours of labour, and so forth.</p>
-
-<p>As to industrial employment generally the following
-trades were investigated: Cotton, woollen, worsted, linen,
-jute, hemp, silk, carpet, hosiery and lace manufacture,
-smallwares, flock and shoddy manufacture, coal and iron
-mines, metalliferous mines, paraffin oil works, slate mines
-and quarries, granite quarries and works, stone quarries,
-china clay works, police, construction and care of roads,
-pavements and sewers, gasworks, waterworks, pig-iron
-manufacture, general engineering, iron and brass foundries,
-iron and steel, shipbuilding (iron and wood), tin plate
-manufacture, saw mills, brass and metal wares, cooperage
-works, coach and carriage building, boot and shoe making,
-breweries, distilleries, brick and tile making, chemical
-manure manufacture, and railway carriage and wagon
-building.</p>
-
-<p>The details obtained related to 355,838 men, 80,253
-boys, 151,263 women and 48,772 girls, and were considered
-by Sir Robert Giffen to be "representative of, perhaps,
-three-fourths of the manual labour classes of the United
-Kingdom." He also expressed the opinion that the
-"broad results shown by the census summary would not
-be sensibly modified by including the great mass of other
-employments not comprised in that summary."</p>
-
-<p>In the following table the Board of Trade summarised
-the proportion of men, women, boys and girls working at
-various rates of wages, in 1886, in the industries which I
-have mentioned:—</p>
-
-<div class="section">
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">{23}</a></div>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">WAGES IN 1886. THE BOARD OF TRADE SUMMARY OF RATES OF WAGES<br />
- (NOT ACTUAL EARNINGS) DERIVED FROM THE DETAILED EXAMINATION<br />
- OF 38 SELECTED INDUSTRIAL OCCUPATIONS</p>
-
-<table class="gt1" summary="gt1-9">
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj" style="width:10em"></td>
- <td class="numb small">Men.<br />Per Cent.</td>
- <td class="numb small">Women.<br />Per Cent.</td>
- <td class="numb small">Boys.<br />Per Cent.</td>
- <td class="numb small">Girls.<br />Per Cent.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">Half Timers</td>
- <td class="numb">——</td>
- <td class="numb">——</td>
- <td class="numb">11.9</td>
- <td class="numb">27.2</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">Under 10s. per week</td>
- <td class="numb">0.1</td>
- <td class="numb">26.0</td>
- <td class="numb">49.7</td>
- <td class="numb">62.5</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">10s. to 15s.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="numb">2.4</td>
- <td class="numb">50.0</td>
- <td class="numb">32.5</td>
- <td class="numb">8.9</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">15s. to 20s.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="numb">21.5</td>
- <td class="numb">18.5</td>
- <td class="numb">5.8</td>
- <td class="numb">1.4</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">20s. to 25s.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="numb">33.6</td>
- <td class="numb">5.4</td>
- <td class="numb">0.1</td>
- <td class="numb">——</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">25s. to 30s.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="numb">24.2</td>
- <td class="numb">0.1</td>
- <td class="numb">——</td>
- <td class="numb">——</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">30s. to 35s.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="numb">11.6</td>
- <td class="numb">——</td>
- <td class="numb">——</td>
- <td class="numb">——</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">35s. to 40s.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="numb">4.2</td>
- <td class="numb">——</td>
- <td class="numb">——</td>
- <td class="numb">——</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">Above 40s.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">2.4</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">——</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">——</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">——</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Total</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">100.0</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">100.0</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">100.0</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">100.0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">Average Rate</td>
- <td class="numb"><i>s.&nbsp;&nbsp;d.</i></td>
- <td class="numb"><i>s.&nbsp;&nbsp;d.</i></td>
- <td class="numb"><i>s.&nbsp;&nbsp;d.</i></td>
- <td class="numb"><i>s.&nbsp;&nbsp;d.</i></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">&nbsp;&nbsp;of wages</td>
- <td class="numb">24&nbsp;&nbsp;9</td>
- <td class="numb">12&nbsp;11</td>
- <td class="numb">9&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2</td>
- <td class="numb">6&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;5</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>It will be seen that the average rate of men's wages
-came out at 24s. 9d. per week or, say, £64 per annum in
-a year of constant occupation. The weighted average
-rate for both sexes and all ages comes out at 17s. 6d. per
-week or, counting 52 weeks' work in the year, £45. 10s.
-per annum.</p>
-
-<p>The Board of Trade also investigated the rates of wages
-in other occupations, and the following table compares the
-£64 of the adult males in general industries with the rates
-of wages paid to adult males in (1) railway service, (2)
-building, (3) mercantile marine, (4) Royal Navy, (5) Army,
-(6) domestic service, (7) asylums, (8) hospitals (in 1886
-unless another date is given):—</p>
-
-<div class="section">
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">{24}</a></div>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">AVERAGE RATES OF WAGES (NOT ACTUAL
-EARNINGS) FOR MEN IN 1886</p>
-
-<table class="gt1" summary="gt1-10">
-
-<colgroup>
- <col style="width:80%" />
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj"></td>
- <td class="numb"><small>Per Annum</small></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">Average of Wage Census (38 Industrial occupations)</td>
- <td class="numb">£64</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">Railways (for 1891)</td>
- <td class="numb">60</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">Building Trades (for 1891)</td>
- <td class="numb">73</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">Seamen: Mercantile Marine, including estimated value of food and berths</td>
- <td class="numb">65</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">Royal Navy, including value of food, etc.</td>
- <td class="numb">65</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">Army (Non-Coms, and men). Including value of food, etc.</td>
- <td class="numb">48</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">Domestic Servants (large households). Including value of food, etc.</td>
- <td class="numb">68</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">Employees in Lunatic Asylums. Including value of food, etc.</td>
- <td class="numb">60</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">Employees in Hospitals and Infirmaries. Including value of food, etc.</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">61</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Unweighted Average</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">£62</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>In his report already referred to, Sir Robert Giffen,
-after detailing the average rates of the above table, says
-(p. xxxiii): "Thus in nearly all these trades the average
-rates are about the same as the average rate in the Census
-of Wages Summary." But the table does not include the
-badly paid agricultural labourer, the largest group of all,
-and the figures for seamen, etc., are, it should be observed,
-swollen by estimates of the value of board and lodging.</p>
-
-<p>Finally, Sir Robert Giffen arrived at the general conclusion
-that "the broad results shown by the census summary
-would not be sensibly modified by including the great mass
-of other employments not comprised in that summary."</p>
-
-<p>In January 1893 Sir Robert Giffen gave evidence before
-the Labour Commission and submitted the facts I have
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">{25}</a></span>
-detailed. He prepared a general estimate of the proportion
-of the national income then taken by the wage-earning
-classes, and his evidence on this point (questions 6909 to
-6914) is summarized in the following table:—</p>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">EARNINGS OF MANUAL LABOURERS IN 1886<br />
-(Sir Robert Giffen's estimate for the Labour Commission)</p>
-
-<table class="gt1" style="max-width:25em" summary="gt1-11">
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj"></td>
- <td class="numb small">Number.</td>
- <td class="numb small" style="width:8em">Annual Average<br />per Wage-Earner.</td>
- <td class="numb small">Aggregate Earnings.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">Men</td>
- <td class="numb">7,300,000</td>
- <td class="numb">£60&nbsp;&nbsp;0&nbsp;&nbsp;0</td>
- <td class="numb">£439,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">Women</td>
- <td class="numb">2,900,000</td>
- <td class="numb">40&nbsp;&nbsp;0&nbsp;&nbsp;0</td>
- <td class="numb">118,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">Boys</td>
- <td class="numb">1,700,000</td>
- <td class="numb">23&nbsp;&nbsp;8&nbsp;&nbsp;0</td>
- <td class="numb">46,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">Girls</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">1,260,000</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">23&nbsp;&nbsp;0&nbsp;&nbsp;0</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">29,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj"></td>
- <td class="numb ulin">13,200,000</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">£48&nbsp;&nbsp;0&nbsp;&nbsp;0</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">£633,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>There can be no question that this estimate of Sir
-Robert Giffen's somewhat exaggerated the actual earnings
-of manual labourers as a whole. In the first place, it was
-too much to assume that the 24s. 9d. per week or £64
-per annum was representative of the whole of adult male
-labour. Without introducing agricultural labourers (the
-largest group in the country), general labourers, postmen,
-and other ill-paid workers, the unweighted average of the
-table on page 24 is £62. If £60 per annum had been given
-as the average <i>rate of wages</i> of all the adult male workers
-in 1886 it would probably have been an exaggeration. It
-was not given as a rate of wages, however, but as the actual
-earnings of the men after all allowance made for short time,
-unemployment, sickness, accidents, strikes, lockouts, stress
-of weather, etc. Sir Robert Giffen appears to have assumed
-that all the adult male workers of the United Kingdom
-were employed on the average about 50 weeks out of 52,
-and were paid at the average rate of £64 per annum!</p>
-
-<p>In 1866 Leone Levi, in estimating the manual workers'
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">{26}</a></span>
-earnings, assumed that four weeks per annum were lost.
-Dudley Baxter in 1867 pointed out, in criticism of Leone
-Levi, that if four weeks' "play" were all that need
-be allowed "England would be a perfect Paradise for
-working men."<span class="fnanchor"><a
-name="Ref_6" id="Ref_6" href="#Foot_6">[6]</a></span> Dudley Baxter, in view of the circumstances
-of his day, allowed ten weeks for "play" in making
-his estimate, and there can be no question that he was
-nearer the truth than Levi. At the present day the level
-of employment is very much the same as it has been for
-the past forty years, while sickness, accidents, and the
-weather are still with us. We need not wonder, then, if
-Professor A. L. Bowley, who has given the subject of wages
-so much attention, bases his estimates upon the loss of six
-weeks' work per annum through sickness and holidays, and
-makes an additional allowance for unemployment, while
-also assuming that 10 per cent. of the working population
-only get casual or irregular work, bringing them in about
-half the amount shown in the Wage Census.<span class="fnanchor"><a
-name="Ref_7" id="Ref_7" href="#Foot_7">[7]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>If the estimate given to the Labour Commission had
-allowed for six weeks' "play," the average earnings of men,
-women, boys and girls would have come out at £40. 5s.
-per annum instead of £48, and the aggregate earnings,
-therefore, at much less than £633,000,000. Leone Levi's
-estimate for 1884, allowing for only four weeks' play in the
-year, was £521,000,000. This figure is too large, but it is
-over £100,000,000 less than that of Sir Robert Giffen.</p>
-
-<p>I now take the Wage Census figure of 1886 as a basis
-and correct it for the upward movement of wages since
-that date by the wage index numbers of the Board of
-Trade (Cd. 4954, which slightly corrects the index
-numbers of Cd. 1761, used in "Riches and Poverty,"
-1905 edition, p. 24), which are based on the mean of over
-150 rates:—</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">{27}</a></div>
-
-<table class="gt1" summary="gt1-12">
-
-<colgroup>
- <col style="width:50%" />
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj small" style="width:8em"><br /><br />Year.</td>
- <td class="numb small">Average Wage<br />(Men, Women and<br />Children) per Week.</td>
- <td class="numb small">Board of Trade Index Number 1900=100. *</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj"></td>
- <td class="numb">s.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;d.</td>
- <td class="numb"></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">1886 (Wage Census figure)</td>
- <td class="numb">17&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;6</td>
- <td class="numb">82.86</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">1900&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"&nbsp;&nbsp;
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="numb">21&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1</td>
- <td class="numb">100.00</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">1908&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"&nbsp;&nbsp;
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="numb">21&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3</td>
- <td class="numb">101.02</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p class="small">* The meaning of this column is that, if the average wage of 1900 be
-represented by 100, the average wage of 1886 is represented by 82·86 and
-that of 1908 by 101·02.</p>
-
-<p>We thus arrive at 21s. 3d. as the average weekly wage
-of the manual workers in 1908. There is much reason
-to believe that this estimate errs on the side of liberality.
-It is unfortunate that we have not a compulsory wage
-census, and the method of estimation used here can pretend
-to no more than approximation. It neglects the important
-fact that between 1886 and 1908 the ranks of women
-and child workers have swollen at the expense of adult
-male workers. The 15,500,000 (estimated) manual
-workers of 1908 consisted as to a larger proportion of
-women and children than the 13,200,000 (estimated)
-manual workers of 1886. I regard the 21s. 3d.,
-therefore, as the most liberal figure that can be put forward
-as the average earnings of the men and women and child
-workers of the United Kingdom in 1908.</p>
-
-<p>We have now to decide what allowances should be
-made (1) for the great army of casual, incompetent, and
-aged or ageing workers who figure in the census returns as
-following definite occupations, and (2) for the loss of time
-through unemployment, sickness, accidents, stress of
-weather, strikes, lockouts, "bank" and other holidays,
-etc., in the case of the remaining workers.</p>
-
-<p>With regard to the first item, I do not think we are
-justified in estimating the incompetents and casuals at
-less than 1,000,000 out of the 15,500,000. For the purposes
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">{28}</a></span>
-of the present estimate, I assume that these 1,000,000
-workers earn, on the average, £25 per head per annum, or
-an aggregate of £25,000,000. My view is that this is a
-liberal estimate of the earnings of what may be termed
-the camp-followers of the industrial army.</p>
-
-<p>With regard to the remaining 14,500,000, we have to
-form an estimate of the amount of time lost per annum
-through voluntary or enforced leisure. No certain information
-exists, and the widest differences of opinion
-have been expressed on the subject. As I have said
-above, Dudley Baxter took ten weeks; Leone Levi took
-four weeks; Mr A. L. Bowley takes six weeks plus a
-further allowance for unemployment.</p>
-
-<p>The Board of Trade, in their recent examination of
-fluctuations in employment, made an analysis from the
-records of the Amalgamated Society of Engineers, combined
-with information supplied by employers, of the time
-lost in the engineering trade. They came to the conclusion
-that, in an average year, perhaps 8 per cent. of working
-time was lost from all causes, and expressed the opinion
-that in a good year the loss might fall to 4 per cent. and
-in a bad year rise to 15 per cent. or more (Cd. 2337,
-p. 101). This would mean, for the engineering trade
-only, a loss of time varying from only two weeks in the
-year to as much as eight weeks or more.</p>
-
-<p>In other employments the widest variations exist. There
-are the quite regular employments, such as the army, the
-navy, the postal service, the police service, and, for the
-greater part, the railway service. There are violently
-fluctuating employments, such as the building trades
-and the shipbuilding trades. In all alike, sickness takes
-its toll, and unemployment arises from accidents, from
-disputes, from "drink," and from seasonal influences and
-depression, while, on the other hand, overtime occasionally
-goes to swell the aggregate earnings.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">{29}</a></span>
-I make the assumption that the average working
-year of the 14,500,000 remaining wage-earners consists
-of 44 weeks. Applying the average wage already
-arrived at (21s. 3d. per week), we get an average
-annual earning of, say, £46. 15s., which gives us
-£678,000,000 as the probable aggregate earnings of the
-14,500,000 workers. Adding the £25,000,000 assumed
-to be earned by the remaining 1,000,000, we arrive at
-£703,000,000 as the total earnings of the manual labourers
-in 1908.</p>
-
-<p>It is probable that this calculation does not take sufficient
-account either of the changes of occupations since 1886,
-or, as has been already pointed out, of the changes in the
-respective proportions of men, women and children
-employed. The average wage of the 1886 Census, taken
-as the basis of the calculation, was, it is necessary to insist,
-exaggerated by the omission of the most ill-paid workmen,
-while the returns upon which it was based, framed
-as they were by employers, are only too likely in a
-proportion of cases to have put the wages paid in the
-most favourable light. The employers again, who filled
-in the forms, were only some 75 per cent. of the firms
-applied to by the Board of Trade, and it is a fair inference
-that those who neglected to reply had no excessive pride
-in the records of their wage-sheets. I submit, therefore,
-that as the 1886 average wage figure is a liberal estimate,<span class="fnanchor"><a
-name="Ref_8" id="Ref_8" href="#Foot_8">[8]</a></span>
-the figure which I have deduced from it does not, in all
-probability, err on the side of under-estimation.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">{30}</a></span>
-Professor Bowley estimates the total paid in wages in
-1901 as £705,000,000,<span class="fnanchor"><a
-name="Ref_9" id="Ref_9" href="#Foot_9">[9]</a></span> and the Board of Trade in the
-Fiscal Blue Book of 1903 (Cd. 1761) say:—</p>
-
-<p>"From investigations based on the Board of Trade
-Census of Wages (1886) combined with the recorded
-changes of wages since that date and the distribution of
-the working population among various industries as shown
-in the census returns, the total wages bill of the United
-Kingdom has been estimated at between £700,000,000 and
-£750,000,000, according to the state of employment."</p>
-
-<p>The estimate which I have given, therefore, differs but
-little from those of Professor Bowley and the Board of
-Trade.<span class="fnanchor"><a
-name="Ref_10" id="Ref_10" href="#Foot_10">[10]</a></span>
-I prefer to use the smaller figures on several
-grounds. In the first place, the allowance for "play"
-is a conservative one. In the second place, I have the
-gravest doubts as to the propriety of including in the
-estimates of the wages of domestic servants, sailors, and
-others, an allowance for the value of "lodging," as is done
-in the figures used. To include so many shillings a week
-for the accommodation afforded by a seaman's bunk or a
-general servant's fraction of an attic is to flatter "earnings"
-out of all resemblance to the truth. The free cottages and
-other allowances to agricultural labourers are often of a
-scarcely marketable character. We may be justified in
-valuing an unhealthy hovel at 1s. 6d. per week, in view
-of the fact that the labourer, if he had it not, would
-need to pay rent elsewhere, but in too many cases the
-"cottage" is fit not for inhabitation but for demolition.
-In the third place, no allowance is made for the excessive
-rents paid by workmen in London and other large towns.
-These rents are really part of the working expenses of the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">{31}</a></span>
-wage earners, and there is as good ground for making
-deductions on account of them as there is for deducting
-wear and tear of machinery in the case of income-tax
-incomes.</p>
-
-<p>We can now arrive at an approximate estimate of the
-National Income as a whole in 1908-9 (say 1908).</p>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">THE NATIONAL INCOME IN 1908</p>
-
-<table class="gt1" summary="gt1-13">
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cate">(1)</td>
- <td class="subj">Persons with incomes which exceed £160 per annum</td>
- <td class="numb">£909,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cate">(2)</td>
- <td class="subj">Persons with incomes below £160 per annum:—</td>
- <td class="numb"></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cate"></td>
- <td class="subj"><i>(a)</i> Persons earning small salaries, petty tradesmen, etc.</td>
- <td class="numb">232,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cate"></td>
- <td class="subj"><i>(b)</i> The wage-earning classes</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">703,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cate"></td>
- <td class="subj"></td>
- <td class="numb ulin">£1,844,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>It will be seen that <i>the income tax exemption limit of £160
-per annum splits the national income into two almost equal
-parts</i>. Of a total income amounting to £1,844,000,000
-in 1908, those with over £160 per annum took
-£909,000,000, while those with less than £160 per
-annum took £935,000,000.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_1" id="Foot_1" href="#Ref_1">[1]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Figures examined in "Riches and Poverty" (1905), Chapter 2.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_2" id="Foot_2" href="#Ref_2">[2]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-In "Riches and Poverty" (1905), Chapter 2, I estimated this figure at
-£900,600,000.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_3" id="Foot_3" href="#Ref_3">[3]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-It has been too freely assumed in calculating the national income that the
-gross assessments represent actual income.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_4" id="Foot_4" href="#Ref_4">[4]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-As Schedule D is an exceedingly important gauge of national prosperity,
-it may be well to remind the reader of its precise application. It is a tax upon
-all income derived from trades, industries and professions, and from all sources
-not specified under the other four Schedules. Profits from businesses established
-in places abroad are assessable under it. The assessments are made
-annually, and are generally based upon the mean of the income received during
-the preceding three years. Fuller particulars will be found in Chapter 21.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_5" id="Foot_5" href="#Ref_5">[5]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-"National Income." R. Dudley Baxter. Macmillan &amp; Co. 1868.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_6" id="Foot_6" href="#Ref_6">[6]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-"The National Income," Dudley Baxter.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_7" id="Foot_7" href="#Ref_7">[7]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-"Economic Journal," Sept. 1904. Page 458.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_8" id="Foot_8" href="#Ref_8">[8]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Take, for example, the boot and shoe trade. The Wage Census for 1886
-(Cd. 6889, p. xiii.) gives the average earnings in boot and shoe factories (both
-sexes and all ages) as £48 per annum. In 1908, more than twenty years after,
-the Board of Trade "Labour Gazette" shows, from employers' returns, that
-(in a July week) 60,337 boot workers took only £58,147 in wages, which is
-about 19s. per week or £49, 8s. in a year of 52 such weeks. With regard to
-this trade, it is clear that either the 1886 estimate was too liberal, or that
-earnings have been practically stationary in the twenty years.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_9" id="Foot_9" href="#Ref_9">[9]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-"Economic Journal," September 1904.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_10" id="Foot_10" href="#Ref_10">[10]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-If, however, the reader prefers to rely upon the larger estimates he will
-find that the general conclusions of this and the following chapter remain
-practically unaltered.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">{32}</a></span>
-
-<h3>CHAPTER III<br />
-<small>DISTRIBUTION OF THE NATIONAL INCOME</small></h3>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">TAKING the population of the United Kingdom,
-1908, at 44,500,000, and the total income at
-£1,844,000,000, we get an average income per head of
-about £40.</p>
-
-<p>Thus, if the income of the nation were equally distributed
-amongst its inhabitants, a family of five persons would
-enjoy an income of about £200 per annum.</p>
-
-<p>But how is the £1,840,000,000 actually divided amongst
-our people? Contrasts between great riches and extreme
-poverty are every day presented to our eyes. Can we do
-anything to reduce to a definite shape our vague conceptions
-of riches and poverty?</p>
-
-<p>Investigation of the material at our disposal has convinced
-me that it is hopeless to do very much in the way
-of detailed classification of incomes. Our census methods
-are ridiculously inadequate, and our inquisition into individual
-incomes is but partial. It is possible, however,
-to depict the subject of distribution in broad outlines with
-considerable accuracy.</p>
-
-<p>As we have already noticed, the £160 line at which
-assessment to income tax begins, divides the national
-income into two almost equal parts. Those persons who
-have more than £160 per annum enjoy an aggregate
-income of £909,000,000. Those persons who have less
-than £160 per annum enjoy an aggregate income of
-£935,000,000.</p>
-
-<p>Let us endeavour to discover how many persons have
-an income of £160 and upwards.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">{33}</a></span>
-A certain amount of confused light is thrown on the
-subject by the returns of the Inland Revenue Department.
-Under Schedules D and E, which relate to profits from
-"Businesses, Concerns, Professions, Employment, etc.," to
-use the official language,<span class="fnanchor"><a
-name="Ref_11" id="Ref_11" href="#Foot_11">[11]</a></span> the commissioners give us a
-record of the number of individual assessments which are
-made. A summary of these is as follows:—</p>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">INCOME TAX. SCHEDULES D AND E.<br />
- PROFITS FROM BUSINESSES, CONCERNS, EMPLOYMENTS, ETC.</p>
-
-<table class="gt1" summary="gt1-14">
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cate"></td>
- <td class="subj"></td>
- <td class="numb small">Number of Assessments.</td>
- <td class="numb small">Gross Income Assessed.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cate">(<i>a</i>)</td>
- <td class="subj">Persons not employees</td>
- <td class="numb">416,661</td>
- <td class="numb">£109,900,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cate">(<i>b</i>)</td>
- <td class="subj">Firms (number of partners not known)</td>
- <td class="numb">53,663</td>
- <td class="numb">80,500,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cate">(<i>c</i>)</td>
- <td class="subj">Public Companies (number of shareholders unknown)</td>
- <td class="numb">37,937</td>
- <td class="numb">291,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cate">(<i>d</i>)</td>
- <td class="subj">Local Authorities</td>
- <td class="numb">11,985</td>
- <td class="numb">24,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cate">(<i>e</i>)</td>
- <td class="subj">Bankers, Coupon dealers, etc., deducting tax on behalf of the Revenue</td>
- <td class="numb">not available</td>
- <td class="numb">33,100,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cate">(<i>f</i>)</td>
- <td class="subj">Employees (Schedule D)</td>
- <td class="numb">114,074</td>
- <td class="numb">27,100,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cate">(<i>g</i>)</td>
- <td class="subj">Employees (Schedule E)</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">471,564</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">109,600,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cate"></td>
- <td class="subj"></td>
- <td class="numb ulin">1,105,884</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">£675,200,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>We have thus a record of 1,100,000 <i>assessments</i>, but
-these assessments do not always correspond to individual
-tax-payers.</p>
-
-<p>Item <i>a</i>, "Persons not employees," gives us the fact that
-416,661 individuals are taxed in respect of trading or
-professional profits. Item <i>b</i> reveals the existence of 53,663
-firms with an unknown number of partners. Item <i>c</i>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">{34}</a></span>
-covers a great many large and small shareholders. Item
-<i>d</i> covers a large number of investors who have lent money
-to local bodies. Item <i>e</i> similarly covers many persons
-of property deriving interest from various securities which
-are taxed "at the source." In items <i>f</i> and <i>g</i> each assessment
-refers to an individual.</p>
-
-<p>Further, these 1,100,000 assessments are made under
-Schedules D and E only, which cover but £675,000,000
-out of a total gross assessment to income tax of
-£1,010,000,000 in 1908-9. There remain to consider
-Schedules A, B, and C.</p>
-
-<p>A moment's reflection will show that from these three
-schedules, which deal respectively with realty, farmers'
-profits, and government securities, we can expect little
-assistance. The assessments under Schedule A are
-made upon tenants, who in the majority of cases are not
-the actual and ultimate tax-payers. The number of
-assessments is enormous; we do not know it, but it
-would not help us if we did, for it has no relation whatever
-to the number of property owners. Under Schedule B,
-as is explained elsewhere,<span class="fnanchor"><a
-name="Ref_12" id="Ref_12" href="#Foot_12">[12]</a></span> there are few income tax
-payers. Under Schedule C certain interest from home
-and foreign government securities is taxed, but not by
-assessment on the actual tax-payers.</p>
-
-<p>To sum up, the number of assessments to income tax is
-not known, and, if it were known, it would be very much
-greater than the number of individual tax-payers. Two-thirds
-of the income tax is collected, not directly from
-the persons who owe the tax, but indirectly or "at the
-source." It is possible for an individual tax-payer to
-appear more than once in each schedule. With delightful
-humour the Inland Revenue Commissioners give a
-hypothetical case of a composite income of £5000 per
-annum, made up as follows:—</p>
-
-<div class="section">
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">{35}</a></div>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">HYPOTHETICAL COMPOSITE INCOME</p>
-
-<table class="gt1" summary="gt1-15">
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="subj"><small>Schedule.</small></td>
- <td class="numb" style="width:5em"><small>Amount.</small></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cate">A</td>
- <td class="subj">Profits from the Ownership of Lands, Houses, etc.</td>
- <td class="numb">£500</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cate">B</td>
- <td class="subj">Profits from the Occupation of Lands</td>
- <td class="numb">200</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cate">C</td>
- <td class="subj">Profits from Government Securities</td>
- <td class="numb">200</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cate">D</td>
- <td class="subj">Profits as an Author</td>
- <td class="numb">100</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cate">D</td>
- <td class="subj">Profits as a Solicitor (partner in a firm the total profits of which are £5000)</td>
- <td class="numb">2,500</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cate">D</td>
- <td class="subj">Profits from Investments in a Public Company (total profits of the Company, £55,000)</td>
- <td class="numb">500</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cate">D</td>
- <td class="subj">Profits from Investment in Municipal Stock</td>
- <td class="numb">100</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cate">D</td>
- <td class="subj">Profits from Investments in Foreign Bonds (payable by coupons cashed in the United Kingdom)</td>
- <td class="numb">100</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cate">D</td>
- <td class="subj">Salary as a Land-Agent</td>
- <td class="numb">500</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cate">E</td>
- <td class="subj">Salary as a Borough Auditor</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">300</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cate"></td>
- <td class="subj"></td>
- <td class="numb ulin">£5,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>This hypothetical gentleman, who is at once a landlord,
-a farmer, a fundholder, a man of letters, a lawyer, a shareholder,
-an investor in foreign bonds, a land-agent, and a
-borough auditor, does great credit to the sense of humour
-of the Inland Revenue authorities, and may be called an
-extreme case. There are, however, tens of thousands of
-fortunate or unfortunate persons who are at once business
-men, investors, and landlords or houselords, and it is clear
-that if we are to arrive at the actual number of individuals
-who earn or receive incomes of £160 per annum or upwards
-we must proceed by other methods.</p>
-
-<p>Before leaving the table on page 33, however, the
-reader should take note of the low range of incomes it
-reveals, so far as individuals can be detected in the list:</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">{36}</a></div>
-
-<table class="gt1" summary="gt1-16">
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cate"></td>
- <td class="subj"></td>
- <td class="numb"><small>Per Annum.</small></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cate">(<i>a</i>)</td>
- <td class="subj">The 416,661 persons not employees have an average income of</td>
- <td class="numb">£260</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cate">(<i>f</i>)</td>
- <td class="subj">The 114,074 employees taxed under Schedule D have an average income of</td>
- <td class="numb">230</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cate">(<i>g</i>)</td>
- <td class="subj">The 471,564 employees taxed under Schedule E have an average income of</td>
- <td class="numb">230</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-
-<p>Many of these individuals have other sources of income
-beside their earnings, but the low mean income of each
-class remains remarkable when that fact is taken into
-account. Classes <i>f</i> and <i>g</i> cannot possibly deceive the
-Income Tax Commissioners as to their incomes, for the
-law compels employers to tell the authorities exactly what
-their employees earn. With an average as low as £230
-it is clear that the majority of salaries lie between the
-exemption limit of £160 and £200 a year. The under
-payment of the middle class stands revealed.</p>
-
-<p>If the reader takes note of these facts he will be less
-surprised by the results of the analysis to which we will
-now proceed.</p>
-
-<p>We now turn to what information is available upon the
-subject of individual incomes. So far as the poorer classes
-of income tax payers are concerned, some clear light is
-afforded by the Income Tax Commissioners in a table
-showing the number of persons claiming abatements.
-This table, which is of great importance, is given on
-page 37.</p>
-
-<p>These abatements are claimed by certain individuals who
-satisfy the Commissioners that their entire incomes, <i>from
-every source</i>, lie between £160 and £700 per annum. Thus
-we get definite information that in 1908-9, 779,552 individuals
-declared their incomes to be within these limits.</p>
-
-<p>The record of the number of abatements is worth particular attention. In
-1893-4 the limit of exemption was £150. In the following year the
-exemption limit was raised £10 to £160, and for the first time an
-abatement was allowed upon incomes up to £500. In 1898-9 abatements were
-introduced on incomes up to £700.</p>
-
-<div class="section">
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">{37}</a></div>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">INDIVIDUAL INCOMES BETWEEN £160 AND £700<br />
-Defined by claims for abatements</p>
-
-<table class="gt2" summary="gt2-1">
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent ulin rlin" rowspan="2">Year.</td>
- <td class="cent ulin smc" colspan="6">Abatements</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="ulin">£120 on incomes of under £150 and under £400.</td>
- <td class="ulin">£160 on incomes exceeding £160 but not exceeding £400.</td>
- <td class="ulin">£100 on incomes exceeding £400 but not exceeding £500.</td>
- <td class="ulin">£150 on incomes exceeding £400 but not exceeding £500.</td>
- <td class="ulin">£120 on incomes exceeding £500 but not exceeding £600.</td>
- <td class="ulin">£70 on incomes exceeding £600 but not exceeding £700.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin" style="width:4.5em">1893-4</td>
- <td>509,397</td>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">1894-5</td>
- <td></td>
- <td>436,325</td>
- <td>13,010</td>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">1895-6</td>
- <td><i>Exemption</i></td>
- <td>449,003</td>
- <td>20,375</td>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">1896-7</td>
- <td><i>limit and</i></td>
- <td>464,017</td>
- <td>23,492</td>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">1897-8</td>
- <td><i>abatement</i></td>
- <td>481,306</td>
- <td>26,056</td>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">1898-9</td>
- <td><i>altered—</i></td>
- <td>495,791</td>
- <td></td>
- <td>31,669</td>
- <td>11,115</td>
- <td>3,940</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">1899-1900</td>
- <td><i>see next</i></td>
- <td>515,680</td>
- <td><i>Abatements</i></td>
- <td>38,055</td>
- <td>16,861</td>
- <td>6,714</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">1900-01</td>
- <td><i>column.</i></td>
- <td>530,014</td>
- <td><i>extended—</i></td>
- <td>42,123</td>
- <td>20,520</td>
- <td>8,647</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">1901-02</td>
- <td></td>
- <td>554,727</td>
- <td><i>see</i></td>
- <td>46,967</td>
- <td>23,899</td>
- <td>10,490</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">1902-03</td>
- <td></td>
- <td>575,444</td>
- <td><i>following</i></td>
- <td>49,610</td>
- <td>26,737</td>
- <td>11,982</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">1903-04</td>
- <td></td>
- <td>603,338</td>
- <td><i>columns.</i></td>
- <td>51,922</td>
- <td>27,777</td>
- <td>12,879</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">1904-05</td>
- <td></td>
- <td>612,548</td>
- <td></td>
- <td>53,384</td>
- <td>29,227</td>
- <td>13,483</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">1905-06</td>
- <td></td>
- <td>622,437</td>
- <td></td>
- <td>56,305</td>
- <td>31,100</td>
- <td>14,886</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">1906-07</td>
- <td></td>
- <td>628,818</td>
- <td></td>
- <td>58,704</td>
- <td>33,150</td>
- <td>16,607</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">1907-08</td>
- <td></td>
- <td>638,482</td>
- <td></td>
- <td>64,560</td>
- <td>39,166</td>
- <td>22,272</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">1908-09</td>
- <td></td>
- <td>648,310</td>
- <td></td>
- <td>66,523</td>
- <td>40,721</td>
- <td>23,998</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="section">
-
-<table class="gt2" style="max-width:25em" summary="gt2-2">
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent ulin rlin">Year.</td>
- <td class="ulin">Total Abatement Granted.</td>
- <td class="ulin">Annual Increse in No. of Abatements Granted.</td>
- <td class="ulin">Rate of Income Tax. Pence in the £.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin" style="width:4.5em">1893-4</td>
- <td>509,397</td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="cent">7</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">1894-5</td>
- <td>449,335</td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="cent">8</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">1895-6</td>
- <td>469,378</td>
- <td class="cent">20,043</td>
- <td class="cent">8</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">1896-7</td>
- <td>487,509</td>
- <td class="cent">18,131</td>
- <td class="cent">8</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">1897-8</td>
- <td>507,362</td>
- <td class="cent">19,853</td>
- <td class="cent">8</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">1898-9</td>
- <td>542,515</td>
- <td class="cent">35,153</td>
- <td class="cent">8</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">1899-1900</td>
- <td>577,310</td>
- <td class="cent">34,795</td>
- <td class="cent">8</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">1900-01</td>
- <td>601,304</td>
- <td class="cent">23,994</td>
- <td class="cent">12</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">1901-02</td>
- <td>636,083</td>
- <td class="cent">34,779</td>
- <td class="cent">14</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">1902-03</td>
- <td>663,773</td>
- <td class="cent">27,690</td>
- <td class="cent">15</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">1903-04</td>
- <td>695,916</td>
- <td class="cent">32,143</td>
- <td class="cent">12</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">1904-05</td>
- <td>708,642</td>
- <td class="cent">12,726</td>
- <td class="cent">12</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">1905-06</td>
- <td>724,728</td>
- <td class="cent">16,086</td>
- <td class="cent">12</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">1906-07</td>
- <td>737,279</td>
- <td class="cent">12,551</td>
- <td class="cent">12</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">1907-08</td>
- <td>764,480</td>
- <td class="cent">27,201</td>
- <td class="cent">9 to 12</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">1908-09</td>
- <td>779,552</td>
- <td class="cent">15,072</td>
- <td class="cent">9 to 12</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">{38}</a></span>
-It will be seen that since 1897-8 there has been a rapid
-increase in the number of abated incomes. This has been
-caused not by the sudden growth of incomes of this class,
-but by (1) the abatements being better understood, and
-(2) heavier taxation making it better worth while for individuals
-to claim the abatements. With the income tax
-at 1s. and 1s. 3d. it became worth while to fill up
-the form. We have, then, to thank the late war, and
-the increased taxation which followed it, for putting at
-our disposal a fairly complete record of the number of
-individual incomes between £160 and £700. Probably
-the record is still incomplete, and we must make an
-allowance for the fact. It is probable also that a certain
-number of persons of small income who ought to pay tax
-escape assessment. Both counts, however, are certainly
-well covered by adding a small percentage to the number
-of individual incomes revealed by the claimed abatements.
-In "Riches and Poverty," edition 1905, with the actual
-claims made standing at about 700,000, I suggested that
-50,000 would be a fair estimate of the number not claiming
-abatements or who escaped taxation. But in five
-years some 80,000 new claims have been made. Over
-27,000 of these were made in 1907-8; this was probably
-due to the clause in the Finance Act of 1907 compelling
-all employers, and not companies alone, to divulge their
-employees' incomes, thus bringing to light non-assessed
-incomes and causing claims for abatements by their
-owners. My estimate of 50,000 I should, in view of
-this further information, raise to 90,000 or 100,000, and
-at the present time I am inclined to think that some
-40,000 incomes between £160 and £700 must still be
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">{39}</a></span>
-regarded as either escaping tax or as being not reviewed
-in the abatements table. We thus arrive at, in round
-figures, 820,000 as a near approximation to the number
-of individuals who possess between £160 and £700 per
-annum.</p>
-
-<p>The aggregate income of the 779,000 persons granted
-abatements in 1908-9 is not given in the report. We can,
-however, estimate it closely, and this is done in the
-following table, figures being added for the 40,000 persons
-whom we have assumed either to neglect to claim abatements
-or to escape taxation altogether:—</p>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">INDIVIDUAL INCOMES BETWEEN £160 AND
-£700 (1908)</p>
-
-<table class="gt1" summary="gt1-17">
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj"></td>
- <td class="numb"><small>Estimated Aggregates.</small></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">648,000 Incomes between £160 and £400.<br />
- Average assumed to be £300</td>
- <td class="numb">£194,400,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">67,000 Incomes between £400 and £500.<br />
- Average assumed to be £450</td>
- <td class="numb">30,150,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">41,000 Incomes between £500 and £600.<br />
- Average assumed to be £550</td>
- <td class="numb">22,550,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">24,000 Incomes between £600 and £700.<br />
- Average assumed to be £650</td>
- <td class="numb">15,600,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">40,000 (balance of estimated total of 820,000) Incomes
- of persons who either neglect to claim abatements or
- altogether escape taxation. Average assumed to be £300</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">12,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;820,000 Incomes aggregate</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">£274,700,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>To proceed, we see that some 820,000 persons enjoy an
-estimated aggregate income of £274,700,000 per annum.
-But the total income of the income tax paying classes
-we have already seen to be £909,000,000. There remains
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">{40}</a></span>
-therefore, to form an estimate of the number of persons
-who enjoy the balance of £634,000,000.</p>
-
-<p>Our best clue to these persons, who individually possess
-incomes exceeding £700 a year, is to be found in the
-number of rich men's houses in the United Kingdom.</p>
-
-<p>In Great Britain an Inhabited House Duty is levied
-upon the occupiers of all houses and residential business
-premises of an annual value exceeding £20. The duty
-being graduated, we obtain records of the houses of Great
-Britain classified according to their rentals. The duty is
-not levied in Ireland.</p>
-
-<p>The Inland Revenue report gives us the following
-interesting record.</p>
-
-<div class="section">
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">GREAT BRITAIN ONLY: PRIVATE DWELLING-HOUSES
-OF £20 AND UPWARDS: 1908-9</p>
-
-<table class="gt3" summary="gt3-1">
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="cent" style="width:4em">Class of House.</td>
- <td></td>
- <td>Number of Houses.</td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="cent" style="width:4em">Class of House.</td>
- <td>Number of Houses.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>£20</td>
- <td class="cent">and under</td>
- <td>£25</td>
- <td class="rlin">384,583</td>
- <td>£20</td>
- <td class="cent">and over</td>
- <td>1,473,214</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>25</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td>30</td>
- <td class="rlin">256,906</td>
- <td>25</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td>1,088,631</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>30</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td>41</td>
- <td class="rlin">414,663</td>
- <td>30</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td>831,725</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>41</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td>50</td>
- <td class="rlin">104,949</td>
- <td>41</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td>417,062</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>50</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td>61</td>
- <td class="rlin">125,051</td>
- <td>50</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td>312,113</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>61</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td>80</td>
- <td class="rlin">61,498</td>
- <td>61</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td>187,062</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>80</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td>100</td>
- <td class="rlin">38,898</td>
- <td>80</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td>125,564</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>100</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td>150</td>
- <td class="rlin">44,953</td>
- <td>100</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td>86,666</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>150</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td>200</td>
- <td class="rlin">16,563</td>
- <td>150</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td>41,713</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>200</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td>300</td>
- <td class="rlin">13,649</td>
- <td>200</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td>25,150</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>300</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td>400</td>
- <td class="rlin">5,207</td>
- <td>300</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td>11,501</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>400</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td>500</td>
- <td class="rlin">2,416</td>
- <td>400</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td>6,294</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>500</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td>600</td>
- <td class="rlin">1,187</td>
- <td>500</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td>3,878</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>600</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td>700</td>
- <td class="rlin">723</td>
- <td>600</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td>2,691</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>700</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td>800</td>
- <td class="rlin">472</td>
- <td>700</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td>1,968</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>800</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td>900</td>
- <td class="rlin">323</td>
- <td>800</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td>1,496</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>900</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td>1000</td>
- <td class="rlin">176</td>
- <td>900</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td>1,173</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>1000</td>
- <td class="cent">and over</td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="rlin">997</td>
- <td>1000</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td>997</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">{41}</a></span>
-The figures refer to Great Britain only, but the number
-of income tax payers in Ireland is small, the payment
-of income tax in that country, in 1908, being but
-£996,000 out of £31,860,000 paid by the United Kingdom
-as a whole.</p>
-
-<p>If there were a constant ratio between incomes and
-rentals, and if every private house contained but one
-family, the record of houses would be a sufficient clue to
-the number of income tax payers; but there is no such
-correspondence, and a considerable proportion of the
-houses are let in tenements.</p>
-
-<p>In London persons with an income over £160 a year
-rarely pay a rental less than £30. In the provinces a
-rental as low as £25 may sometimes represent an
-income tax payer. Many £25, £30, and even £40, and
-more houses in London and elsewhere are tenement
-dwellings. Some notorious London slums consist of
-houses of about £30 annual value. In West London
-6s. a week, £15, 12s. a year, commands two poor
-rooms.</p>
-
-<p>Some residential shops, etc., not included in the above
-list, house income tax payers, but usually the well-to-do
-shopkeeper lives away from his shop, the upper part of
-which is let to poorer persons.</p>
-
-<p>These considerations make it impossible to deduce the
-aggregate of income tax payers from the house record,
-but it is a suggestive fact that in Great Britain there
-were in 1908 only 1,088,631 private houses of £25 and
-over. It is clear that the number of persons with incomes
-exceeding £160 a year cannot much exceed that figure,
-even when allowance is made for the Irish houses not
-included in the record.</p>
-
-<p>As we have ascertained from the income tax abatement
-claims the approximate number of income tax
-payers between £160 and £700 a year, we are enabled
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">{42}</a></span>
-to neglect the difficult relation of small rentals to incomes,
-and to concentrate our attention upon a simpler and
-more satisfactory problem, the number of houses likely to
-be in the occupation of persons with upwards of £700 a
-year.</p>
-
-<p>It is submitted that persons in the Metropolis possessing
-an income of over £700 per annum are unlikely to
-occupy private dwelling-houses of an annual value below
-£60. Indeed, London householders with incomes below
-£700 sometimes pay higher rentals than £60. Against
-this fact we must, however, place the existence of many
-blocks of flats of high rentals which pay Inhabited House
-Duty, not per flat, but per block. I think we may balance
-the one consideration against the other, and assume that
-the private dwelling-houses in London exceeding £60
-in annual value roughly correspond to the number of
-persons with £700 per annum and upwards.</p>
-
-<p>In the provinces and Scotland rentals are lower, and
-I think we may safely draw the line at £50, in view of
-the fact that we are excluding, as in London, all residential
-shops, public houses, etc.</p>
-
-<p>The number of houses in Great Britain of the classes
-referred to is as follows:—</p>
-
-<div class="section">
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">{43}</a></div>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">PRIVATE DWELLING-HOUSES IN GREAT BRITAIN<br />
- LIKELY TO BE IN THE OCCUPATION OF PERSONS<br />
- WITH £700 PER ANNUM AND UPWARDS (1908-9)</p>
-
-<table class="gt1" style="max-width:25em" summary="gt1-18">
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent"><small>Annual Value.</small></td>
- <td class="cent"><small>Metropolis.</small></td>
- <td class="cent"><small>Rest of England.</small></td>
- <td class="cent"><small>Scotland.</small></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="numb">£50 to £61</td>
- <td class="numb"></td>
- <td class="numb">76,141</td>
- <td class="numb">10,739</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="numb">61 to &nbsp;&nbsp;80</td>
- <td class="numb">18,502</td>
- <td class="numb">37,075</td>
- <td class="numb">5,921</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="numb">80 to 100</td>
- <td class="numb">10,033</td>
- <td class="numb">24,875</td>
- <td class="numb">3,988</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="numb">100 to 150</td>
- <td class="numb">12,593</td>
- <td class="numb">28,411</td>
- <td class="numb">3,949</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="numb">150 to 200</td>
- <td class="numb">5,110</td>
- <td class="numb">10,075</td>
- <td class="numb">1,378</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="numb">200 to 300</td>
- <td class="numb">5,541</td>
- <td class="numb">7,427</td>
- <td class="numb">681</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="numb">300 to 400</td>
- <td class="numb">2,645</td>
- <td class="numb">2,437</td>
- <td class="numb">125</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="numb">400 to 500</td>
- <td class="numb">1,408</td>
- <td class="numb">960</td>
- <td class="numb">48</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="numb">500 to 600</td>
- <td class="numb">748</td>
- <td class="numb">424</td>
- <td class="numb">15</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="numb">600 to 700</td>
- <td class="numb">504</td>
- <td class="numb">210</td>
- <td class="numb">9</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="numb">700 to 1000</td>
- <td class="numb">746</td>
- <td class="numb">212</td>
- <td class="numb">13</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="numb">£1000 and over</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">826</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">145</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">26</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="numb"></td>
- <td class="numb ulin">58,656</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">188,392</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">26,892</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>If the reader has not before examined the subject he
-will probably be exceedingly surprised to find that there
-are so few rich men's houses, and therefore so few rich
-men, in Great Britain. In England and Wales there are
-247,048 houses and in Scotland only 26,892 houses likely
-to contain persons with incomes exceeding £700 per annum.
-There are nine times as many such houses in England as
-in Scotland. This corresponds closely to the income tax
-assessments. The yield of the income tax in Scotland is
-but one-ninth or one-tenth of the yield in England.</p>
-
-<p>We have to add an estimate for Ireland. The yield of
-the income tax in Ireland is very small, about one-third
-of the yield of Scotland. If, then, we add 9000 houses for
-Ireland, we shall probably be near the truth.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">{44}</a></span>
-We thus get the following figures for the whole of the
-United Kingdom, making our figures round:</p>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">PRIVATE DWELLING-HOUSES IN THE UNITED KINGDOM<br />
- PROBABLY CORRESPONDING TO INCOME TAX PAYERS<br />
- WITH £700 AND UPWARDS PER ANNUM (1908-9)</p>
-
-<table class="gt1" style="max-width:20em" summary="gt1-19">
-
-<colgroup>
- <col style="width:75%" />
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj"></td>
- <td class="cent"><small>Number.</small></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">London</td>
- <td class="numb">58,700</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">Rest of England and Wales</td>
- <td class="numb">188,400</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">Scotland</td>
- <td class="numb">27,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">Ireland</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">9,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">&nbsp;&nbsp;Total</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">283,100</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>We can now arrive at an estimate of the total number
-of income tax payers. It is as follows:</p>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">INCOME TAX PAYERS OF THE UNITED
-KINGDOM (1908-9)</p>
-
-<table class="gt1" style="max-width:20em" summary="gt1-20">
-
-<colgroup>
- <col style="width:75%" />
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent"><small>Incomes.</small></td>
- <td class="cent"><small>Number.</small></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">Between £160 and £700</td>
- <td class="numb">820,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">Exceeding £700</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">280,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">Total</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">1,100,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>I think that this estimate of 1,100,000 may be
-accepted with confidence as a near approximation to
-the actual number of individual incomes which exceeded
-£160 per annum in 1908-9.</p>
-
-<p>Taking 1,100,000 as a trustworthy figure, we are in a
-position to show how the population of the United
-Kingdom is divided by the line of income tax exemption.
-If we assume that each of the 1,100,000 persons is the
-head of a family of five persons, we get, by obvious
-calculation, the following result:</p>
-
-<div class="section">
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">{45}</a></div>
-
-<div style="font-family:sans-serif">
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">THE EQUATOR of BRITISH INCOMES</p>
-
-<table class="frontisp" summary="equator">
-
-<tr>
- <td class="center large">£909,000,000 per annum<br />
- taken by<br />
- 5,500,000 people<br />
- having Incomes of £160 and upwards<br />
- per annum</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="center large">£935,000,000 per annum<br />
- taken by<br />
- 39,000,000 people<br />
- having Incomes below £160<br />
- per annum</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="noborder"><i>In 1908 the Income Tax Exemption limit of £160 per annum divided the
- National Income into two almost equal parts.</i></td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">{47}</a></div>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">DISTRIBUTION OF THE NATIONAL INCOME AS BETWEEN<br />
- THOSE WITH MORE AND THOSE WITH LESS<br />
- THAN £160 PER ANNUM (1908-9)</p>
-
-<table class="gt1" style="max-width:35em" summary="gt1-21">
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="cent"><small>Number.</small></td>
- <td class="cent"><small>Income.</small></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">Persons with incomes of over £160 and their families (1,100,000 × 5)</td>
- <td class="numb">5,500,000</td>
- <td class="numb">£909,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">Persons with incomes of less than £160 and their families (total population less 5,500,000)</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">39,000,000</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">935,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj"></td>
- <td class="numb ulin">44,500,000</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">£1,844,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>These striking facts are expressed in diagrammatic form
-on page 45. Broadly speaking, it is shown that <i>one-half
-of the entire income of the United Kingdom is enjoyed by
-about 12 per cent. of its population</i>.</p>
-
-<p>But a still more extraordinary conclusion emerges from
-the facts we have examined. Of the 1,100,000 income
-tax payers, 820,000 are persons with incomes over £160
-and not exceeding £700. The aggregate income of these
-820,000 persons we estimated at £275,000,000 (page 39),
-and the estimate is a liberal one. By subtraction from
-the total income of the income tax classes (£909,000,000)
-we see that the 280,000 rich persons with over £700 per
-annum possess an aggregate income of £634,000,000 per
-annum. The facts are clearly shown in the following
-table and in the diagram which forms the frontispiece of
-this volume:</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">{48}</a></div>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">RICHES, COMFORT, AND POVERTY, 1908</p>
-
-<table class="gt1" summary="gt1-22">
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj" colspan="4">Distribution of the National Income as between (1)
- those with £700 per annum and upwards; (2) those
- with £160 to £700 per annum; and (3) those with
- not more than £160 per annum.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="cent"><small>Number.</small></td>
- <td class="cent"><small>Income.</small></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj" colspan="2"><span class="smc">Riches</span></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="subj">Persons with Incomes of £700 per annum and
- upwards and their families, 280,000 × 5</td>
- <td class="numb">1,400,000</td>
- <td class="numb">£634,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj" colspan="2"><span class="smc">Comfort</span></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="subj">Persons with Incomes between £160 and £700 per
- annum and their families, 820,000 × 5</td>
- <td class="numb">4,100,000</td>
- <td class="numb">275,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj" colspan="2"><span class="smc">Poverty</span></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="subj">Persons with Incomes of less than £160 per
- annum and their families</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">39,100,000</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">935,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="subj"></td>
- <td class="numb ulin">44,500,000</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">£1,844,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>Thus, to the conclusion that one-half of the entire income
-of the nation is enjoyed by but about 12 per cent. of its
-population, we must add another even more remarkable,
-viz.: that <i>more than one-third of the entire income of the
-United Kingdom is enjoyed by less than one-thirtieth of its
-people</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The broad outlines thus drawn I shall not attempt to
-amplify, for, as will be gathered from the nature of the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">{49}</a></span>
-available material, such amplification would be of little
-value. Nor would any useful purpose be served by any
-arbitrary division of our population into "upper,"
-"middle," and "working" classes. The three divisions
-of population at which we have arrived, although arbitrary,
-have naturally arisen in the course of our inquiry,
-and with some propriety we may term them respectively
-the Rich Classes, the Comfortable Classes and the Poor
-Classes.</p>
-
-<p>The great fact emerges that the enormous annual income
-of the United Kingdom is so badly distributed amongst
-us that, out of a population of 44,500,000, 39,000,000
-are "poor" in the sense that their incomes do not exceed
-£160 a year. It is no longer incredible that in a
-population of 44,500,000 people, enjoying an aggregate
-income of £1,844,000,000, there exist "30 per cent. living
-in the grip of perpetual poverty." When we realize that
-39,000,000 out of our 44,500,000 are poor, measured
-by a very modest standard of income, the statistics of
-Booth and Rowntree cease to surprise us. In analysis,
-the United Kingdom is seen to contain a great multitude
-of poor people, veneered with a thin layer of the comfortable
-and the rich.</p>
-
-<p>It will be of interest to compare the above statistics
-with those which appeared in "Riches and Poverty,"
-edition 1905. The statement then presented was based
-on the Inland Revenue figures of 1903-4, and the frontispiece
-bore the heading "British Incomes in 1904." For
-the purposes of comparison, the 1905 edition figures may
-be attributed to 1903, since the fiscal year 1903-4 is as
-to nine months in 1903. Similarly, the figures arrived
-at in the above pages may be dated 1908, an interval of
-five years separating the two investigations.</p>
-
-<p>The following is the comparison arrived at, after
-adjustment of the earlier figures by raising the estimated
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">{50}</a></span>
-number of income tax payers in 1903 from 1,000,000 to
-1,050,000, for the reasons given on page 38.</p>
-
-<div class="section">
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">DISTRIBUTION OF BRITISH INCOMES</p>
-
-<table class="gt2" summary="gt2-3">
-
-<tr>
- <td rowspan="3" class="smc rlin ulin">Range of Income.</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="cent rlin">1903</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="cent">1908</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="ulin rlin">Figures of "Riches and Poverty," 1905 edition, adjusted<span
- class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_13" id="Ref_13" href="#Foot_13">[13]</a></span>
- by raising estimate of Income Tax payers from 1,000,000 to 1,050,000.</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="ulin"></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin ulin">Number of Persons.</td>
- <td class="cent rlin ulin">Income.</td>
- <td class="cent rlin ulin">Number of Persons.</td>
- <td class="cent ulin">Income.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td class="rlin cent">Million£</td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td class="cent">Million£</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">Persons with over £700 a year and their families<br />&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,250,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">570</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,400,000</td>
- <td class="numb">634</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">Persons with over £160, but not over £700, and their families<br />&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">4,000,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">260</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">4,100,000</td>
- <td class="numb">275</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">Persons with not more than £160 and their families<br />&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">37,250,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">880</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">39,000,000</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">935</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin ulin">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Totals</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">42,500,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">1710</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">44,500,000</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">1844</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The result is to show that, in the five years, the wealthy
-classes have increased their share of the national dividend,
-both actually and relatively. We shall later find this
-conclusion confirmed by a comparison of the respective
-growths of taxed incomes and wage rates.</p>
-
-<p>The stationariness of wages is a fact which closely
-demands the attention of the nation.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_11" id="Foot_11" href="#Ref_11">[11]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-For a fuller explanation of these Schedules reference should be made to
-Chapter 21.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_12" id="Foot_12" href="#Ref_12">[12]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-See Chapter 21.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_13" id="Foot_13" href="#Ref_13">[13]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-The change in the proportions through the adjustment is insignificant and
-negligible, as will be seen by reference to the original estimate.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">{51}</a></span>
-
-<h3>CHAPTER IV<br />
-<small>THE ESTATES OF RICH AND POOR</small></h3>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">OUR review of the extraordinary facts relating to what
-has been called with grim humour the "National"
-income, prepares us for an examination of the estates of
-rich and poor.</p>
-
-<p>Legal distribution of the property of deceased persons
-can only be made upon payment of certain taxes, commonly
-called death duties, and legally known as the
-Estate, Legacy and Succession duties. The nature and
-extent of these duties I shall discuss in a later chapter.
-At this point I am only concerned with the facts which
-are brought to light in the collection of the chief death
-duty, the Estate duty, as since varied, of the great 1894
-Budget<span class="fnanchor"><a
-name="Ref_14" id="Ref_14" href="#Foot_14">[14]</a></span> of the late Sir William Harcourt.</p>
-
-<p>The principle of graduation was very properly applied
-to this duty, and accordingly we obtain, through the
-reports of the Inland Revenue Commissioners, an exceedingly
-valuable record, not only of the total value of the
-property which is "left"—it is a suggestive term—by the
-deceased, but of the classification of that property in large
-and small estates.<span class="fnanchor"><a
-name="Ref_15" id="Ref_15" href="#Foot_15">[15]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The Estate Duty is payable upon all estates which exceed £100 net (net,
-that is, after the discharge of all debts due by the deceased) and the
-Inland Revenue authorities undoubtedly pass under review the greater
-part of the property which is thus legally taxable. There must be a
-certain leakage, of course, for such heritages as household furniture,
-cash in money or notes, bearer bonds, and so forth, are sometimes
-divided up amongst the relatives of a departed property owner without
-account to the State, and it is difficult properly to assess unquoted
-securities, goodwills, trade stocks, furniture, etc. Moreover, large
-sums pass <i>inter vivos</i>. How much property thus escapes official
-observation we do not know, but it is probably a considerable amount.</p>
-
-<div class="section">
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">{52}</a></div>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">PROPERTY LEFT AT DEATH IN THE UNITED KINGDOM.<br />
- NUMBERS AND VALUES OF ESTATES BROUGHT TO THE NOTICE OF THE<br />
- INLAND REVENUE COMMISSIONERS IN THE FIVE YEARS 1904-5 TO 1908-9.</p>
-
-<table class="gt2" summary="gt2-4">
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="4" class="cent smc ulin rlin"><br />Class of Estate.<br /><br /></td>
- <td colspan="2" class="cent ulin rlin">1904-5</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="cent ulin rlin">1905-6</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="cent ulin">1906-7</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="4" class="rlin"></td>
- <td class="cent rlin">Number.</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">Value.<br />Mill. £.</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">Number.</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">Value.<br />Mill. £.</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">Number.</td>
- <td class="cent">Value.<br />Mill. £.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="4" class="rlin">A. <i>Estates not Dutiable</i>:</td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="4" class="rlin">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Bankrupt Estates</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,628</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">—</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,552</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">—</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,704</td>
- <td class="numb">—</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="4" class="rlin">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Estates not exceeding £100 net</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">15,931</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">0.9</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">15,462</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">0.9</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">16,039</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">0.9</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="4" class="cent rlin">Total A</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">17,559</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">0.9</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">17,014</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">0.9</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">17,743</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">0.9</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="4" class="rlin">B. <i>Estates Liable to Duty</i>:<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Small Estates:—</td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="4" class="rlin">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(1) Not exceeding £300 gross</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">18,505</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">3.5</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">18,262</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">3.5</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">18,995</td>
- <td class="numb">3.7</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="4" class="rlin">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(2) Between £300 and £500 gross</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">8,846</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">3.6</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">8,907</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">3.6</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">9,311</td>
- <td class="numb">3.7</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="4" class="rlin">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>Net Capital Values</i>"—</td>
- <td class="numb rlin"></td>
- <td class="numb rlin"></td>
- <td class="numb rlin"></td>
- <td class="numb rlin"></td>
- <td class="numb rlin"></td>
- <td class="numb"></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Exceeding</td>
- <td class="numb">£100</td>
- <td style="width:10em" class="cent">but not over</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">£500</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">5,853</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">2.5</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">5,728</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">2.5</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">5,990</td>
- <td class="numb">2.6</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="numb">500</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">10,098</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">8.4</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">9,894</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">8.1</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">10,516</td>
- <td class="numb">8.6</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="numb">1,000</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">10,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">16,704</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">60.4</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">16,130</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">58.8</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">17,098</td>
- <td class="numb">61.6</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="numb">10,000</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">25,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">2,295</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">41.8</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">2,254</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">40.4</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">2,473</td>
- <td class="numb">42.5</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="numb">25,000</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">50,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">883</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">34.6</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">931</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">36.4</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">909</td>
- <td class="numb">34.9</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="numb">50,000</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">75,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">288</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">18.9</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">277</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">19.5</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">314</td>
- <td class="numb">19.6</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="numb">75,000</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">100,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">161</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">15.0</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">139</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">12.1</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">127</td>
- <td class="numb">11.3</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="numb">100,000</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">150,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">128</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">14.0</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">133</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">18.2</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">159</td>
- <td class="numb">19.2</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="numb">150,000</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">250,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">89</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">21.6</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">91</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">18.6</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">104</td>
- <td class="numb">22.4</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="numb">250,000</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">500,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">44</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">17.6</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">70</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">23.9</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">58</td>
- <td class="numb">21.3</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="numb">500,000</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,000,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">23</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">17.2</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">21</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">13.1</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">18</td>
- <td class="numb">12.9</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="numb">1,000,000</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">2,000,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">↑</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">↑</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">↑</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">↑</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">↑</td>
- <td class="numb">↑</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="numb">2,000,000</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">3,000,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">5.9</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">8</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">13.5</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">10</td>
- <td class="numb">34.1</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="numb">3,000,000</td>
- <td class="cent"></td>
- <td class="numb rlin"></td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">↓</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">↓</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">↓</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">↓</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">↓</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">↓</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="4" class="cent rlin">Total B</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">63,918</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">265.1</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">62,845</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">272.2</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">66,082</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">298.5</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="4" class="rlin"><i>Total Estates</i></td>
- <td class="numb rlin">81,477</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">266.0</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">79,859</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">273.1</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">83,825</td>
- <td class="numb">299.4</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="section">
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">{53}</a></div>
-
-<table class="gt2" summary="gt2-5">
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="4" class="cent smc ulin rlin"><br />Class of Estate.<br /><br /></td>
- <td colspan="2" class="cent ulin rlin">1907-8</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="cent ulin rlin">1908-9</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="cent ulin">Average of<br />1904-5 to<br />1908-9</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="4" class="rlin"></td>
- <td class="cent rlin">Number.</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">Value.<br />Mill. £.</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">Number.</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">Value.<br />Mill. £.</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">Number.</td>
- <td class="cent">Value.<br />Mill. £.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="4" class="rlin">A. <i>Estates not Dutiable</i>:</td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="4" class="rlin">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Bankrupt Estates</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,663</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">—</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,802</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">—</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,670</td>
- <td class="numb">—</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="4" class="rlin">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Estates not exceeding £100 net</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">16,475</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">0.9</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">15,875</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">0.9</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">15,956</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">0.9</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="4" class="cent rlin">Total A</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">18,138</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">0.9</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">17,677</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">0.9</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">17,626</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">0.9</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="4" class="rlin">B. <i>Estates Liable to Duty</i>:<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Small Estates:—</td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="4" class="rlin">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(1) Not exceeding £300 gross</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">19,340</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">3.7</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">19,481</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">3.7</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">18,917</td>
- <td class="numb">3.6</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="4" class="rlin">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(2) Between £300 and £500 gross</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">9,736</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">3.9</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">9,640</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">3.8</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">9,288</td>
- <td class="numb">3.7</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="4" class="rlin">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>Net Capital Values</i>:—</td>
- <td class="numb rlin"></td>
- <td class="numb rlin"></td>
- <td class="numb rlin"></td>
- <td class="numb rlin"></td>
- <td class="numb rlin"></td>
- <td class="numb"></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Exceeding</td>
- <td class="numb">£100</td>
- <td style="width:10em" class="cent">but not over</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">£500</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">6,374</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">3.0</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">6,422</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">2.9</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">6,074</td>
- <td class="numb">2.7</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="numb">500</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">10,782</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">9.1</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">10,729</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">9.1</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">10,404</td>
- <td class="numb">8.6</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="numb">1,000</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">10,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">17,356</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">65.4</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">17,266</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">64.5</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">16,910</td>
- <td class="numb">62.1</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="numb">10,000</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">25,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">2,341</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">40.3</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">2,328</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">40.4</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">2,338</td>
- <td class="numb">41.0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="numb">25,000</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">50,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">908</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">35.5</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">918</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">34.4</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">910</td>
- <td class="numb">35.1</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="numb">50,000</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">75,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">278</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">19.8</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">297</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">19.5</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">291</td>
- <td class="numb">19.4</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="numb">75,000</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">100,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">144</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">14.0</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">155</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">13.9</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">145</td>
- <td class="numb">13.2</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="numb">100,000</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">150,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">109</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">16.4</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">136</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">16.8</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">133</td>
- <td class="numb">16.9</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="numb">150,000</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">250,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">90</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">18.7</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">78</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">17.3</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">90</td>
- <td class="numb">19.7</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="numb">250,000</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">500,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">51</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">20.1</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">50</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">20.1</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">54</td>
- <td class="numb">20.6</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="numb">500,000</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,000,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">17</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">16.6</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">15</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">8.3</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">19</td>
- <td class="numb">13.6</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="numb">1,000,000</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">2,000,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">4</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">4.6</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">6</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">9.2</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">↑</td>
- <td class="numb">↑</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="numb">2,000,000</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">3,000,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">2.6</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">2.2</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">7</td>
- <td class="numb">18.1</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="numb">3,000,000</td>
- <td class="cent"></td>
- <td class="numb rlin"></td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">2</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">8.6</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">2</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">5.0</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">↓</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">↓</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="4" class="cent rlin">Total B</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">67,533</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">282.3</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">67,524</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">270.9</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">65,580</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">278.3</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="4" class="rlin"><i>Total Estates</i></td>
- <td class="numb rlin">85,671</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">283.2</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">85,201</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">271.8</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">83,206</td>
- <td class="numb">279.2</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">{54}</a></div>
-
-<p>Before setting out particulars of the numbers and values
-of the estates revealed through the operation of the Estate
-Duty, it will be well to remind the reader of the number
-of deaths per annum in the United Kingdom. In the
-years 1899 to 1903, the figures were as follows:—</p>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">DEATHS IN UNITED KINGDOM</p>
-
-<table class="gt1" style="max-width:25em" summary="gt1-23">
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent small">Year.</td>
- <td class="cent small">Deaths.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">1904</td>
- <td class="cent">707,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">1905</td>
- <td class="cent">670,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">1906</td>
- <td class="cent">681,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">1907</td>
- <td class="cent">679,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">1908</td>
- <td class="cent">677,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="cent">Average Deaths per annum 1904-1908 = 683,000.</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>We see that the mean number of deaths in the five years
-1904-8 was just over 680,000 per annum.</p>
-
-<p>We now inquire, as to these 680,000 persons who die
-in the United Kingdom in a year, how many leave
-property of sufficient value to be brought under the notice
-of the tax-gatherers, and what is the value of the property
-left by them.</p>
-
-<p>These questions are answered in considerable detail by
-the table on pages 52 and 53, which shows, for each of
-the last five financial years of which we have record, the
-numbers and values of the estates reviewed.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">{55}</a></span>
-It will be seen that, taking the average of these five
-years, we get the following summary facts:—</p>
-
-<table class="gt1" summary="gt1-24">
-
-<tr>
- <td>Deaths per annum</td>
- <td class="numb">683,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Sworn Estates per annum, number</td>
- <td class="numb">83,206</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Estates of less value than £100 net each per annum</td>
- <td class="numb">17,626</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Estates exceeding £100 net each per annum</td>
- <td class="numb">65,580</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Net value of Dutiable Estates per annum</td>
- <td class="numb">£278,300,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>The question now arises, what is the average value of
-the tiny estates which are not the subject of affidavits?
-What is the amount of property per head left by the poor
-people who form the great majority of the inhabitants of
-our rich country? There are the few humble sticks of
-furniture, and the small sums invested in savings banks,
-friendly societies, trade unions, building societies, etc.,
-What are these worth?</p>
-
-<p>The Chief Registrar of Friendly Societies, Mr Stuart
-Sim, in his latest Report (No. 105 of 1909), p. 44, gives
-us the Summary of Registered Provident Societies and
-Thrift Institutions, which appears on page 56.</p>
-
-<p>The total funds, £439,000,000, represent the savings
-of some millions of people, but the total number of
-"members," nearly 34,000,000, must not be taken to
-stand for so many individuals. There is, of course, much
-duplication in the membership, one individual being sometimes
-member of two, three, four, or more societies or
-clubs. A carpenter, earning 30s. a week, may be a
-member of his trade union, member of two friendly
-societies, have a few pounds in the Post Office Savings
-Bank, and be a depositor in a building society, thus
-figuring as "five members" in the list.</p>
-
-<p>The list is not complete, for it does not cover the
-industrial insurance companies, which waste in costly
-management so large a part of the sums paid them, and
-unregistered friendly societies and slate clubs.</p>
-
-<div class="section">
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">{56}</a></div>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">THRIFT INSTITUTIONS: SUMMARY OF REGISTERED PROVIDENT
-SOCIETIES<br />AND CERTIFIED AND POST OFFICE
-SAVINGS BANKS AT DEC. 31st, 1907.</p>
-
-<table class="gt2" style="max-width:35em" summary="gt2-6">
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="cent smc ulin rlin">Nature of Institution.</td>
- <td class="cent ulin rlin">No. of<br />Returns.</td>
- <td class="cent ulin rlin">No. of<br />Members.</td>
- <td class="cent ulin">Funds.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="rlin">Building Societies:</td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td class="cent">£</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td style="width:1em"></td>
- <td class="rlin">Incorporated Societies</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,852</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">565,047</td>
- <td class="numb">57,300,118</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="rlin">Unincorporated Societies</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">58</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">58,000</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">15,989,111</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">1,910</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">623,047</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">73,289,229</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="rlin">Friendly Societies, etc.:</td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="rlin">Ordinary Friendly Societies</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">6,563</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">3,416,869</td>
- <td class="numb">19,346,567</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="rlin">Societies having Branches</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">20,640</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">2,710,437</td>
- <td class="numb">25,610,365</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="rlin">Collecting Friendly Societies</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">55</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">9,010,574</td>
- <td class="numb">9,946,447</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="rlin">Benevolent Societies</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">73</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">29,716</td>
- <td class="numb">337,393</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="rlin">Working Men's Clubs</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,036</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">272,847</td>
- <td class="numb">381,463</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="rlin">Specially Authorised Societies</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">162</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">70,980</td>
- <td class="numb">532,717</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="rlin">Specially Authorised Loan Societies</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">618</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">141,850</td>
- <td class="numb">897,784</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="rlin">Medical Societies</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">96</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">313,755</td>
- <td class="numb">65,513</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="rlin">Cattle Insurance Societies</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">60</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">4,029</td>
- <td class="numb">8,570</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="rlin">Shop Clubs</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">7</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">12,207</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">1,349</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">29,310</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">15,983,264</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">57,128,168</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="rlin">Co-operative Societies:</td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="rlin">Industries and Trades</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">2,267</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">2,461,028</td>
- <td class="numb">53,788,917</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="rlin">Businesses</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">399</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">108,550</td>
- <td class="numb">984,680</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="rlin">Land Societies</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">146</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">18,631</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">1,619,716</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">2,812</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">2,588,209</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">56,393,313</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td><br /></td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="rlin">Trade Unions</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">652</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,973,560</td>
- <td class="numb">6,424,176</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="rlin">Workmen's Compensation Schemes (1)</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">59</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">99,371</td>
- <td class="numb">164,560</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="rlin">Friends of Labour Loan Societies</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">248</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">33,576</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">260,905</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="rlin">Total Registered Provident Societies</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">34,991</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">21,301,027</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">193,660,351</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td class="cent rlin">Banks.</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">Depositors.</td>
- <td class="cent">Deposits.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="subj rlin">Railway Savings Banks</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">18</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">64,126</td>
- <td class="numb">5,865,072</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="subj rlin">Trustee Savings Banks (including Investments in Stock)</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">222</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,780,214</td>
- <td class="numb">61,729,588</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="subj rlin">Post Office Savings Bank (including Investments in Stock)</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">15,166</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">10,692,555</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">178,033,974</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="rlin">Total Certified and Post Office Savings Banks</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">15,406</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">12,536,895</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">245,628,634</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td><br /></td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td class="ulin rlin"></td>
- <td class="ulin rlin"></td>
- <td class="ulin"></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="rlin">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<br />Grand Total</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">50,397</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">33,837,922</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">439,288,985</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<div class="small">
-
-<p>(1) The figures given include 64,700 members, and £105,475 funds
-undistributed, at 31st December 1907, in respect of Schemes whose
-Certificates had expired or were revoked at that date.</p>
-
-<p><i>Note.</i>—Where Returns are made to a date other than 31st December
-the particulars at the nearest date available are given.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">{57}</a></span>
-On the other hand, it would be a profound mistake to
-regard the sum shown—£439,000,000—as belonging
-entirely to manual workers. No small part of the
-funds of building societies, savings banks, etc., belong
-to the middle classes, and even professional men do not
-disdain to purchase houses through building societies.</p>
-
-<p>Additions must be made for the tiny stocks of little
-shopkeepers and the "furniture" in poor houses, but on
-the latter account those who know what the furniture of
-the poor usually consists of will make modest estimates
-of its value. Its exchange value is almost negligible, and
-its value in use is that it is a factor in the sordid discomfort
-of the poor home, being in that respect not unworthy of
-the ugly walls which enclose it.</p>
-
-<p>Altogether it is probable that we may estimate the total
-property of the poor at less than £500,000,000 in 1908,
-and regard this sum as belonging chiefly to a great mass
-of people, forming by far the greater part of the 39,000,000
-persons under the line of Income Tax exemption. Probably
-about £15,000,000 of this sum passes at death per
-annum, and only a small part of it, chiefly the house property,
-comes under review by Somerset House.</p>
-
-<p>With the facts we have reviewed we are in a position to
-arrive at a just idea of the respective proportions of rich
-and poor estates. On page 59 will be found a table
-which shows the nature of those proportions. I have
-taken the averages of the past five years arrived at in the
-tables on pages 52-53, and have made a rough division
-between rich and poor by drawing the line at the possession
-of property worth £1,000 net capital value.</p>
-
-<p>To give a true idea of the division of deaths in the two
-classes, it is necessary to make allowance in the rich class
-for the deaths of the children of the well-to-do. It may
-be taken that, in addition to the 20,000 adults who die
-every year possessed of estates worth upwards of £1,000,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">{58}</a></span>
-7,500 children and young persons die in well-to-do homes.
-I then place in the upper part of the table the number of
-deaths remaining after deduction from 683,000 of all the
-other figures in the table.</p>
-
-<p>In arriving at the amount of property left by the poor I
-have assumed that of the £15,000,000 of savings estimated
-as passing at death per annum, £5,000,000 does actually
-come under review in the first few lines of the table on
-pages 52-53. The balance, £10,000,000, I have brought into
-the account as corresponding to the 592,294 deaths in the
-first line of the table on p. 59.</p>
-
-<p>With these explanations the table will speak for itself,
-and its tale is a startling one. We see that, drawing the
-line between the rich and poor arbitrarily at the possession
-of £1,000, of the 683,000 persons who die in a year,
-28,397 die rich or very rich, leaving £259,700,000, while
-654,603 die poor or very poor, leaving between them only
-£29,500,000.</p>
-
-<p>The figures over £10,000 are worth special attention:—</p>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">FORTUNES OVER £10,000 EACH (NET)</p>
-
-<table class="gt1" style="max-width:15em" summary="gt1-25">
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent small">Year.</td>
- <td class="cent small">Number.</td>
- <td class="cent small">Value.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">1904-5</td>
- <td class="numb">3,912</td>
- <td class="numb">£186,600,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">1905-6</td>
- <td class="numb">3,924</td>
- <td class="numb">195,700,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">1906-7</td>
- <td class="numb">4,172</td>
- <td class="numb">218,200,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">1907-8</td>
- <td class="numb">3,945</td>
- <td class="numb">197,200,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">1908-9</td>
- <td class="numb">3,986</td>
- <td class="numb">187,100,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p><i>Year by year, with the regularity of the seasons, about
-four thousand persons die leaving between them about
-£200,000,000 out of total estates declared to be worth about
-£300,000,000.</i></p>
-
-<div class="section">
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">{59}</a></div>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">PROPERTY LEFT BY 683,000 PERSONS<br />
-<small>Average of 1904-5 to 1908-9</small></p>
-
-<table class="gt1" summary="gt1-26">
-
-<colgroup>
- <col />
- <col style="width:60%" />
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="cent small">Deaths.</td>
- <td class="cent small">Propery Left.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="2"><i>POOR AND VERY POOR</i></td>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="subj">Died with so little property that no affidavit was sworn
- (Property estimated at £10,000,000, see p. 58)</td>
- <td class="numb">592,294</td>
- <td class="numb">£10,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="subj">Died Bankrupt</td>
- <td class="numb">1,670</td>
- <td class="numb">—</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="subj">Died leaving less than £100 net</td>
- <td class="numb">15,956</td>
- <td class="numb">900,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="subj">Died leaving between £100 and £500 net</td>
- <td class="numb">34,279</td>
- <td class="numb">10,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="subj">Died leaving between £500 and £1,000 net</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">10,404</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">8,600,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td>Total Poor and Very Poor</td>
- <td class="numb">654,603</td>
- <td class="numb">£29,500,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="2"><i>RICH AND VERY RICH</i></td>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="subj">Died under age without property</td>
- <td class="numb">7,500</td>
- <td class="numb">—</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="subj">Died leaving between £1,000 net and £10,000 net</td>
- <td class="numb">16,910</td>
- <td class="numb">62,100,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="subj">Died leaving between £10,000 net and £1,000,000 net</td>
- <td class="numb">3,980</td>
- <td class="numb">179,500,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="subj">Died millionaires</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">7</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">18,100,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td>Total Rich and Very Rich</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">28,397</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">£259,700,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>&nbsp;<br />&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="smc">Total Rich and Poor</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">683,000</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">£292,500,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">{60}</a></div>
-
-<p>170 persons per annum die worth £150,000 each;
-80 die worth over £250,000 each; 26 die worth over
-£500,000 each; and 7 die worth about £2,500,000
-each.</p>
-
-<p>Thus, in an average year, 26 persons die leaving
-between them far more than is possessed by 654,000 poor
-persons who die in one year. Again, in a single average
-year, the wealth left by the few rich people who die
-approaches in amount the aggregate property possessed
-by the whole of the living poor.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_14" id="Foot_14" href="#Ref_14">[14]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Finance Act, 1894 (57 &amp; 58 Vict. c. 30).</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_15" id="Foot_15" href="#Ref_15">[15]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-It was in the first edition of this work that attention was first drawn to
-this new source of information.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">{61}</a></span>
-
-<h3>CHAPTER V<br />
-<small>THE NATIONAL ACCUMULATIONS</small></h3>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">WE pass from the consideration of the property which
-is left at death in a single year to the estimation
-of the value of the total capital stock of the United
-Kingdom.</p>
-
-<p>We can proceed by two different methods. We can
-argue from the property left by those who die in a single
-year to the property possessed by the living, or we can
-capitalize that part of the national income which is
-derived from property. The former method was used
-as long ago as the 'fifties by Porter in his "Progress
-of the Nation." The second method has been employed
-by many statisticians, notably by Sir Robert
-Giffen.</p>
-
-<p>In the following table I have formed an estimate of the
-accumulated wealth of the nation at the present time,
-dividing it into three categories:—</p>
-
-<p>(1) "National" property in the proper sense, i.e. property
-in the possession of the Imperial Government or
-Local Authorities.</p>
-
-<p>(2) Land and Capital Stock within the United Kingdom
-owned by private individuals, and</p>
-
-<p>(3) Property in foreign countries and British Possessions
-owned by persons in the United Kingdom.</p>
-
-<div class="section">
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">{62}</a></div>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">ACCUMULATED WEALTH OF THE UNITED KINGDOM: 1908<br />
-<small>[This table should not be quoted without the context]</small></p>
-
-<table class="gt1" summary="gt1-27">
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cate">(1)</td>
- <td colspan="4" class="subj smc">Public Property (Imperial and Local)</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="cate"><i>(a)</i></td>
- <td colspan="2" class="subj">Imperial Property</td>
- <td class="numb">£550,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="cate"><i>(b)</i></td>
- <td colspan="2" class="subj">Local Property</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">1,370,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="4"></td>
- <td class="numb">£1,920,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td colspan="3" class="subj">Subtract (1) National Debt (£762,000,000)
- and (2) Local Loans (£600,000,000)</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">1,362,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="4"></td>
- <td class="numb ulin">£558,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cate">(2)</td>
- <td colspan="4" class="subj smc">Property in the United Kingdom owned by Private Individuals:—</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="cate">(<i>c</i>)</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="subj">Agricultural Lands and the Farmhouses, Buildings, Fences,
- Roads, Ditches, etc., thereof. Profits under Schedule A
- of Income Tax (1908-9) £52,000,000 capitalized at 20
- years' purchase</td>
- <td class="numb">£1,040,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="cate">(<i>d</i>)</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="subj">Houses, Business Premises, etc.,
- and their Lands. Profits under
- Schedule A of Income Tax
- (1908-9) £217,000,000 capitalized
- at 15 years' purchase</td>
- <td class="numb">3,255,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="cate">(<i>e</i>)</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="subj">Other Profits from Land under
- Schedule A of Income Tax
- (1908-9) £1,300,000 capitalized
- at 25 years' purchase</td>
- <td class="numb">32,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="cate">(<i>f</i>)</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="subj">Farmers' Capital. Estimated at
- £6 per acre for 47,000,000 acres
- under cultivation</td>
- <td class="numb">282,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="cate">(<i>g</i>)</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="subj">The National Debt (neglecting
- the small amount held abroad)</td>
- <td class="numb">762,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="cate">(<i>h</i>)</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="subj">Local Debts</td>
- <td class="numb">600,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="cate">(<i>i</i>)</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="subj">Capital of Miscellaneous Trades:—</td>
- <td class="numb"></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="cate">(1)</td>
- <td class="subj">Profits of Miscellaneous
- Businesses, Professions, etc.,
- taxed under Schedule D of
- Income Tax in 1908-9 (allowing
- for profits assumed to
- escape taxation £60,000,000,
- see p. 16), and deducting
- for profits from abroad
- (£25,000,000, see p. 16), were
- £444,000,000. One-half of
- this sum (£222,000,000)
- assumed to be from capital
- and capitalized at 10 years'
- purchase</td>
- <td class="numb">2,220,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="cate">(2)</td>
- <td class="subj">Profits of small traders who
- are not Income Tax payers
- are in part derived from
- capital</td>
- <td class="numb">100,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="cate">(<i>j</i>)</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="subj">Railways. Profits taxed under
- Schedule D 1908-9 =
- £43,000,000 capitalized at 25
- years' purchase</td>
- <td class="numb">1,075,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="cate">(<i>k</i>)</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="subj">Mines and Quarries. Profits taxed
- under Schedule D 1908-9 =
- £18,000,000 capitalized at 5
- years' purchase</td>
- <td class="numb">90,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="cate">(<i>l</i>)</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="subj">Gasworks. Profits taxed under
- Schedule D 1908-9 = £7,800,000
- capitalized at 20 years' purchase</td>
- <td class="numb">156,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="cate">(<i>m</i>)</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="subj">Ironworks. Profits taxed under
- Schedule D 1908-9 = £5,100,000
- capitalized at 5 years' purchase</td>
- <td class="numb">25,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="cate">(<i>n</i>)</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="subj">Waterworks. Profits taxed under
- Schedule D 1908-9 = £6,200,000
- capitalised at 20 years' purchase</td>
- <td class="numb">124,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="cate">(<i>o</i>)</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="subj">Canals. Profits taxed under
- Schedule D 1908-9 = £4,200,000
- capitalized at 20 years' purchase</td>
- <td class="numb">84,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="cate">(<i>p</i>)</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="subj">Markets, Tolls, Fishings, Cemeteries,
- etc. Profits taxed under
- Schedule D 1908-9 = £1,400,000
- capitalized at 20 years' purchase</td>
- <td class="numb">28,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="cate">(<i>q</i>)</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="subj">Other Interests and Profits taxed
- under Schedule D 1908-9 =
- £7,700,000 capitalized at 20
- years' purchase</td>
- <td class="numb">154,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="cate">(<i>r</i>)</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="subj">Furniture, Works of Art, etc., in
- Private Houses. Assumed to be
- one-sixth of the value of "Houses"
- in Schedule A (see item <i>d</i>)</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">540,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="4"></td>
- <td class="numb ulin">£10,567,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cate">(3)</td>
- <td colspan="4" class="subj smc">Property in Places Abroad Owned by Persons
- in the United Kingdom</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="cate">(<i>s</i>)</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="subj">Interest from Indian, Colonial and
- Foreign Government Securities
- taxed under Schedule C 1908-9
- = £32,200,000 capitalized at
- 25 years' purchase</td>
- <td class="numb">805,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="cate">(<i>t</i>)</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="subj">Interest from Indian, Colonial and
- Foreign Securities, including
- Railways, taxed under Schedule D
- 1908-9 = £56,600,000
- capitalized at 20 years' purchase</td>
- <td class="numb">1,132,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="cate">(<i>u</i>)</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="subj">Other Profits from abroad derived
- from property assumed to have
- a capital value of about</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">700,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="4"></td>
- <td class="numb ulin">£2,637,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="5" class="cent smc">Summary</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cate">(1)</td>
- <td colspan="3" class="subj">Public Property</td>
- <td class="numb">£558,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cate">(2)</td>
- <td colspan="3" class="subj">Property in the United Kingdom
- owned by Private Individuals</td>
- <td class="numb">10,567,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cate">(3)</td>
- <td colspan="3" class="subj">Property in places abroad owned by
- persons in the United Kingdom</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">2,637,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="4"></td>
- <td class="numb ulin">£13,762,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">{65}</a></span>
-To the explanations given in the table itself some further
-notes may be added. For the greater part, the estimates
-are based, it will be seen, upon Income Tax statistics.
-The items thus arrived at are near approximations to the
-truth. The table also contains some necessarily rough
-estimates of uncertain items.</p>
-
-<p>The matter of public property is an exceedingly difficult
-one to deal with. In item <i>a</i> I have estimated that our
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">{66}</a></span>
-warships and stores of naval and military material, Imperial
-shipyards, dockyards and arsenals, public offices, galleries,
-museums and their contents, government factories and
-workshops and their plant, post office, telegraph and
-telephone capital, etc., are worth £550,000,000 at a
-conservative estimate. The capital value of all our
-ships, allowing for depreciation, cannot be less than
-£150,000,000, and naval works and material must be
-worth fully £80,000,000. Army material and military
-works are of less value, but can scarcely be estimated
-at less than £120,000,000. The value of the post
-office, telegraph and telephone businesses at only 15
-years' purchase of the profits would be £60,000,000.
-The Suez Canal shares are worth £28,000,000. Thus
-£550,000,000 as an estimate of the total value of all
-Imperial property is not an excessive figure.<span class="fnanchor"><a
-name="Ref_16" id="Ref_16" href="#Foot_16">[16]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The public property in the care of local authorities, as
-trustees for the nation, is exceedingly great. It is convenient
-to consider common lands in this connexion.
-Probably there are some 2,000,000 acres of common
-lands in England and Wales—all that remains unfilched
-of full many times that area.<span class="fnanchor"><a
-name="Ref_17" id="Ref_17" href="#Foot_17">[17]</a></span> If we value these commons
-at an average of £25 per acre—some of the commons, as
-in Surrey, are worth from £200 to £2,000 an acre, valued
-at present market rates—we get £50,000,000.</p>
-
-<p>Roads are an important item in the national valuation—they
-are almost all that is left to the nation of the nation's
-area. There are about 22,000 miles of main roads and
-about 97,000 miles of minor roads. These have value as
-land and value as highways, but if we value land and construction
-together at an average of only £5,000 per mile we
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">{67}</a></span>
-arrive at about £600,000,000 as a conservative estimate of
-the value of the roads of the United Kingdom.</p>
-
-<p>There remain to consider the values of the parks and
-other land, buildings (including offices, houses, schools,
-markets, asylums and workhouses), bridges, sewers, lighting
-systems, gasworks, electric light and power undertakings,
-tramways, waterworks, reservoirs, etc.</p>
-
-<p>The outstanding debts of the local authorities of the
-United Kingdom are now about £600,000,000. The whole
-of this amount has been spent upon the objects referred to
-and they are worth considerably more. I submit that it
-is a very conservative estimate to value local government
-property at 20 per cent. more than the amount of the
-outstanding loans or say £720,000,000.</p>
-
-<p>We thus arrive at £1,370,000,000 as a rough but reasonable
-estimate of the value of the local property. Adding
-it to the £550,000,000 of Imperial property we get
-£1,920,000,000 as a valuation of that portion of the
-accumulated wealth of the United Kingdom which is in
-the collective ownership of the nation.<span class="fnanchor"><a
-name="Ref_18" id="Ref_18" href="#Foot_18">[18]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>But, against the possession of these large amounts of
-property we have to set the mortgages upon the public
-assets which are represented by the National Debt and
-Local Debts. These, of course, are not directly secured
-upon Imperial and Local Government property, but upon
-the Imperial and local revenues. It is convenient, however,
-to regard them as mortgages, and to deduct them
-as I have done in the table. Making this deduction, I
-am able properly to include the amount of the national
-debt and local debts in my estimate of the value of private
-property (see items <i>g</i> and <i>h</i>). This gives a true view of
-the subject. The people of the United Kingdom collectively
-own relatively little property. In the time to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">{68}</a></span>
-come this will be remedied, for local authorities are rapidly
-acquiring reproductive undertakings. Until they are paid
-for, however, by the discharge of the loans raised to acquire
-or equip them, we do well to remember that they are
-mortgaged to individuals. Therefore, in deducting the
-debts from the valuation of public property and in adding
-them to the private property I submit that I am presenting
-an accurate picture of the actual position.</p>
-
-<p>To sum up this part of the subject, the people of the
-United Kingdom collectively possess property worth
-£1,920,000,000 and are collectively indebted to a few of
-their number in the sum of £1,362,000,000. Thus, all that
-they may be said to own collectively is property worth the
-comparatively insignificant sum of £558,000,000.</p>
-
-<p>I pass to the private property which is commonly called
-"national" wealth.</p>
-
-<p>In item <i>c</i> agricultural lands and the farmhouses and
-other buildings thereon are valued at £1,040,000,000. In
-1898 the Royal Commission on Agriculture arrived at the
-value of lands by taking 18 years' purchase of the profits
-of 1893. The value of agricultural land is now rising
-with the appreciation in the price of food.<span class="fnanchor"><a
-name="Ref_19" id="Ref_19" href="#Foot_19">[19]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Item <i>d</i> "Houses," it should be clearly understood,
-covers not only dwelling-houses, but factories, workshops,
-offices, and all other premises save farmhouses. It also
-includes, as is so often overlooked, both house value and
-land value. In capitalizing at 15 years' purchase, the
-market value of the property is certainly not overstated.
-The £3,255,000,000 so arrived at is a handsome sum and
-by far the most considerable item in the list. It includes,
-in the value of factories and other business premises, a
-considerable amount of trade capital.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">{69}</a></span>
-It should not be forgotten that we are speaking of
-economic valuation, not of intrinsic value. Houses which
-rank for no small part of the £3,255,000,000 are of small
-intrinsic value, their economic value being only produced
-by the sheer necessities of those whose needs must find a
-roof. London contains great areas of filthy brick-work
-which are worthy to be destroyed, but worth many millions
-to the houselords who draw rents from them.</p>
-
-<p>Item <i>f</i> deals with farmers' capital. Here I have used
-the figure arrived at in 1905 by R. H. Inglis Palgrave.<span class="fnanchor"><a
-name="Ref_20" id="Ref_20" href="#Foot_20">[20]</a></span>
-After careful examination of the amounts of capital per
-acre employed in various parts of the country, Mr Palgrave
-considers £6 an acre an excessive estimate, but Major
-Craigie, who has given the subject much attention, is
-inclined to think it too low.</p>
-
-<p>Items <i>g</i> and <i>h</i> have been already referred to.</p>
-
-<p>Item <i>i</i> (1) is an estimate of the amount of capital employed
-in the miscellaneous trades and professions taxed
-under Schedule D of the Income Tax. I have assumed
-that one-half of the estimated profits were derived from
-capital, and this half I have capitalized at 10 years' purchase.
-The amount so arrived at—£2,220,000,000—may be regarded
-as a reasonable estimate, not as an accurate one. In
-1908, it may be pointed out, the nominal "paid up"
-capital of registered joint-stock companies amounted to
-£2,123,000,000.</p>
-
-<p>Under <i>i</i> (2) £100,000,000 is put down as a rough estimate
-of the capital employed by small traders whose incomes
-are less than £160 per annum. I think that
-£100,000,000 is a liberal estimate, but it should be noted,
-against this opinion, that in 1885 Sir Robert Giffen's estimate
-was £335,000,000. In either case the figure is sheer
-guesswork; there is no proper statistical material.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">{70}</a></span>
-Items <i>j</i> to <i>q</i> need little comment. I point out, however,
-that the profits of mines, quarries and ironworks are
-capitalized at only 4 years' purchase by some authorities
-in view of their exhaustible character.</p>
-
-<p>Item <i>r</i> relates to furniture, works of art and other movable
-property. I have estimated this to amount to one-sixth
-of the item "Houses" (<i>d</i>). It is right to point out,
-however, that this estimate is very much at variance with
-former ones. Sir Robert Giffen in 1885 took one-half of
-the value of "Houses," and Mulhall and other statisticians
-have commonly used this estimate. But is it reasonable?
-I think not. In the first place the item "Houses" covers
-a great number of business premises the contents of which
-are valuable but are already estimated for in item <i>i</i>. The
-item also covers the value of all the land connected with
-the premises. Deducting for land and for business premises,
-could we, even as to the balance, assert that the
-average private dwelling contains furniture and other effects
-worth 50 per cent. of the cost of the structures? Enquiry
-has shown me that such an estimate would be only warrantable
-in the case of rich houses. But rich houses, as we
-have seen, are comparatively few, and "comfortable"
-houses not many. Coming to the great bulk of the small
-dwelling houses of the United Kingdom the furniture and
-effects are so poor that their value, unfortunately, as compared
-even with that of the mean houses which shelter
-them, is small, and in many cases negligible.</p>
-
-<p>In taking one-sixth instead of one-half of item <i>d</i> in
-arriving at item <i>r</i> therefore, I feel that I am making
-the most liberal possible estimate. To make the figure
-about £1,600,000,000, as we should do by taking the
-traditional one-half of the value of "Houses," would, I
-submit, be very wide of the mark.</p>
-
-<p>The total value thus estimated of the property in the
-United Kingdom owned by individuals affords a striking
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">{71}</a></span>
-contrast with that owned by the State. It amounts to
-£10,567,000,000.</p>
-
-<p>We have now to consider the third category: "Property
-in places abroad owned by persons in the United Kingdom."
-The items speak for themselves and are capitalized
-at very reasonable rates. We get the remarkable fact that
-certain persons in this country own about £2,600,000,000
-of property in places abroad.</p>
-
-<p>The grand total of the whole estimate is £13,762,000,000—£300
-per head of the population, or say £1,500 per
-family of five persons.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_16" id="Foot_16" href="#Ref_16">[16]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-There is also, of course, the value of the trained personnel of both army
-and navy, which could not be taken at less than £250 per soldier and
-£400 per sailor, but I confine this estimate to the value of "property"
-commonly so called.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_17" id="Foot_17" href="#Ref_17">[17]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-There are no commons in Ireland and Scotland.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_18" id="Foot_18" href="#Ref_18">[18]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-In 1885 Sir Robert Giffen estimated Government and local property at
-£500,000,000, but I do not know his reasons for naming that figure.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_19" id="Foot_19" href="#Ref_19">[19]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Lord Eversley seems to think that 25 years' purchase meets the conditions
-of 1905. See discussion in the Royal Statistical Society's Journal for
-March 1905.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_20" id="Foot_20" href="#Ref_20">[20]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-"Estimates of Agricultural Losses." Paper read to the Royal Statistical
-Society in March 1905.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">{72}</a></span>
-
-<h3>CHAPTER VI<br />
-<small>THE MONOPOLY OF CAPITAL</small></h3>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">IN view of the facts as to rich and poor estates which we
-examined in Chapter 4, it is obvious that to state that
-the accumulated wealth of the United Kingdom probably
-amounts to £300 per head of the population, or £1,500
-per family of five persons, is to mask in averages a great
-inequality of distribution.</p>
-
-<p>Reverting to the Death Duty records, it is possible, by
-means of them, to give a true idea of the manner of distribution
-amongst our people of the greater part of the nearly
-£14,000,000,000 of capital.</p>
-
-<p>I again direct attention to the tables on pages 52
-and 53. Year after year, with extraordinary constancy,
-a certain amount of money passes in each class of
-estate. So small are the variations in relation to the
-magnitude of the totals that it is hardly necessary to
-average the five years in working at the figures.</p>
-
-<p>If about 65,000 persons die every year leaving about
-£279,000,000, what is the ratio to these figures of the
-numbers and property of the living?</p>
-
-<p>The question thus raised is an exceedingly interesting
-one. Porter in his "Progress of the Nation" seems to
-have assumed a ratio of 45 to 1, but I do not think that
-the true figure can be so high as this.</p>
-
-<p>The British Crown, since Queen Anne, has passed at
-the following dates:</p>
-
-<table class="gt1" style="max-width:15em" summary="gt1-28">
-
-<tr><td>Anne,</td><td>1702</td></tr>
-<tr><td>George I.,</td><td>1714</td></tr>
-<tr><td>George II.,</td><td>1727</td></tr>
-<tr><td>George III.,</td><td>1760</td></tr>
-<tr><td>George IV.,</td><td>1820</td></tr>
-<tr><td>William IV.,</td><td>1830</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Victoria,</td><td>1837</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Edward VII.,</td><td>1901</td></tr>
-<tr><td>George V.,</td><td>1910</td></tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">{73}</a></span>
-Thus, in 208 years, the Crown has passed eight times,
-or, on the average, once in about 26 years.</p>
-
-<p>I have investigated the dates at which a considerable
-number of well-known estates have passed at death during
-two centuries and have found the most remarkable variations
-in different families. The Earldom of Suffolk has
-passed at average intervals of 16.7 years between 1731 and
-1898. The Earldom of Coventry has passed at intervals
-of 22 years between 1712 and 1843. These are intervals
-which are well under the average, while above the mean
-are cases quite as remarkable. The Earldom of Essex,
-between 1709 and 1892, has passed only four times, giving
-an average of 45.7 years. The Earldom of Bathurst, again,
-between 1775 and 1892, passed only five times, giving an
-average of 43.4 years.</p>
-
-<p>Taking the mean of a large number of actual cases, I
-get an average of 29.2 years and I have decided to take
-30 as a round figure which cannot be far from the truth.
-Assuming, then, that there are thirty living property owners
-for every dead one in the final column of the table on
-page 53, I have constructed the table entitled "The
-Division of Property: An Argument from the Dead to the
-Living," which appears on pages 74 and 75. The figures in
-columns 1 and 2, taken from the table in Chapter 4, are
-multiplied by 30 to form the figures in columns 3 and 4.
-The results are exceedingly interesting.</p>
-
-<div class="section">
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">{74}</a></div>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">THE DIVISION OF PROPERTY: AN ARGUMENT<br />
- FROM THE DEAD TO THE LIVING</p>
-
-<table class="gt2" style="max-width:25em" summary="gt2-7">
-
-<tr>
- <td rowspan="3" style="width:12.5em" class="cent rlin ulin">CLASSES OF ESTATE</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="cent ulin">THE DEAD</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="ulin">Averages of the Death Duty Records in the five years
- 1904-5 to 1908-9.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin ulin">(1)<br />PERSONS.</td>
- <td class="cent ulin">(2)<br />PROPERTY.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td class="cent">£</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">Less than £100 net</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">15,956</td>
- <td class="numb">900,00</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">Less than £300 gross</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">18,917</td>
- <td class="numb">3,600,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">£300 to £500 gross</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">9,288</td>
- <td class="numb">3,700,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">£100 to £500 net</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">6,074</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">2,700,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">&nbsp;&nbsp;Total Estates not over £500</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">50,235</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">10,900,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">&nbsp;<br /></td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">£500 to £1,000 net</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">10,404</td>
- <td class="numb">8,600,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">£1,000 to £10,000 net </td>
- <td class="numb rlin">16,910</td>
- <td class="numb">62,100,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">£10,000 to £25,000 net</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">2,338</td>
- <td class="numb">41,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">£25,000 to £50,000 net</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">910</td>
- <td class="numb">35,100,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">£50,000 to £75,000 net</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">291</td>
- <td class="numb">19,400,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">£75,000 to £100,000 net</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">145</td>
- <td class="numb">13,200,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">£100,000 to £150,000 net</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">133</td>
- <td class="numb">16,900,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">£150,000 to £250,000 net</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">90</td>
- <td class="numb">19,700,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">£250,000 to £500,000 net</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">54</td>
- <td class="numb">20,600,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">£500,000 to £1,000,000 net</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">19</td>
- <td class="numb">13,600,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">Over £1,000,000 net</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">7</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">18,100,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">&nbsp;&nbsp;Total Estates over £500</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">31,301</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">268,300,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">&nbsp;<br /></td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Grand Total</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">81,536</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">279,200,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="section">
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">{75}</a></div>
-
-<table class="gt2" style="max-width:35em" summary="gt2-8">
-
-<tr>
- <td rowspan="3" style="width:12.5em" class="cent rlin ulin">CLASSES OF ESTATE</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="cent rlin ulin">THE LIVING</td>
- <td rowspan="3" class="cent ulin">AVERAGE VALUE OF ESTATES PER HEAD.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="rlin ulin">Figures of columns 1 and 2 multiplied
- by 30 upon the assumption that each
- dead property owner in column 1
- corresponds to 30 living ones.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin ulin">(3)<br />PERSONS.</td>
- <td class="cent rlin ulin">(4)<br />PROPERTY.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td class="cent rlin">£</td>
- <td class="cent">£</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">Less than £100 net</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">478,680</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">27,000,000</td>
- <td class="numb">56</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">Less than £300 gross</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">567,510</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">108,000,000</td>
- <td class="numb">190</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">£300 to £500 gross</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">278,640</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">111,000,000</td>
- <td class="numb">398</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">£100 to £500 net</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">182,220</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">81,000,000</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">444</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">&nbsp;&nbsp;Total Estates not over £500</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">1,507,050</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">327,000,000</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">216</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">&nbsp;<br /></td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">£500 to £1,000 net</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">312,120</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">258,000,000</td>
- <td class="numb">826</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">£1,000 to £10,000 net </td>
- <td class="numb rlin">507,300</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,863,000,000</td>
- <td class="numb">3,672</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">£10,000 to £25,000 net</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">70,140</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,230,000,000</td>
- <td class="numb">17,536</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">£25,000 to £50,000 net</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">27,300</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,053,000,000</td>
- <td class="numb">38,571</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">£50,000 to £75,000 net</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">8,730</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">582,000,000</td>
- <td class="numb">66,600</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">£75,000 to £100,000 net</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">4,350</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">396,000,000</td>
- <td class="numb">91,034</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">£100,000 to £150,000 net</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">3,990</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">507,000,000</td>
- <td class="numb">127,067</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">£150,000 to £250,000 net</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">2,700</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">591,000,000</td>
- <td class="numb">218,800</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">£250,000 to £500,000 net</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,620</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">618,000,000</td>
- <td class="numb">381,481</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">£500,000 to £1,000,000 net</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">570</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">408,000,000</td>
- <td class="numb">715,789</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">Over £1,000,000 net</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">210</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">543,000,000</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">2,585,714</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">&nbsp;&nbsp;Total Estates over £500</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">939,030</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">8,049,000,000</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">8,571</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">&nbsp;<br /></td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Grand Total</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">2,446,080</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">8,376,000,000</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">3,424</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">{76}</a></div>
-
-<p>In the first place, the total property comes out at
-£8,376,000,000 which is about £5,400,000,000 less than
-the estimate of private property arrived at in Chapter 5.
-This is not surprising. There can be no question that a
-considerable amount of property evades the Death Duties.
-On page 78 will be found details, taken from the Reports
-of the Inland Revenue Commissioners, of the various
-descriptions of property which passed in the year 1908-9.
-Take the item "Household Goods, Apparel, etc." It
-amounts to but £6,000,000. Now, in Chapter 5, as the
-reader will remember, I formed an estimate of £550,000,000
-as the value of such effects, this estimate being £400,000,000
-lower than that made by Sir Robert Giffen twenty years
-ago. The £6,000,000 is officially described as relating to
-"household goods, pictures, china, linen, apparel, etc."
-Multiplied by 30 it gives but £180,000,000, which is certainly
-£300,000,000 less than it should be. It will be seen
-that "Book Debts, Stock, Goodwill, etc.," figure for only
-£17,000,000 in 1908-9, pointing to under-estimation.
-Similar undervaluation probably obtains in regard to other
-items of property, while bonds to bearer frequently escape
-taxation. Of investments in places overseas a very great
-part undoubtedly escapes death duty.</p>
-
-<p>Another and most important point is that a considerable
-amount of property eludes the Death Duties through gifts
-by the living. The following figures are significant:—</p>
-
-<div class="section">
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">COMPARISON OF (1) INCOME TAX ASSESSMENTS<br />
-AND (2) ESTATE ASSESSMENTS</p>
-
-<table class="gt1" style="max-width:17.5em" summary="gt1-29">
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="small cent">Gross Assessments to Income Tax.<br />Million £</td>
- <td class="small cent">Net Estates Reviewed for Death Duties.<br />Million £</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td style="width:6em">1895-6</td>
- <td class="numb">677.8</td>
- <td class="numb">213.2</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>1896-7</td>
- <td class="numb">704.7</td>
- <td class="numb">215.8</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>1897-8</td>
- <td class="numb">734.5</td>
- <td class="numb">247.3</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>1898-9</td>
- <td class="numb">762.7</td>
- <td class="numb">250.6</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>1899-1900</td>
- <td class="numb">791.7</td>
- <td class="numb">292.8</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>1900-1</td>
- <td class="numb">833.3</td>
- <td class="numb">264.5</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>1901-2</td>
- <td class="numb">867.0</td>
- <td class="numb">288.9</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>1902-3</td>
- <td class="numb">879.6</td>
- <td class="numb">270.5</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>1903-4</td>
- <td class="numb">902.8</td>
- <td class="numb">264.1</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>1904-5</td>
- <td class="numb">912.1</td>
- <td class="numb">265.1</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>1905-6</td>
- <td class="numb">925.2</td>
- <td class="numb">272.2</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>1906-7</td>
- <td class="numb">943.7</td>
- <td class="numb">298.5</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>1907-8</td>
- <td class="numb">980.1</td>
- <td class="numb">282.3</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>1908-9</td>
- <td class="numb">1010.0</td>
- <td class="numb">270.9</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">{77}</a></span>
-It will be observed that there is a remarkable lack of
-correlation between the income tax and the death duty
-assessments. The former have grown most satisfactorily.
-The latter grew in the first few years of the operation of
-the Harcourt revised Death Duties and then became, for
-practical purposes, stationary. There can be no doubt
-that the explanation is to be found in the increase of gifts
-made <i>inter vivos</i> to avoid the payment of death duty, and
-that the estates reviewed in 1908-9 should have been
-nearer £400,000,000 than £300,000,000.</p>
-
-<p>Parliament has tried to meet this avoidance by enacting
-(Finance Act of 1909, which was passed into law in 1910
-after rejection by the Peers in 1909) that gifts <i>inter vivos</i>
-shall not be exempted from death duty unless made more
-than three years prior to the death of the giver.</p>
-
-<p>The apparent discrepancy between the £8,376,000,000
-arrived at on page 75 and the £13,700,000,000 arrived
-at on page 65 is therefore not an inaccuracy, but an
-accurate consequence of the facts referred to.</p>
-
-<p>As it stands, then, the table on pages 74-75 represents
-the greater part, but not the whole, of the property of the
-persons to whom it relates. Nevertheless, it gives us as
-accurate an idea of the manner of distribution as though
-it dealt with the whole.</p>
-
-<div class="section">
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">{78}</a></div>
-
-<p class="smc center">Classification according to (1) Size of Estate and (2) Description of Property,<br />
- of the Gross Value of the Estates which passed at Death in the Fiscal Year 1908-9</p>
-
-<table class="gt2" summary="gt2-9">
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent ulin rlin" style="width:12em">Size of Estates</td>
- <td class="cent ulin rlin">Stocks, Funds, Shares, and other like Securities.</td>
- <td class="cent ulin rlin">Cash in the House and in Bank.</td>
- <td class="cent ulin rlin">Money lent on Mortgages, Bonds, Bills, etc.</td>
- <td class="cent ulin">Trade Assets, <i>i.e.</i> Book Debts, Stock, Goodwill, etc.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td class="cent rlin">£</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">£</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">£</td>
- <td class="cent">£</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">Not exceeding £300 gross</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">239,910</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,263,509</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">119,186</td>
- <td class="numb">222,528</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">Between £300 and £500 gross</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">392,345</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">974,686</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">211,362</td>
- <td class="numb">262,508</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">£100 to £500</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">265,873</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">354,133</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">110,053</td>
- <td class="numb">664,130</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">£500 to £1000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,586,521</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,633,265</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">760,018</td>
- <td class="numb">863,702</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">£1000 to £10,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">21,247,265</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">6,169,300</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">7,281,737</td>
- <td class="numb">4,296,571</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">£10,000 to £25,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">18,767,290</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">2,345,310</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">4,112,023</td>
- <td class="numb">2,184,906</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">£25,000 to £50,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">17,675,813</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,454,151</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">3,111,506</td>
- <td class="numb">1,704,057</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">£50,000 to £75,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">10,562,035</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">726,051</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,561,811</td>
- <td class="numb">1,334,990</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">£75,000 to £100,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">7,534,683</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">572,995</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,354,405</td>
- <td class="numb">852,908</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">£100,000 to £150,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">10,175,403</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">567,701</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,479,966</td>
- <td class="numb">668,643</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">£150,000 to £250,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">9,738,895</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">317,672</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">888,356</td>
- <td class="numb">736,528</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">£250,000 to £500,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">11,377,749</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">860,505</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,648,587</td>
- <td class="numb">1,244,988</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">£500,000 to £1,000,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">3,370,659</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">36,126</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">280,636</td>
- <td class="numb">1,177,432</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin ulin">Over £1,000,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">6,318,402</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">616,113</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">82,533</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">1,059,061</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin ulin">Total</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">119,252,843</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">17,891,517</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">23,002,179</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">17,272,952</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="section">
-
-<table class="gt2" summary="gt2-10">
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent ulin rlin" style="width:12em">Size of Estates</td>
- <td class="cent ulin rlin">Policies of Insurance.</td>
- <td class="cent ulin rlin">Household Goods Apparel etc.</td>
- <td class="cent ulin rlin">Agricultural Land.</td>
- <td class="cent ulin">House Property and Business Premises.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td class="cent rlin">£</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">£</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">£</td>
- <td class="cent">£</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">Not exceeding £300 gross</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">562,756</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">277,353</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">100,014</td>
- <td class="numb">598,220</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">Between £300 and £500 gross</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">353,865</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">210,848</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">94,088</td>
- <td class="numb">967,152</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">£100 to £500</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">507,869</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">239,037</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">329,362</td>
- <td class="numb">2,862,200</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">£500 to £1000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">844,829</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">404,730</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">588,750</td>
- <td class="numb">4,120,809</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">£1000 to £10,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">3,553,234</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,673,603</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">4,102,764</td>
- <td class="numb">18,168,513</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">£10,000 to £25,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,400,980</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">849,525</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">2,432,372</td>
- <td class="numb">6,516,563</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">£25,000 to £50,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,067,993</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">633,560</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">2,465,454</td>
- <td class="numb">4,322,623</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">£50,000 to £75,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">314,705</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">360,607</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,407,645</td>
- <td class="numb">2,091,525</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">£75,000 to £100,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">337,012</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">208,217</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,741,005</td>
- <td class="numb">1,161,460</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">£100,000 to £150,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">490,791</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">364,077</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,373,393</td>
- <td class="numb">1,635,301</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">£150,000 to £250,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">535,038</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">336,487</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,542,264</td>
- <td class="numb">1,454,949</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">£250,000 to £500,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">279,200</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">448,789</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,611,265</td>
- <td class="numb">1,222,858</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">£500,000 to £1,000,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">179,368</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">-*39,952</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,649,580</td>
- <td class="numb">614,244</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin ulin">Over £1,000,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">282,723</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">225,708</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">1,253,498</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">307,871</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin ulin">Total</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">10,710,363</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">6,192,589</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">20,691,454</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">46,044,288</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="5" class="cent">* Capital transferred in the year to other classes
- exceeded that brought into these classes.</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="section">
-
-<table class="gt2" summary="gt2-11">
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent ulin rlin" style="width:12em">Size of Estates</td>
- <td class="cent ulin rlin">Ground Rents and similar Burdens.</td>
- <td class="cent ulin rlin">Other Property.</td>
- <td class="cent ulin rlin">Total Gross Capital Values.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td class="cent rlin">£</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">£</td>
- <td class="cent">£</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">Not exceeding £300 gross</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,505</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">388,068</td>
- <td class="numb">3,773,049</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">Between £300 and £500 gross</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">5,811</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">397,431</td>
- <td class="numb">3,870,096</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">£100 to £500</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">13,008</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">517,903</td>
- <td class="numb">5,863,568</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">£500 to £1000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">43,922</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,226,606</td>
- <td class="numb">12,073,152</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">£1000 to £10,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">571,404</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">7,811,769</td>
- <td class="numb">74,876,160</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">£10,000 to £25,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">790,506</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">4,802,567</td>
- <td class="numb">44,202,042</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">£25,000 to £50,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">724,520</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">4,199,814</td>
- <td class="numb">37,359,491</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">£50,000 to £75,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">371,867</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">2,061,497</td>
- <td class="numb">20,792,733</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">£75,000 to £100,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">271,003</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,225,183</td>
- <td class="numb">15,258,871</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">£100,000 to £150,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">354,061</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,485,937</td>
- <td class="numb">18,595,273</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">£150,000 to £250,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">561,046</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">2,479,257</td>
- <td class="numb">18,590,492</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">£250,000 to £500,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">411,398</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">2,257,972</td>
- <td class="numb">21,363,311</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">£500,000 to £1,000,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">105,066</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">992,010</td>
- <td class="numb">8,365,169</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin ulin">Over £1,000,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">188,350</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">6,571,469</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">16,905,728</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin ulin">Total</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">4,413,467</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">36,471,483</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">301,889,135</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">{79}</a></div>
-
-<p>The table is full of striking contrasts. I have divided
-it into two parts, the lower of which consists almost entirely
-of the income tax paying classes. We should expect those
-with incomes exceeding £3 per week for the most part to
-be the property owners of the nation. It will be seen that
-the number of persons with £500 of property and upwards
-indicated by this table is 939,000. This number may be
-compared with our estimate of income tax payers, which
-was 1,100,000.</p>
-
-<p>Of the 939,030 persons with £8,049,000,000, as many
-as 312,120 own between them but about £258,000,000,
-leaving 626,910 persons with £7,791,000,000.</p>
-
-<p>Of the 626,910 persons with £7,791,000,000, as many
-as 507,300 have between them £1,863,000,000, leaving
-119,610 persons with £5,928,000,000.</p>
-
-<p>And it is amongst the big estates that we must assuredly
-look for the bulk of the avoidance of Death Duties, which
-is clearly indicated by the table on pp. 76-77. Thus the
-closer we get to the facts the more amazing the monopoly
-of capital appears. It is literally true to say that a mere
-handful of people owns the nation. <i>It is probably true
-that a group of about 120,000 people who with their
-families form about one-seventieth part of the population,
-owns about two-thirds of the entire accumulated wealth of
-the United Kingdom.</i></p>
-
-<p>It is an inevitable consequence of the monopoly of
-capital by a few people that the distribution of the national
-income is as pictured in the frontispiece of this volume.
-If we were quite unable to investigate incomes, we
-should know without investigation that the facts as
-to capital must have as a corollary a grossly uneven
-distribution of income. If, again, we had merely the
-known facts as to incomes before us, and death duty
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">{80}</a></span>
-statistics were not available, we should be able to deduce
-from them just such a monopoly of wealth as is examined
-in this chapter.</p>
-
-<p>As to the insignificant fraction of the national wealth
-owned by the working and lower middle classes, it is
-mockery to term it the "capital of the working classes," as
-is done not infrequently. It corresponds, for the most part,
-to the squirrel's store of nuts. It stands chiefly for sick pay,
-unemployment benefits, funeral moneys, bits of jerry-built
-houses, and so forth. It is rarely industrial capital used
-for the benefit of the savers.</p>
-
-<p>Those who have so little property cannot bargain fairly
-for the sale of their services with those who own the
-national undertaking. A small group of private owners
-exercises the effective government of the nation through
-the possession of the means of production, which are the
-means of life. As for the Government at Westminster, it
-is impotent because, like the mass of the people, it owns
-little or no property. It cannot even control the chief
-source of the national wealth—coal, or the prime factor in
-trade—railways. The investments of the State, like the
-investments of the masses, are a negligible quantity.
-And those rule who own.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">{81}</a></span>
-
-<h3>CHAPTER VII<br />
-<small>THE AREA OF THE UNITED KINGDOM</small></h3>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">LET us now consider the area of the United Kingdom.
-I use the word area with intention, for it is its
-area which differentiates land from all other commodities.
-Man can make soil by disintegrating rock. He can entirely
-strip the soil from a given superficies. He can change a
-fen into a farm. He can rob land of its fertility by careless
-cultivation. He can rear floors above land or sink shafts
-below it. Upon the base afforded by a small piece of land
-he can manufacture enough cloth to clothe a multitude.
-There is one thing, however, which he cannot do. He
-cannot change the geographical position of land. The
-element of area, of extension, is inherent and immobile,
-unchangeable and indestructible.<span class="fnanchor"><a
-name="Ref_21" id="Ref_21" href="#Foot_21">[21]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>It follows that the manner of the control of land is an
-exceedingly important matter to a community. The immobile
-area is the base of all human activities. Upon it
-we needs must live, and the manner of our distribution
-upon it largely determines our happiness.</p>
-
-<p>In the United Kingdom, as we have already seen, the
-people collectively own but little property, and of the
-entire area of the country, the control of which so largely
-determines their relations with each other, but the roads,
-rivers, and a few insignificant commons and parks are
-public property. The whole area measures 77,000,000
-acres and nearly 77,000,000 acres are private property.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">{82}</a></span>
-As we might expect from the facts we have already
-examined, the greater part of the area is in a comparatively
-small number of hands. There are a large
-number of landowners, but great landowners are few.</p>
-
-<p>As in many other parts of these enquiries, we are faced
-with a plentiful lack of precise information as to the
-ownership of the soil. The more important the subject,
-the less trouble we take, as a people, to keep record of
-it. In 1910 it is impossible for any man to say precisely
-how many persons own British land. No Bluebook on
-the subject has been published for thirty-five years. The
-last return of landowners, known as the "New Domesday
-Book," was made in 1873, and is forgotten by the present
-generation, although it created much interest and controversy
-upon its publication.</p>
-
-<p>The contents of the New Domesday Book were carefully
-corrected and analysed by Mr John Bateman.<span class="fnanchor"><a
-name="Ref_22" id="Ref_22" href="#Foot_22">[22]</a></span> For England
-and Wales alone his summary of the figures, revised
-as to the great estates down to 1883, is as follows:—</p>
-
-<div class="section">
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">OWNERSHIP OF LAND IN ENGLAND AND WALES</p>
-
-<table class="gt1" style="max-width:20em" summary="gt1-30">
-
-<tr>
- <td class="small cent">Number of Owners.</td>
- <td class="small cent" style="width:12em">Class of Owner.</td>
- <td class="small cent">Acres.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="numb">400</td>
- <td>Peers and Peeresses</td>
- <td class="numb">5,729,979</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="numb">1,288</td>
- <td>Great Landowners</td>
- <td class="numb">8,497,699</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="numb">2,529</td>
- <td>Squires<span class="fnanchor"><a
- name="Ref_23" id="Ref_23" href="#Foot_23">[23]</a></span></td>
- <td class="numb">4,319,271</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="numb">9,585</td>
- <td>Greater Yeomen<span class="fnanchor"><a
- name="Ref_23b" id="Ref_23b" href="#Foot_23">[23]</a></span></td>
- <td class="numb">4,782,627</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="numb">24,412</td>
- <td>Lesser Yeomen<span class="fnanchor"><a
- name="Ref_23c" id="Ref_23c" href="#Foot_23">[23]</a></span></td>
- <td class="numb">4,144,272</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="numb">217,049</td>
- <td>Small Proprietors</td>
- <td class="numb">3,931,806</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="numb">703,289</td>
- <td>Cottagers</td>
- <td class="numb">151,148</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="numb">14,459</td>
- <td>Public Bodies</td>
- <td class="numb">1,443,548</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="numb ulin"></td>
- <td>Waste</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">1,524,624</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="numb ulin">973,011</td>
- <td>Waste</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">34,524,974</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">{83}</a></span>
-While the number of owners came out at nearly
-1,000,000, it will be seen that the ownership of the
-greater number is a very small thing indeed. For practical
-purposes, about 38,000 persons owned by far the greater
-part of England and Wales. The analysis shows:</p>
-
-<p class="center">38,214 people owned 27,473,848 acres:<br />
- average 719 acres each.</p>
-
-<p class="center">934,797 people owned 5,526,502 acres:<br />
- average 6 acres each.</p>
-
-<p>Again of the 934,797 small owners:</p>
-
-<p class="center">703,289 people owned 151,148 acres:<br />
- average less than 1 rood.</p>
-
-<p>As to the United Kingdom, Mr Bateman's analysis
-showed:</p>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">UNITED KINGDOM LAND OWNERSHIP: 1883</p>
-
-<table class="gt1" style="max-width:20em" summary="gt1-31">
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="small cent">Acres.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Total Area</td>
- <td class="numb">77,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Owned by 2,500 persons</td>
- <td class="numb">40,426,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>It has been quaintly observed in mitigation of these
-facts, and with a view to reconciling the British people to
-the humiliation and economic servitude involved in these
-facts, that some part of the 2,500 persons' 40,000,000
-acres consists of mountain and waste land. As a matter
-of fact, this plea is a further condemnation of the position,
-for very little indeed of our small British area ought to
-be "waste." British landowners are responsible to the
-nation for their wanton neglect of afforestation. Let the
-"waste" land of the rich be handed over to the nation if it
-is declared to be valueless to its few owners.</p>
-
-<p>Since 1883 the number of owners has doubtless increased,
-but not largely, for even those people who
-own little strips of land bearing houses chiefly do so on
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">{84}</a></span>
-leasehold tenure, being in effect employed in the engaging
-process of nursing ground rents for a future generation
-of the few who own. It may be that in the United
-Kingdom at the present moment there are about 1,250,000
-freeholders, but the substantial ownership of British
-land remains as it is faithfully pictured in the above
-figures.</p>
-
-<p>As need hardly be added, these facts about land
-ownership are a most striking confirmation of the conclusions
-arrived at in these pages as to the monopoly of
-capital.</p>
-
-<p>As we are land animals, we are compelled, such of us as
-cannot command the capital necessary to buy a base to
-live upon or work upon, to come to terms with the individuals
-who are in possession of the British area. The
-payment which is made for permission to use land is commonly
-called rent, and the total amount of the rent paid
-for the use of the 77,000,000 acres is a considerable sum.
-We can form a very fair estimate of it from the Income
-Tax returns already examined.</p>
-
-<p>First, as to the landlords' revenue from agricultural land.
-This we obtain from Schedule A of the Income Tax. The
-income assessed in 1908-9 was £52,000,000 gross, but as
-we have already noted, part of this was not real income.
-Between the cost of repairs (for which the Commissioners
-allowed £6,360,000), adjustments on appeal, etc., the net
-income from agricultural lands taxed in 1907-8 was about
-£44,000,000. But this is the rent, not of the land alone,
-but of the farms as going concerns, with all their buildings,
-fences, roads, ditches, etc. The actual rent of the land
-alone may perhaps be put at £35,000,000.</p>
-
-<p>Secondly, we come to the rents of all lands bearing
-houses, factories, business premises, etc. The gross income
-assessed under Schedule A of the Income Tax in
-1908-9 was £217,000,000, of which £49,000,000 was
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">{85}</a></span>
-for the Metropolis alone. From this figure considerable
-deductions have to be made to arrive at net income.
-The Commissioners allowed for repairs £33,700,000, for
-Charities, etc. £7,400,000, for empty property £8,000,000,
-for over-assessments, etc. £3,900,000. Thus the real
-income from houses and the land upon which they stand,
-accruing to private landlords is reduced to £164,000,000.
-Of this £164,000,000 how much is rent from land
-alone?</p>
-
-<p>In London about one-third of the gross assessment is
-land rent. In the Provinces the proportion is smaller;
-probably less than one-fourth. As to the former figure,
-the L.C.C. surveyor, after careful examination of the subject
-in detail, a few years ago estimated the land values
-of the Metropolis at £15,000,000, which was just over
-one-third the gross assessment of land and buildings
-together. I take, then, the Metropolitan land rents at
-£16,000,000 and those of the rest of the United Kingdom
-at one-fourth of the gross assessment (£164,000,000),
-or £41,000,000. Thus we arrive at £57,000,000 for the
-whole of the United Kingdom. To this we have to
-add £1,000,000 of miscellaneous sporting rents, tithes,
-etc.</p>
-
-<p>But Schedule A does not exhaust the profits derived
-from the ownership of land. Under Schedule D are
-assessed Railways, Mines, Quarries, Ironworks, etc., which
-are undertakings attached to land, and in the profits of
-which land rents form a part. The most important case
-is that of mines. In 1893 the Royal Commission on
-Mining Royalties carefully calculated all mining royalties,
-dead rents, etc., received by freeholders in 1889 at less
-than £5,000,000.<span class="fnanchor"><a
-name="Ref_24" id="Ref_24" href="#Foot_24">[24]</a></span> This sum has now probably increased
-to about £7,000,000, including mines and quarries of all
-descriptions. The rental value of the land employed in
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">{86}</a></span>
-Railways, Canals, etc., can hardly be taken as more than
-£6,000,000 per annum.</p>
-
-<p>Collecting the figures we have estimated, we get:</p>
-
-<div class="section">
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">ESTIMATE OF LAND RENTS OF THE UNITED KINGDOM</p>
-
-<table class="gt1" style="max-width:20em" summary="gt1-32">
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">From Farm Lands</td>
- <td class="numb" style="width:8em">£35,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">From Lands bearing Dwelling-Houses, Factories, Business Premises, etc.</td>
- <td class="numb">57,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">From Sporting Rents, etc.</td>
- <td class="numb">1,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">From Mines, Quarries, etc.</td>
- <td class="numb">7,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">From Other Property</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">6,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj"></td>
- <td class="numb ulin"><span class="fnanchor"><a
- name="Ref_25" id="Ref_25" href="#Foot_25">[25]</a></span>£106,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Thus, in round figures, we get £106,000,000 as an
-estimate of the tribute which is paid to private owners
-for permission to use the area of the United Kingdom.
-As we have seen, 2,500 persons own one-half the whole
-area, while 38,200 persons own three-fourths of the area
-of England and Wales, so that the greater part of this
-income of £106,000,000 goes into few hands.</p>
-
-<p>In view of the fact that the total income of the United
-Kingdom has been estimated at £1,840,000,000, it is at
-first surprising that the amount of this land rent is not
-larger than £106,000,000, and it is of interest to ask why
-it is, in view of the monopolization of so much of the whole
-area by so few people, that the land rents are not greater
-than they are.</p>
-
-<p>The first explanation is the influence of free imports and
-cheap transport in putting at our disposal the harvests of
-the entire world. Cheap food for our people has spelt
-"loss" to the landowner. The landowners possess just
-as much land as before, neither more nor less, but as the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">{87}</a></span>
-produce which it yields is lower in price, they have been
-able to exact, for permission to produce the kindly fruits of
-the earth, a smaller rent. As our wealth has grown in
-the last generation the tribute paid to the owners of
-agricultural lands has grown less. Now that food is
-again appreciating in price the land tribute will on this
-account rise again.</p>
-
-<p>But, while the rent paid for farm lands has fallen since
-the seventies, the rent paid for urban sites has increased,
-and, of course, a further portion of the whole area has
-passed from the first category into the second. The
-country-side has been increasingly deserted, and our big
-towns have grown,<span class="fnanchor"><a
-name="Ref_26" id="Ref_26" href="#Foot_26">[26]</a></span> both by their own natural increase,
-and by a continual influx from the villages and small
-towns.</p>
-
-<p>How is it, then, that the landlords have not been able
-to exact a greater rent than about £57,000,000 for the
-use of urban sites? In the first place, while this sum
-may seem small in proportion to the total income of our
-people, it is very large in relation to the exceedingly
-small area for the use of which it is exacted. Almost
-the entire area of the United Kingdom is sparsely populated.
-It is an empty country dotted with small crowded
-spots called towns. When we reflect, then, that the land
-rent of the great empty country is £35,000,000, while the
-land rent of the crowded towns is £57,000,000, we see the
-latter item in its true light, as enormous in relation to the
-insignificant area for permission to use which it is paid.</p>
-
-<p>In this connexion it is important to observe that an
-exceedingly large manufacturing business can be carried
-on upon a small piece of the earth's surface, measuring
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">{88}</a></span>
-50 feet by 100 feet, or only an eighth part of an acre. The
-whole of the manufacturing plant of the United Kingdom
-stands upon a base which cannot possibly amount to
-more than a negligible fraction of the whole area of the
-country. Thus, while the industrial has to bid high for
-the use of land, he needs, as a rule, but a very small piece
-for his purposes. The area needed for a tennis court is
-often sufficient for the base of a business in which 100 or
-200 hands are employed and which draws a huge profit
-from their labour.</p>
-
-<p>Or take the subject of housing. All the urban sites of
-the United Kingdom together occupy a negligible part of
-its area. If our 9,000,000 houses occupied half an acre
-each, as unfortunately they do not, they would account for
-but 4,500,000 acres out of our 77,000,000 acres.</p>
-
-<p>But apart from the fact that the size of the area which
-yields urban land rents is exceedingly small, local rates
-are a perpetual charge upon land rents. The point
-is that, as the renter of fixed property is rated according
-to his rental, the size of the rental he is able to pay is
-in part determined by the amount of the rates. The
-higher the rates, the less rent he can afford, and therefore
-the less can the landowner obtain for the use of his land.</p>
-
-<p>For the reason just stated, it is often argued that the
-landowner actually pays local rates.<span class="fnanchor"><a
-name="Ref_27" id="Ref_27" href="#Foot_27">[27]</a></span> The fact that he is
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">{89}</a></span>
-unable to exact as much rent as though no rates existed
-is said to be equivalent to an actual payment by the landowner
-of the difference between the rent which he receives
-and the rent which he might receive. This economic
-doctrine is worth examination.</p>
-
-<p>In the first place it is not only the rates which the
-occupier takes into consideration when he decides that he
-can afford to rent a certain property. He considers
-"rates and taxes." The Inhabited House Duty is taken
-into consideration fully as much as the poor rate. If it
-did not exist the tenant could afford to pay a higher rent.</p>
-
-<p>Let us carry this a little further. What is the Inhabited
-House Duty? It is an Income Tax roughly proportioned
-to the size of a man's income by the size of the house
-which he inhabits. But there is another Income Tax, the
-Income Tax commonly so-called, levied at so much in the
-£ on incomes over £160 per annum. Is the Income Tax
-taken into consideration by a family man looking out for a
-house? Not directly, perhaps, in the same way that he
-adds the "rates and taxes" to the rent before deciding
-that he can afford a certain eligible residence, but indirectly
-there can be no question whatever that the Income Tax
-has great influence in deciding a man's rental. Indeed,
-the raising of the Income Tax from 6d. to 1s. may directly
-cause a man to leave a £60 house for a £50 house. We
-see, then, that if the landowner pays the local rates, he
-most certainly pays the Inhabited House Duty, and
-further that if he pays the form of Income Tax called the
-House Duty, it is at least arguable that he pays the Income
-Tax proper.</p>
-
-<p>But that is not all. There is another determinant of
-the rent which a man can afford, and that is the price of
-gas. In and around London the variation in price is
-considerable, and the careful householder does not forget
-the fact when deciding whether to live North, South, East,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">{90}</a></span>
-or West. South of the Thames gas is cheaper than in the
-North. According to the doctrine under examination,
-therefore, the landowners North of the Thames must at
-least "pay" the difference between the two rates.</p>
-
-<p>Again, on the same lines it might be argued that, as a
-rise in the price of building materials checks building and
-therefore makes a landowner ready to accept a lower rent
-for his land, the landowner actually pays the increased
-cost of building when materials rise.</p>
-
-<p>And so we might proceed from one logical step to
-another until we arrived at the comfortable conclusion
-that, if the sole expense of a householder were his rent,
-he could pay his whole income as rent, and that, therefore,
-the real "loss" of the landowners is the difference between
-the entire income of the nation and the land rents which
-they now actually receive.</p>
-
-<p>The whole truth of the matter is: For long years
-rates have been levied upon the occupiers of fixed
-property. Contracts as to the use or sale of land and the
-property affixed thereto have been made between man
-and man with full knowledge of the existence of rates.
-While, therefore, it is perfectly true that, but for the
-existence of local levies, the owners of the soil would be
-receiving a higher tribute than is actually the case, it is
-straining the meaning of language to say that they pay
-the rates, or that the rates are an actual burden upon
-them. In so far as present-day landowners have inherited
-their land from men who were given it by a worthless
-Sovereign or in any other way came by it without proper
-consideration, to talk of the burden of rates upon real
-property can scarcely excite sympathy. In so far as
-present-day landowners acquired their property for proper
-consideration or inherited it from those who so acquired it,
-the rates were taken into account when the price was paid,
-and no burden can therefore truly be said to exist. If
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">{91}</a></span>
-to-day A gives £1000 for a piece of land he does so
-with full knowledge of local rates, and the seller gets less
-for his land because of his knowledge. Therefore, when A,
-in his turn, leases his land and a house built upon it to
-another person, he cannot allege that he bears the burden
-of the rates. Yet it remains true that, if the burden did
-not exist, the land would yield A a higher rent. In a
-word the rates have become a rent-charge upon the
-property.</p>
-
-<p>To sum up the conclusions of this chapter, we have seen
-that while the total income of the nation is £1,840,000,000,
-the landowners take £106,000,000 as land rent, and that
-this amount would be much greater but for (1) the untaxed
-admission of competitive foodstuffs, (2) the very
-small area occupied by the towns, and (3) the levying of
-local taxation upon fixed property.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_21" id="Foot_21" href="#Ref_21">[21]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Cf.</i> Marshall, "The fundamental attribute of land is its extension."—"Principles
-of Economics," Book I, p. 221.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_22" id="Foot_22" href="#Ref_22">[22]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-"Great Landowners." John Bateman (Harrison).</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_23" id="Foot_23" href="#Ref_23">[23]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-These classifications are purely arbitrary.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_24" id="Foot_24" href="#Ref_24">[24]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-See C 6980, page 79.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_25" id="Foot_25" href="#Ref_25">[25]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-It has been constantly stated that the land rents of the United Kingdom
-amount to £250,000,000. Such an estimate is unwarranted.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_26" id="Foot_26" href="#Ref_26">[26]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-It is only in the large towns that land rents have risen. Many towns of
-less than 20,000 in population are decreasing in size and their rents consequently
-falling. In the ten years ended 1901 no less than 187 towns of from
-2,000 to 50,000 inhabitants declined in population.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_27" id="Foot_27" href="#Ref_27">[27]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-The point is of so much importance that it may be well to quote some
-expressions of opinion on the subject.</p>
-
-<p>"In practice there is little doubt that the majority of intending tenants,
-both in town and country, do take the precaution of enquiring what rates or
-taxes they will have to pay, and vary their estimates accordingly. In their
-case, then, it is the landlord, and not the tenant, who bears the burden of the
-rates." "Land Nationalisation" (p. 86), by Harold Cox. (Methuen &amp; Co.).</p>
-
-<p>"We have assumed with most economists, that in the end, on the average,
-the rates, however levied, fall upon the owner (inasmuch as they compel him
-to lower the rent which he demands for his property)." "Towards a Social
-Policy" (p. 49), by a Committee of Liberals. "The Speaker" Publishing
-Co. Ld.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">{92}</a></span>
-
-<h3>CHAPTER VIII<br />
-<small>THOSE WHO WORK AND THOSE WHO WAIT</small></h3>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">WE have seen that, although the sum of the land rents
-taken by the owners of the British area is actually
-very great, it is small as compared with the total of the
-national income. We have also seen that there is a simple
-explanation of this. We have become a manufacturing
-and a town-dwelling people, and the area occupied by our
-factories and towns is very small. The chief demand for
-land is confined to the outskirts of such towns as are
-increasing in size. The landlords of the big towns have
-their pockets increasingly filled with unearned increment,
-while the landlords of the empty country are reminded in
-the most practical possible way of that inherent quality
-of immobile area to which we have referred as the distinguishing
-characteristic of land. When we speak of a
-town as growing rapidly we refer to the growth in relation
-to the area of the town, not in relation to the area of the
-country. I reiterate this point because, when it is once
-realised, we see our way as a community to an exceedingly
-simple solution of many important problems. We speak
-of the enormous size of London. As a matter of fact, the
-whole area administered by the London County Council
-is but 75,000 acres. Again, "Greater London" contains
-but 443,000 acres, and yet is the dwelling-place of
-7,000,000 people, or far more than the entire population
-of the 2,420,000,000 acres of the Dominion of Canada.</p>
-
-<p>We shall return to the foregoing considerations hereafter.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">{93}</a></span>
-As a result of the small amount of land required as a
-base for the establishment of industrial plant, or for the
-warehouse or stores of a distributive business, it is usually
-but a small part of the total product of an industrial or
-commercial organisation which is taken by the owner of
-its site. That this is usually true is obvious from the fact
-that of a total annual income of £1,840,000,000 the owners
-of area are able to exact but £106,000,000. Of this
-£106,000,000 again, as was pointed out in the last chapter,
-£35,000,000 is exacted from farmers who make the
-meagre profit of from £17,000,000 to £26,000,000 per
-annum over and above their rentals. Out of the teeming
-populations of the towns, with all their manufacturing and
-commercial activities, the owners of area are able to draw
-but about £57,000,000.</p>
-
-<p>Now let us revert to the extraordinary figures which
-are the basis of the frontispiece to this volume.</p>
-
-<p>We have shown that, of a total income of £1,840,000,000,
-as much as £634,000,000 is taken by a small group of
-persons numbering 280,000, or with their families 1,400,000.
-The great landowners are obviously amongst these 280,000
-persons, and the greater part of British land rents are therefore
-included in their income. But, if the whole of it be
-included, there still remains £528,000,000 of income not
-derived from land rents, and taken by a very small
-number of persons.</p>
-
-<p>The explanation of this fact is to be found in the
-monopoly of capital which we examined in Chapter 6. In
-so few hands is the greater part of the accumulated capital
-of the country concentrated that, in spite of the fall in the
-rate of interest, the lion's share of the national income is
-secured by a few. Each "dose" of capital may produce a
-smaller return than of old, but there are more "doses" of
-capital in the possession of the few capitalists, and these,
-in relation to the whole population, add but very slowly to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">{94}</a></span>
-their numbers, so slowly that we get the extraordinary
-congestion of capital revealed by the Death Duty returns
-and pictured in the table in pages 74 and 75.</p>
-
-<p>Thus the monopoly of capital is a more far-reaching
-thing than the monopoly of land, and it secures for a
-number of people almost as limited as the great land-owning
-class, a gross profit compared with which the sum
-of British land rents is insignificant.</p>
-
-<p>It is of interest to show, from a number of concrete
-examples, how the joint product of mental and manual
-labour comes to be shared up between those who work
-and those who wait.<span class="fnanchor"><a
-name="Ref_28" id="Ref_28" href="#Foot_28">[28]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The following particulars are extracted from recent
-balance-sheets of ten well-known industrial joint-stock
-companies, each of which is representative of hundreds
-of others. I shall distinguish the concerns by a letter
-only, for I am not criticizing individuals, but seeking
-to illustrate the causes which produce inequalities of
-wealth.</p>
-
-<p>Company A owns a well-known proprietary article. The
-balance-sheet examined is dated 1904. Its issued capital
-is £1,000,000, and there are no Debentures. A Profit and
-Loss a/c shows that the year's sales amounted to £411,000.
-The total expenditure incurred in manufacturing the year's
-production was only £218,000. There was therefore a
-balance of profit amounting to £193,000. That is to say,
-after paying all outgoings, including wages, salaries, rent,
-advertising, and so forth, produce which cost £218,000
-to manufacture was sold for nearly twice as much. A
-dividend of 20 per cent. was paid for the year, and £30,000
-carried to reserve. What, then, did those get who worked
-to produce the goods which were sold for £411,000?
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">{95}</a></span>
-Obviously, a part only of the £218,000, probably not more
-than £100,000. If it be taken as £100,000, we see that
-those who worked to make the products of the Company
-(including the brain work of managers, foremen, etc.)
-obtained only £100,000, while the shareholders of the
-Company took £192,000. A great slice of the increment
-went into the pockets of individuals who certainly had not
-earned it.</p>
-
-<p>Company B is a restaurant company and the balance-sheet
-is for 1903. It does not publish a Profit and Loss
-a/c. The issued capital is £189,000, but a great deal of
-this is "water," for bonus shares have been issued year
-after year. In the year under review the profits amounted
-to £76,000, or over 40 per cent. of the amount of the
-watered capital. We do not know what the Company
-pays in wages, but I doubt if it reaches £30,000 per
-annum, or one-half the amount of the year's profits.
-The employees are chiefly young girls who are paid a
-few pence per hour. This case is an exceedingly instructive
-one to the student of "unearned increment,"
-because the restaurants are many in number and situated
-on most valuable sites. After paying the ground landlord's
-unearned increment, the sleeping partners in this
-concern gain, as they sleep, a hundredfold more unearned
-increment than the ground landlords.</p>
-
-<p>Company C sells an article of food. The balance-sheet
-is dated 1903. Its issued capital is £2,000,000, and
-there are £500,000 of 4½ per cent. debentures. Much of
-the capital is represented by goodwill. The net profit
-for the year, after paying Directors' fees, amounted to
-£139,000. In spite of the enormous capital, the sleeping
-"ordinary" partners get 7 per cent. Again we do not
-know the wages paid, but it is hardly likely to be as
-much as the net profit of £139,000. If the employees
-get that sum, which is doubtful, the sleeping partners gain
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">{96}</a></span>
-as much as all the workers who make and sell the products
-of the Company and manage and direct it.</p>
-
-<p>Company D is an engineering firm. The balance-sheet
-is dated 1904. The issued capital is £3,500,000 and there
-are £1,500,000 of 4 per cent. debentures. The net profits
-for the year were £636,000, which sufficed, after paying
-debenture interest, preference dividend, directors' fees,
-etc., to give the ordinary shareholders 15 per cent. It
-is not probable that the wages paid in a year are greater
-than the £636,000 of net profit, but if they amount to
-£1,000,000, which is unlikely, the workers of the Company
-gain little more than the shareholders.</p>
-
-<p>Company E is a restaurant company. Date of balance-sheet
-1903. The issued capital is £325,000 and in addition
-there are £100,000 of debentures. The profits for
-the year amounted to £52,000. After paying debenture
-interest, and preference dividend, the ordinary shareholders
-got 16 per cent. The amount of wages paid is
-not known, but it is probably under £20,000. To take
-this liberal estimate, the workers get £20,000; the sleeping
-partners £52,000.</p>
-
-<p>Company F is an engineering concern; the balance-sheet
-is for 1903. The issued capital is £5,000,000 and
-there are debentures for £2,250,000. The net profits for
-the year amounted to £556,000. After paying debenture
-interest and preference dividend, 10 per cent. was paid to
-the ordinary shareholders. Again it is impossible to state
-with accuracy the amount of wages paid, but it is improbable
-that they exceed the amount of the net profit. 5,000
-men at £80 per annum would come to £400,000.</p>
-
-<p>Company G is engaged in manufacturing cotton. Its
-capital is £10,000,000 and there are debentures for over
-£1,000,000. The net profit (the balance-sheet is for 1903)
-amounted to £2,684,000, which is a return of 25 per cent.
-on the entire capital. I do not know the wages bill, but
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">{97}</a></span>
-if the company employed 5,000 people at £100 a year each,
-and 10,000 more at £50 a year each the total wages would
-be £1,000,000. Such employment would still leave the
-sleeping partners with nearly three times as much increment
-as the workpeople!</p>
-
-<p>Company H is a restaurant company, which fortunately
-gives us a profit and loss account. The balance-sheet is
-for 1904. The issued capital is £570,000 and in addition
-there are £300,000 of 4 per cent. debentures. The profit
-and loss account shows the following figures:</p>
-
-<table class="gt1" style="max-width:20em" summary="gt1-33">
-
-<colgroup>
- <col style="width:75%" />
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">Gross Profit on Trading</td>
- <td class="numb">£474,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">Salaries, wages, <i>rents</i>, rates, repairs, horsekeep,
- maintenance and other expenses</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">327,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">Profit</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">£147,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>Here we have the statement that included in the
-£327,000 of total expenses is a certain sum which was
-paid in salaries and wages. What was it? We do not
-know, but the company had 90 restaurants at each of
-which about 10 persons were engaged. That means 900
-employees. If they were paid £40 a year each (as a
-matter of fact they were paid less than that) the wages
-would amount to £36,000. If, in addition, at headquarters,
-etc., 100 more people were employed at £100 each, that
-would mean another £10,000 a year or a total wages bill
-of £46,000. The net profits were £147,000. Therefore
-the investors got at least four times as much as those who
-worked to make the profits! As for the landlord's share,
-a glance at the figures shows that it must have been very
-small in proportion to that taken by the sleeping partners.
-Yet again the business is done upon some of the most
-valuable sites in the whole country. The business, indeed, is
-only valuable because of the sites, yet the capitalist and not
-the landlord takes the lion's share of the unearned increment
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">{98}</a></span>.</p>
-
-<p>Company I is a manufacturing firm in an important
-trade. The balance-sheet is for 1903 and the directors
-complain of "<i>depression of trade</i>." The issued capital is
-£500,000 and there are debentures for £300,000. The net
-profit made was £70,000 which, after paying debenture
-interest, sufficed to provide 10 per cent. for the shareholders.
-If the company "finds work" for 1,000 men at an
-average of £70 per man, the profits, even in depression, are
-more than is paid to the workmen who make the profits.</p>
-
-<p>Company J works a great monopoly service under
-licence from the State.<span class="fnanchor"><a
-name="Ref_29" id="Ref_29" href="#Foot_29">[29]</a></span> The issued capital amounts to
-£5,500,000 and in addition there is Debenture Stock
-amounting to £3,570,000. In 1904 the income amounted
-to over £2,019,000 and the outlay, including rents, wages,
-materials, management, etc., to £1,155,000, leaving a net
-profit of £864,000. Of this the State took £186,000 for
-royalties, leaving a balance of £678,000 for the share and
-debenture holders. Thus the sleeping partners took far
-more than the entire earnings of managers, clerks, operators,
-and workmen. The number of individuals employed by
-this concern in 1904 was 30,000. As illustration of a fact
-already referred to, viz. that a great business needs but
-a small base, it may be added that the year's rents
-(building <i>plus</i> land rents), taxes and insurance came to
-only £77,000. Thus, while the landlords of most valuable
-sites took something much less than £77,000, the capitalists
-took £864,000 out of the business done upon the
-sites.</p>
-
-<p>I have thus described the earning and distribution of a
-very considerable amount of income by 10 large industrial
-joint-stock companies. It should be observed that the
-profits made were won in a period of trade depression
-and falling wages, when short time and unemployment
-slew their thousands.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">{99}</a></span>
-The consideration of such companies is exceedingly instructive
-for another reason. In them the functions of
-capital and of business ability are usually divorced. Their
-shares are, as to a great part, held by mere sleeping partners,
-while the business ability is supplied by managers or
-managing directors who, while they may have a certain
-proprietary interest in the company, rarely own more than
-a small part of the capital. In the cases quoted, after payment
-for both labour and skill in management, great and
-disproportionate sums remain over to reward those who
-"wait."</p>
-
-<p>The companies quoted cannot be regarded as
-exceptional cases. The reader has but to glance from day
-to day at the reports of company meetings published in
-the daily newspapers to note the steady manufacture of
-dividends by industrial and other joint-stock concerns. In
-1908 the number of joint-stock companies registered in the
-United Kingdom and believed to be trading was 45,000
-and the paid-up capital £2,100,000,000. In 1908-9, the
-corresponding financial year, 37,937 "public companies"
-were assessed to income tax and declared their profits at
-£291,000,000. From this £291,000,000 we have to make
-certain deductions before we arrive at the profits of ordinary
-joint-stock companies, for the total includes railway companies
-and some banks, waterworks, etc., not registered
-with the Registrar of Joint-stock Companies. Allowing
-£65,000,000 on this score we have £226,000,000 left as
-the profit made by joint-stock companies having a nominal
-capital of £2,100,000,000. Many of these companies
-have debenture capital but, on the other hand, it is
-probable that, of the £2,100,000,000, fully one-third is
-"water"—exaggerated goodwills, promoters' profit, underwriters'
-commissions, bonus shares and the rest of it. Anyone
-who is interested in this point should examine the
-yearly return of companies registered which now shows not
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">{100}</a></span>
-only the amount of capital "considered as paid up" but
-the actual amount subscribed in cash and the payments
-for underwriting. In a recent return I find such items as
-this:</p>
-
-<table class="gt1" style="max-width:20em" summary="gt1-34">
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">Capital considered as paid up</td>
- <td class="numb">£76,683</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">Minimum Subscription required</td>
- <td class="numb">£7</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">Amount allotted before beginning business</td>
- <td class="numb">£16,729</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p class="nodent">and this:</p>
-
-<table class="gt1" style="max-width:20em" summary="gt1-35">
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">Capital considered as paid up</td>
- <td class="numb">£25,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">Minimum Subscription required</td>
- <td class="numb">£8,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">Commission for underwriting</td>
- <td class="numb">25 per cent.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">Amount allotted before commencing business</td>
- <td class="numb">£8,010</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>That is how a great part of the £2,100,000,000 of
-registered joint-stock "<i>paid up</i>" capital is made.</p>
-
-<p>Setting dummy capital against debentures, we see that,
-after payment of wages to the workmen and foremen,
-after the payment of salaries to clerks and officials, after
-the reward of business ability by the payment of managers
-or managing directors, after the payment of royalties to
-patentees where such were payable, after the payment of all
-rents exacted by the owners of area, there remained a
-profit of £226,000,000, being over 10 per cent. on the
-total paid-up capital, watered and unwatered, of all the
-joint-stock companies registered in the United Kingdom.</p>
-
-<p>We have also to remember that a large amount of
-unearned increment accrues to many of the sleeping
-partners who draw the £226,000,000 through the appreciation
-of their securities on the stock markets. Thus the £1
-shares of Company H referred to above were quoted in July
-1905 at £6 each, which means that either the present or
-past holders of the shares gained not only handsome
-interest, but saw their capital increased sixfold without
-any exertion upon their part. This creation of a market
-in the profits of usury has terribly unfortunate results for
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">{101}</a></span>
-the employees of joint-stock companies. To the original
-shareholders who sold at a huge premium the 30 per cent.
-dividend was 30 per cent. To the new shareholder who
-pays the price which has arisen from the usurious profits,
-the 30 per cent. dividend is only 4 per cent. or 5 per cent.
-He goes to the shareholders' meeting clamouring for his
-5 per cent., and eager to resist any suggestion that the
-wages of those who make his profits should be increased.
-The very success of the company thus becomes an argument
-not for the increase of wage but for a reduction of
-expenses. The managing director knows that he has got
-to face a body of shareholders who, for the most part, rate
-a high dividend as a low one. This point was illustrated
-in my own experience recently in a very striking way.
-Writing in the "Daily News" I commented upon the small
-wages paid by a well-known company paying a dividend
-of 30 per cent. per annum. This roused the indignation
-of a shareholder in the company who wrote me a letter
-the chief point of which ran as follow:</p>
-
-<p style="padding-left:2em">"Most of the shareholders have paid £6 or £7
-per share, and so get a return of not more than 5
-per cent."</p>
-
-<p>So one set of taskmasters passes out of the game with
-its tremendous gains, and is succeeded by another set.
-To the latter the poor workpeople are not churning out 30
-per cent. but a mere 5 per cent. When the new shareholders
-enter their premises they see easy work done by
-overpaid people who make dividends of only 5 per cent.
-If, at a shareholders' meeting (it has happened at company
-meetings) a shareholder pleads for higher wages for the
-employees, he is howled down. They are earning only
-5 per cent!</p>
-
-<p>Another illustration is to be found in railway stocks,
-many of which have (1) been deliberately watered, and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">{102}</a></span>
-(2) risen in price on the market, so that, while railway men
-are badly paid, the present holders of the stocks are
-apparently making small profits. Many railway companies
-have enlarged their ordinary capital by the delightfully
-simple process of multiplying by two. £100 of
-original stock has been changed into £100 of "preferred"
-and £100 of "deferred." This has not been done behind
-the scenes, but boldly and with the permission of our rich
-men's parliament. As a consequence it is made to appear
-that the net receipts of railways are only about 3½ per cent.
-of their "paid-up" capitals. But the nominal capitals have
-not been "paid-up"; and even in so far as the original
-capital is concerned much of it is unreal. Thus the magnitude
-of the injustice which they suffer is hidden from
-railway servants. They risk their lives for the public
-every day and what do they get for it? In 1908, the
-27 leading railway companies paid in wages only
-£30,000,000, or only 25s. per employee per week! These
-27 companies own nearly all the railway lines, employ
-nearly all the railway servants and make nearly all the
-profits assessed by the Inland Revenue Commissioners.
-And what do these profits amount to? As I have shown
-in Chapter 5, they amount to £43,000,000 per annum,
-or far more than is paid in wages in one of the most
-dangerous and most useful of all occupations.</p>
-
-<p>It is instructive to note how the joint-stock company
-promoter calculates the wages factor in forming his plans.
-I recently had sent to me the prospectus of a gas company,
-formed to take over and enlarge an existing concern.
-It began by picturing the fat dividend "earned"
-by other gas companies, thus:—</p>
-
-<div class="small">
-
-<p>The profitable nature of the Gas Companies, and the favour in which
-their Shares are held by Investors, is shown by the following particulars,
-which are obtained from the Stock Exchange Official List,
-Stock Exchange Year Book, and other Official sources:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">{103}</a></span>
-The Croydon Gas Company pay 14 per cent., and the £100 Ordinary
-Stock is quoted at £320.</p>
-
-<p>The Wakefield Gas Company pay 11½ per cent., and the £25
-Ordinary Shares are quoted at £63.</p>
-
-<p>The Brentford Gas Company pay 12 per cent., and the £100 Consolidated
-Stock is quoted at £250.</p>
-
-<p>The Staines and Egham District Gas Company pay 13 per cent.,
-and the £25 Ordinary Shares are quoted at £60.</p>
-
-<p>While the Eastbourne Gas Company's A and C Stock pay dividends
-of 15 per cent. respectively, and the £10 Shares are now standing at
-165 per cent. premium.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>What all men who live by work and not by dividends
-should note is, how such beautiful results are arrived at.
-Inquiry will show that common "gas" is extracted from
-certain suitable varieties of coal by the hard labour of individuals
-employed in the handling of the inventions of
-the dead. It is hard work and exhausting work. If the
-shareholders, who only stand and wait, receive such princely
-dividends, what is the share of those who make the gas?</p>
-
-<p>The company prospectus referred to is good enough to
-reveal the nature of the division of the spoils. Its own
-statement is as follows:—</p>
-
-<div class="section">
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">{104}</a></div>
-
-<table class="gt1 small" summary="gt1-36">
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="subj">Taking the consumption of Gas at only 30,000,000 cubic feet per
- annum, and after allowing for the total cost of Coals, Labour, etc.,
- and crediting the sales for Coke and Residuals, Rates, and Taxes,
- Materials, etc., the income of the Company should be as follows:</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="subj">By sale of 30,000,000 feet of Gas at 5s. 10d. per 1,000
- cubic feet (present price being 6s. 10d.)</td>
- <td class="numb">£8,750 0 0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="subj">&nbsp;,,&nbsp;&nbsp;Sale of Coke, Tar, Breeze, and Residuals, including
- Meter Rentals</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">1,813 0 0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="2"></td>
- <td class="numb">£10,563 0 0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="subj">To purchases:</td>
- <td></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">&nbsp;,,&nbsp;&nbsp;3,000 Tons of Coal at 17s. 6d. per ton</td>
- <td class="numb">£2,650 0 0</td>
- <td></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">&nbsp;,,&nbsp;&nbsp;Purification, 2d. per 1,000 feet</td>
- <td class="numb">250 0 0</td>
- <td></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">&nbsp;,,&nbsp;&nbsp;Repairs and Renewals to Works
- and Machinery, 4d. per 1,000
- feet of Gas made</td>
- <td class="numb">500 0 0</td>
- <td></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">&nbsp;,,&nbsp;&nbsp;Repairs, Services to Mains, Lamp
- Columns, and Meters, 2d. per
- 1,000 feet of Gas made</td>
- <td class="numb">250 0 0</td>
- <td></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">&nbsp;,,&nbsp;&nbsp;Directors' Remuneration, Secretary
- and Manager's Salary, Wages
- at works, Rates and Taxes, etc.,
- and Miscellaneous Expenses</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">1,353 0 0</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">5,003 0 0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj" style="text-align:right">Net Profit</td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="numb">£5,560 0 0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">To pay 6 per cent. on 15,000
- Preference shares at 6 per cent</td>
- <td class="numb">£900 0 0</td>
- <td></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">To pay 12 per cent. on 15,000 Ordinary
- shares at 12 per cent.</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">1,800 0 0</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">2,700 0 0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="subj">Leaving a surplus, available for further dividends on
- the Ordinary Shares and for Reserve Fund</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">£2,860 0 0</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The company expects to sell its gas and by-products for
-£10,563. It further expects that its entire outlay in producing
-the £10,563 worth of gas, etc., will be only £5,003,
-leaving a net profit of £5,560! Now let us look for the
-estimated <i>remuneration of labour</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Here are the lines:—</p>
-
-<table class="gt1" summary="gt1-37">
-
-<colgroup>
- <col style="width:85%" />
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">To directors' remuneration, secretary and manager's
- salary, wages at works, rates and taxes, etc.,
- and miscellaneous expenses</td>
- <td class="numb">£1,353</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj">And the repair and renewal items, which include
- some wages</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">750</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj" style="text-align:right">Total</td>
- <td class="numb">£2,103</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p class="nodent">So that £2,103 per annum covers, not only wages at works,
-salaries, directors' fees, but repairs, rates and taxes, and
-miscellaneous expenses, which must include postages,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">{105}</a></span>
-stationery, etc. It is obvious, therefore, that the total
-reward of all bodily and mental labour, all furnace-feeding
-and more or less scientific management, all
-work whatsoever connected with the gas-making and
-repairs is calculated by the promoters to cost something
-less than £2,103. Therefore, it is actually promised to
-investors, in the light of day, that they can take out of the
-product of the company's labour profits amounting to
-£5,560, while all the workers, including managers, are to
-take only about £1,500. And nothing is more certain
-than that, in the present condition of what we prettily call
-the "labour market," thousands of men, with thousands of
-women and children dependent upon them, would clamour
-to have the chance to take a share of the £1,500 while
-working to make £5,560 for the investors. Nor is it that
-we are merely examining the extravagant promises of a
-prospectus. There is nothing impossible in this scheme;
-the company has a good thing, and it is bound to make
-fine profits. I have given above a few specimens of gas
-dividends. Here are some more:</p>
-
-<div class="section">
-
-<table class="gt1 small" style="max-width:30em" summary="gt1-38">
-
-<colgroup>
- <col style="width:70%" />
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">Name of Company.</td>
- <td class="cent">Nominal Value of Shares or Stock.</td>
- <td class="cent">Dividend.</td>
- <td class="cent">Price of Shares (1905).</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td style="width:15em">The British Gas Light Co., Ltd.</td>
- <td class="numb">£20 </td>
- <td class="numb">10&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;p.c.</td>
- <td class="numb">£41</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>The Ipswich Gas L. Co. (A Stk.)</td>
- <td class="numb">10</td>
- <td class="numb">13½ p.c.</td>
- <td class="numb">28</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Eastbourne Gas Co. (C Stock)</td>
- <td class="numb">10</td>
- <td class="numb">15&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;p.c.</td>
- <td class="numb">28</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Harrogate Gas Co. (A Stock)</td>
- <td class="numb">100</td>
- <td class="numb">17&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;p.c.</td>
- <td class="numb">340</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Aldershot Gas and Water Co.</td>
- <td class="numb">10</td>
- <td class="numb">11½ p.c.</td>
- <td class="numb">23</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Portsea Is. Gas Lgt. Co. (B Shs.)</td>
- <td class="numb">50</td>
- <td class="numb">13&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;p.c.</td>
- <td class="numb">127</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>European Gas Co., Ltd.</td>
- <td class="numb">10</td>
- <td class="numb">11&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;p.c.</td>
- <td class="numb">23</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Bournemouth Gas and Water Co.</td>
- <td class="numb">10</td>
- <td class="numb">14&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;p.c.</td>
- <td class="numb">30</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Watford Gas and Coke Co.</td>
- <td class="numb">100</td>
- <td class="numb">13½ p.c.</td>
- <td class="numb">276</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>In each of these cases the remuneration of labour is
-much less than the remuneration of those who "wait."</p>
-
-<p>Thus the records of public companies place at our
-disposal a very fair picture of distribution as it is. We
-cease to wonder at the terrible error in the distribution
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">{106}</a></span>
-of the nation's income. It is brought home to us that a
-few individuals, through a monopoly of capital, have a
-great economic advantage over the multitude of their
-fellows. That it is impossible to argue that the error of
-distribution accords, even roughly, with the intrinsic value
-of the various orders of services, is sufficiently shown in
-the case of these companies, for their gross profit is usually
-subject to deduction for the reward of brain-power before
-assessment by the Income Tax Commissioners. We see
-that it is not any form of ability, either in design or in
-organization (which is but design) or in manual effort
-which secures the largest rewards in industry. It is capital,
-as capital, which takes the lion's share of the product of the
-mental and manual labour exercised upon the small area
-of land which serves for the basis of our industries.<span class="fnanchor"><a
-name="Ref_30" id="Ref_30" href="#Foot_30">[30]</a></span> The
-landlord's share, although actually great, is relatively small.
-In agriculture the conditions are different. It is the landlord,
-as landlord, who takes the lion's share of the product
-of the cultivated acres of the United Kingdom.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_28" id="Foot_28" href="#Ref_28">[28]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-I use this phrase with intention. Interest, once defined as the reward of
-"abstinence," is now usually explained by the economists of the schools to be
-the reward of "waiting." "Abstinence" has been laughed out of court.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_29" id="Foot_29" href="#Ref_29">[29]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-The State has now agreed to buy out this undertaking.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_30" id="Foot_30" href="#Ref_30">[30]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-In view of the fact that the Single Tax doctrines of Henry George are still
-sedulously propagated in this country it is of interest to quote here the following
-passage from one of Mr George's latest works:</p>
-
-<p>"<i>We have no fear of capital, regarding it as the natural handmaiden of
-labour; we look on interest itself as natural and just; we would set no limit to
-accumulation, nor impose on the rich any burden that is not equally placed on
-the poor; we see no evil in competition, but deem unrestricted competition to be
-as necessary to the health of the industrial and social organisms as the free circulation
-of the blood is to the health of the bodily organism—to be the agency
-whereby the fullest co-operation is to be secured. We would simply take for the
-community what belongs to the community, the value that attaches to land by
-the growth of the community; leave sacredly to the individual all that belongs
-to the individual; and, treating necessary monopolies as functions of the State,
-abolish all restrictions and prohibitions save those required for public health,
-safety, morals, and convenience.</i>"—From "The Condition of Labour" by
-Henry George. Published by Swan, Sonnenschein, 1891. Pages 91 and 92.</p>
-
-<p>This gospel of unrestricted competition (in the same volume Henry George
-chided Pope Leo XIII. for counselling the State to restrict the employment of
-women and children) is actually preached to the poor as a solution of the
-problem of poverty.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">{107}</a></span>
-
-<h3>CHAPTER IX<br />
-<small>PROFITS, BAD TRADE AND UNEMPLOYMENT</small></h3>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">IF we look at the amounts of profit assessed under the
-income tax during the last fifteen years we are
-struck with the steady growth of the figures:—</p>
-
-<div class="section">
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">GROSS PROFITS ASSESSED TO INCOME TAX</p>
-
-<table class="gt1" style="max-width:25em" summary="gt1-39">
-
-<tr><td>1893-4</td><td class="numb">£673,700,000</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1894-5</td><td class="numb">657,100,000</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1895-6</td><td class="numb">677,800,000</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1896-7</td><td class="numb">704,700,000</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1897-8</td><td class="numb">734,500,000</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1898-9</td><td class="numb">762,700,000</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1899-1900</td><td class="numb">791,700,000</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1900-1</td><td class="numb">833,300,000</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1901-2</td><td class="numb">867,000,000</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1902-3</td><td class="numb">879,600,000</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1903-4</td><td class="numb">902,800,000</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1904-5</td><td class="numb">912,100,000</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1905-6</td><td class="numb">925,200,000</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1906-7</td><td class="numb">943,700,000</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1907-8</td><td class="numb">980,100,000</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1908-9</td><td class="numb">1,010,000,000</td></tr>
-
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="nodent">These figures have been widely quoted, and with reason,
-as indicative of rapidly growing prosperity. We see that
-the gross assessment to income tax has actually grown
-by over £336,000,000 since 1894. We could have no
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">{108}</a></span>
-better proof of the growth of the national product which
-is divided up amongst us.</p>
-
-<p>There is but one set-back in the table. It occurred in
-the year 1894, when the total gross assessment fell by
-£16,600,000, and the assessment under Schedule D
-(Trades and Professions) fell by £16,000,000. This fall,
-of course, was only an apparent one caused by an alteration
-in the limit of exemption. Since that date there has
-been remarkable growth. Since "Riches and Poverty"
-first appeared (1905) the growth has proceeded very
-rapidly indeed.</p>
-
-<p>It is of interest to inquire into the movement of wages
-and employment during these years of remarkable prosperity.
-Did wages rise and was employment constant?</p>
-
-<p>In "Riches and Poverty," edition 1905, pp. 99 <i>et seq.</i>,
-I wrote:</p>
-
-<p>"Let us take some typical trades, and examine the
-rates of wages paid in these years of rapidly increasing
-profits.</p>
-
-<p>"The figures about to be quoted are those collected by
-the Labour Department of the Board of Trade.</p>
-
-<p>"London carpenters in 1894 were paid 9½d. per hour.
-In 1897 the rate rose to 10d. and in 1903 to 10½d. In
-Birmingham in 1894 the rate was 9d. and in 1903 9½d.
-In Belfast the rise between 1894 and 1903 was from 7¾d.
-to 8½d.</p>
-
-<p>"Bricklayers' labourers in London were paid 6½d. per
-hour in 1894 and 7d. in 1903. In Manchester the rate
-remained constant at 6d. per hour. In Birmingham there
-was a rise from 6d. to 6½d. Masons' labourers in Glasgow
-have been paid since 1894 a constant rate of 5½d.</p>
-
-<p>"Turning to coal-hewers we get some considerable
-changes, which are best shown in tabular form:—</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">{109}</a></div>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">NOMINAL DAILY EARNINGS OF COAL HEWERS<br />1894-1903</p>
-
-<table class="gt3" summary="gt3-2">
-
-<tr>
- <td rowspan="2" class="rlin2"></td>
- <td class="cent rlin">Northumberland</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">Durham.</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">Sth. Staffs. and East Worcestershire.</td>
- <td class="cent">West Scotland.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="padnumb rlin"><i>s.</i>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>d.</i></td>
- <td class="padnumb rlin"><i>s.</i>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>d.</i></td>
- <td class="padnumb rlin"><i>s.</i>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>d.</i></td>
- <td class="padnumb"><i>s.</i>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>d.</i></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="padnumb rlin2">1894</td>
- <td class="padnumb rlin">5&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;9</td>
- <td class="padnumb rlin">5&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;5</td>
- <td class="padnumb rlin">4&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;8</td>
- <td class="padnumb">6&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="padnumb rlin2">1897</td>
- <td class="padnumb rlin">5&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;0</td>
- <td class="padnumb rlin">4&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;11</td>
- <td class="padnumb rlin">4&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4</td>
- <td class="padnumb">4&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;6</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="padnumb rlin2">1900</td>
- <td class="padnumb rlin">6&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;0</td>
- <td class="padnumb rlin">5&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;10</td>
- <td class="padnumb rlin">4&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;8</td>
- <td class="padnumb">6&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="padnumb rlin2">1901</td>
- <td class="padnumb rlin">7&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;9</td>
- <td class="padnumb rlin">7&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;5</td>
- <td class="padnumb rlin">5&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;0</td>
- <td class="padnumb">8&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="padnumb rlin2">1903</td>
- <td class="padnumb rlin">6&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;0</td>
- <td class="padnumb rlin">5&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;10</td>
- <td class="padnumb rlin">5&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;0</td>
- <td class="padnumb">5&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;9</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>"In the ten years there has been a considerable variation,
-but the high rates of 1901 were brief in duration.
-Coal-hewers' wages have now gone back almost to the
-level of 1894.</p>
-
-<p>"Engine fitters in London earned 38s. in 1894 and 39s.
-in 1903. In Birmingham and Manchester the rates rose
-from 34s. in 1894 to 36s. in 1903. In Newcastle there
-was a greater rise in the same period, from 31s. 6d. to 36s.</p>
-
-<p>"Ironfounders in London obtained 38s. in 1894, 40s.
-to 42s. in 1900 and 40s. in 1903. In Manchester the
-rates were much the same. In Birmingham 36s. was paid
-in 1894 and 38s. in 1903.</p>
-
-<p>"Compositors in London were paid 38s. in 1894 and
-39s. in 1903. In Manchester the rate remained constant
-at 35s. In Glasgow the rate remained constant at 34s.</p>
-
-<p>"Agricultural labourers in the Eastern Counties obtained
-11s. 1d. per week in 1894 and a gradual increase to 13s. 1d.
-in 1903. In the North near coal there was a rise from
-17s. 5d. to 18s. 4d. In the Midlands 13s. 5d. was paid
-in 1894 and 14s. 6d. in 1903.</p>
-
-<p>"Textile wages are best expressed by an index number.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">{110}</a></span>
-Taking the rate of 1903 as 100 the rate paid in 1894
-was nearly 95 per cent. of that of 1903. This increase
-refers to cotton spinners and weavers and linen and jute
-operatives taken together.</p>
-
-<p>"A mere recital of the foregoing facts is sufficient to
-show that the rise in wages in 1894-1903 was at a much
-lower rate than the growth of profits in the same period."</p>
-
-<p>Revising this work for 1910, I regret to say that the
-changes in the above-quoted rates have been so few that it
-is not worth while to rewrite what I set down five years ago.
-Wage rates have been almost stationary in the interim,
-and the changes that have been made in the above figures
-are too insignificant to be worth recording.</p>
-
-<p>The matter is best dealt with by setting out the Board
-of Trade wages index numbers. In the important table
-on page 112 I have contrasted the representative wage
-index numbers prepared by the Board of Trade with
-index numbers representing the gross assessments to
-income tax. In a similar table in "Riches and Poverty,"
-1905 edition, I did not take into consideration the growth
-of the number of income tax payers. In the present
-calculation I have assumed a growth of income tax payers
-of 10,000 a year throughout the period, which must be
-very near the truth.</p>
-
-<p>It will be seen that, representing the profits of 1900 by
-100 and calculating the profits of other years as percentages
-of 100, the total profits index number rises from
-86.8 in 1893 to 112.5 in 1908.</p>
-
-<p>The wages are treated in the same way, the rates of the
-years before and after 1900 being expressed as percentages
-of the rates of that year. It will be found that the index
-number expressing the unweighted average of the building,
-coal-mining, engineering and textile trades, and agriculture
-rose from 90.1 in 1893 to 101.0 in 1908.</p>
-
-<p>It is a striking contrast:—</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">{111}</a></div>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">PROFITS AND WAGES CONTRASTED<br />
-<small>(From Table on page 112).</small></p>
-
-<table class="gt1 small" style="max-width:20em" summary="gt1-40">
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="cent">Profits.<br />Per cent. of those of 1900.</td>
- <td class="cent">Wages.<br />Per cent. of those of 1900.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td style="width:4em">1893</td>
- <td class="numb">86.8</td>
- <td class="numb">90.1</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>1900</td>
- <td class="numb">100.0</td>
- <td class="numb">100.0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>1908</td>
- <td class="numb">112.5</td>
- <td class="numb">101.0</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>It should be remembered that the income tax assessments
-are largely made upon the average of the profits
-of the three years preceding the year of assessment (see
-Chapter 21), and that the income tax has been better
-collected in recent years, but even when allowance is
-made for this the figures remain remarkable.</p>
-
-<p>The table does much less than justice to the growth
-of profits, for this reason. As will be seen by the table
-on page 37, the growth of income tax payers has been
-chiefly in the region of small salaries, which (see p. 36)
-average about £200 a year. The addition of 10,000
-income payers at £200 a year adds but £2,000,000 to a
-year's aggregate assessment. But the addition of 10,000
-£200 income tax payers in a year, little as it adds to the
-aggregate, waters down the average income tax income
-(col. C, p. 112), and so lowers the Profits Index Number.
-If one could separate the small salary earners from the
-table, <i>profits would show a much more decided growth</i>, considerable
-as is the rise in the index number as modified
-by the small fry.</p>
-
-<p>On the other hand, the Wage Index Number deals with
-certain trades—mining, textile, engineering, building, agriculture—which
-have certainly gained more in wage rates
-in the period than a great mass of labour outside the
-groups named. Therefore, while the Profits Index Number
-minimizes the growth of profits, the Wage Index Number
-exaggerates the growth of wages as a whole. On the
-latter point, see Chapter 2.</p>
-
-<div class="section">
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">{112}</a></div>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">TAXED PROFITS AND WAGES CONTRASTED</p>
-
-<p class="nodent small">The Wage Index Numbers are those of the Board of
-Trade (Cd. 4954). The Profit Index Numbers are
-based upon the Inland Revenue Assessments. The
-Financial Year 1893-4 is taken to correspond with
-the Calendar Year 1893.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent small"><i>Note.</i>—The wages and profits of 1900 are represented by 100. The wages
-and profits of the other years are expressed as percentages of those of 1900.</p>
-
-<table class="gt2" summary="gt2-12">
-
-<tr>
- <td rowspan="3" class="ulin rlin cent">YEAR</td>
- <td colspan="4" class="ulin rlin cent">PROFITS.</td>
- <td colspan="4" class="ulin cent">WAGES.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin cent">A.</td>
- <td class="rlin cent">B.</td>
- <td class="rlin cent">C.</td>
- <td class="rlin cent">D.</td>
- <td class="cent">E.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="ulin rlin cent">Gross Assessments to Income Tax.</td>
- <td class="ulin rlin cent">Probable Number of Income Tax Payers.</td>
- <td class="ulin rlin cent">Average Gross Income of Tax Payers.</td>
- <td class="ulin rlin cent">Index No. of Incomes. 1900=100</td>
- <td class="ulin cent">Wages Index No. 1900=100.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td class="cent rlin">£</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">Number.</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">£</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">Per Cent.</td>
- <td class="cent">Per Cent.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">1893</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">674,000,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">950,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">709</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">86.8</td>
- <td class="numb">90.1</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">1894</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">657,000,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">960,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">684</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">83.8</td>
- <td class="numb">89.5</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">1895</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">678,000,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">970,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">698</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">85.5</td>
- <td class="numb">89.1</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">1896</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">705,000,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">980,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">719</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">88.1</td>
- <td class="numb">89.9</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">1897</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">734,000,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">990,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">741</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">90.8</td>
- <td class="numb">90.8</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">1898</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">763,000,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,000,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">763</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">93.5</td>
- <td class="numb">93.2</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">1899</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">792,000,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,010,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">784</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">96.0</td>
- <td class="numb">95.4</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">1900</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">833,000,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,020,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">816</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">100.0</td>
- <td class="numb">100.0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">1901</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">867,000,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,030,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">841</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">103.0</td>
- <td class="numb">99.0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">1902</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">880,000,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,040,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">846</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">103.6</td>
- <td class="numb">97.8</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">1903</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">903,000,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,050,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">860</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">105.3</td>
- <td class="numb">97.2</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">1904</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">912,000,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,060,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">860</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">105.3</td>
- <td class="numb">96.7</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">1905</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">925,000,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,070,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">864</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">105.8</td>
- <td class="numb">97.0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">1906</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">944,000,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,080,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">874</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">107.1</td>
- <td class="numb">98.3</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">1907</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">980,000,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,090,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">899</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">110.1</td>
- <td class="numb">101.7</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin ulin">1908</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">1,010,000,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">1,100,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">918</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">112.5</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">101.0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="numb rlin">Increase<br />1893-1908</td>
- <td class="cent ulin rlin">49.8<br />Per Cent</td>
- <td class="cent ulin rlin">15.7<br />Per Cent</td>
- <td class="cent ulin rlin">29.5<br />Per Cent</td>
- <td class="cent ulin rlin">29.5<br />Per Cent</td>
- <td class="cent ulin">12.0<br />Per Cent</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="numb rlin">Increase<br />1900-1908</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">21.2<br />Per Cent</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">7.8<br />Per Cent</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">12.5<br />Per Cent</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">12.5<br />Per Cent</td>
- <td class="cent">1.0<br />Per Cent</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">{113}</a></div>
-
-<div class="image-center">
- <img src="images/profits-wages.jpg" width="650" height="449" alt="profits-wages" />
- <div class="caption">
- <p>PROFITS AND WAGES, 1893-1908<br />(see Table on p. 112).</p>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">{115}</a></span>
-Thus in recent years the proportion of the national
-income taken by labour made no gain upon the proportion
-taken by capital. On the contrary, labour took a
-diminished share of the increased product.</p>
-
-<p>Since the Boer War labour has barely retained the
-increase which it obtained between 1894 and 1900.</p>
-
-<p>The seriousness of the position is increased by the
-great rise in the cost of living, as the following figures
-testify:</p>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">WAGES AND COST OF LIVING</p>
-
- <table class="gt1" style="max-width:20em" summary="gt1-41">
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="cent">Board of Trade<br />Wages Index No.</td>
- <td class="cent">Board of Trade<br />Wages Index Number<br />Retail Price of Food in London</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>1895</td>
- <td class="numb">89.1</td>
- <td class="numb">93.0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>1900</td>
- <td class="numb">100.0</td>
- <td class="numb">100.0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>1908</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">101.0</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">109.0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Increase per cent.</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">13.3</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">17.2</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>Thus, real wages have actually fallen since 1895.</p>
-
-<p>Again, as has been already remarked, the Board of
-Trade Wages Index Number deals with trades which on
-the whole have gained more than wages generally. Railway
-wages have been stationary for years, even while the
-cost of living has been going up. On the German and
-Swiss national lines the men have been granted higher
-wages in compensation for increased costs; here our
-railway companies abuse their monopolistic position to
-the uttermost in regard to wages as in regard to the
-public welfare.</p>
-
-<p>In addition to reduced rates of wages in slump years,
-the working classes are made to bear the brunt of depression
-through (1) "short time" or partial unemployment,
-and (2) dismissal.</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">{116}</a></div>
-
-<div class="section">
-
-<div class="tbl-hdg">
-
-<p class="nodent smc">Unemployment.—Table showing, for the end of
-each month in <small>1900-1910</small>, the number of
-members out-of-work in the Trade Unions
-which pay "Unemployment Benefit." These
-figures do not include members receiving
-strike or sick pay</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<table class="gt2" style="max-width:25em" summary="gt2-13">
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin ulin" style="width:4em">Date.</td>
- <td class="cent rlin ulin">Membership.</td>
- <td class="cent rlin ulin">Number out<br />of Work.</td>
- <td class="cent ulin">Per Cent.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">1900</td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">January</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">521,833</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">14,252</td>
- <td class="numb">2.7</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">February</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">524,872</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">15,114</td>
- <td class="numb">2.9</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">March</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">524,199</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">11,821</td>
- <td class="numb">2.3</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">April</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">525,865</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">13,075</td>
- <td class="numb">2.5</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">May</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">531,608</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">12,645</td>
- <td class="numb">2.4</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">June</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">533,119</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">13,992</td>
- <td class="numb">2.6</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">July</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">533,499</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">14,566</td>
- <td class="numb">2.7</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">August</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">534,331</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">15,971</td>
- <td class="numb">3.0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">September</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">536,242</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">19,520</td>
- <td class="numb">3.6</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">October</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">535,668</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">17,750</td>
- <td class="numb">3.3</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">November</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">539,175</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">17,715</td>
- <td class="numb">3.2</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">December</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">540,102</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">21,496</td>
- <td class="numb">4.0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">1901</td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">January</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">545,539</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">21,682</td>
- <td class="numb">4.9</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">February</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">543,487</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">21,159</td>
- <td class="numb">3.6</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">March</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">544,688</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">19,618</td>
- <td class="numb">3.8</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">April</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">547,197</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">21,018</td>
- <td class="numb">3.6</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">May</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">544,460</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">19,487</td>
- <td class="numb">3.4</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">June</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">541,651</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">18,605</td>
- <td class="numb">3.4</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">July</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">539,422</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">18,164</td>
- <td class="numb">3.9</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">August</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">543,971</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">21,025</td>
- <td class="numb">3.7</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">September</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">542,917</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">20,180</td>
- <td class="numb">3.7</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">October</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">544,827</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">19,995</td>
- <td class="numb">3.8</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">November</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">545,832</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">20,614</td>
- <td class="numb">3.6</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">December</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">554,018</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">25,703</td>
- <td class="numb">4.6</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">1902</td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">January</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">553,218</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">24,470</td>
- <td class="numb">4.4</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">February</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">561,708</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">24,072</td>
- <td class="numb">4.3</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">March</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">551,270</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">20,241</td>
- <td class="numb">3.7</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">April</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">550,958</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">21,349</td>
- <td class="numb">3.9</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">May</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">549,023</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">21,926</td>
- <td class="numb">4.0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">June</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">554,893</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">22,832</td>
- <td class="numb">4.2</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">July</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">550,169</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">21,859</td>
- <td class="numb">4.0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">August</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">551,565</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">24,549</td>
- <td class="numb">5.5</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">September</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">553,870</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">27,522</td>
- <td class="numb">5.0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">October</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">548,442</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">27,270</td>
- <td class="numb">5.0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">November</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">549,197</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">26,454</td>
- <td class="numb">4.8</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">December</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">552,415</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">30,302</td>
- <td class="numb">5.5</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">1903</td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">January</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">547,671</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">27,685</td>
- <td class="numb">5.1</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">February</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">549,843</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">26,471</td>
- <td class="numb">4.8</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">March</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">559,129</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">24,096</td>
- <td class="numb">4.3</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">April</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">554,901</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">22,665</td>
- <td class="numb">4.1</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">May</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">554,524</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">22,102</td>
- <td class="numb">4.0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">June</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">556,695</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">24,804</td>
- <td class="numb">4.5</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">July</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">555,743</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">27,394</td>
- <td class="numb">4.9</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">August</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">561,946</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">30,751</td>
- <td class="numb">5.5</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">September</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">558,508</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">32,179</td>
- <td class="numb">5.8</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">October</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">555,105</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">32,358</td>
- <td class="numb">5.8</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">November</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">562,954</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">33,614</td>
- <td class="numb">6.0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">December</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">559,897</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">37,501</td>
- <td class="numb">6.7</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">1904</td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">January</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">561,226</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">36,767</td>
- <td class="numb">6.6</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">February</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">563,824</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">34,388</td>
- <td class="numb">6.1</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">March</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">567,232</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">33,950</td>
- <td class="numb">6.0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">April</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">561,611</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">33,706</td>
- <td class="numb">6.0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">May</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">571,384</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">36,002</td>
- <td class="numb">6.3</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">June</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">573,373</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">34,066</td>
- <td class="numb">5.9</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">July</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">568,272</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">34,494</td>
- <td class="numb">6.1</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">August</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">575,061</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">37,006</td>
- <td class="numb">6.4</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">September</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">575,575</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">39,005</td>
- <td class="numb">6.8</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">October</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">576,642</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">39,396</td>
- <td class="numb">6.8</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">November</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">577,268</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">40,244</td>
- <td class="numb">7.0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">December</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">573,726</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">43,435</td>
- <td class="numb">7.6</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="section">
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">{117}</a></div>
-
-<div class="tbl-hdg">
-
-<p class="nodent"><span class="smc">Unemployment</span>—<i>continued</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<table class="gt2" style="max-width:25em" summary="gt2-14">
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin ulin" style="width:4em">Date.</td>
- <td class="cent rlin ulin">Membership.</td>
- <td class="cent rlin ulin">Number out<br />of Work.</td>
- <td class="cent ulin">Per Cent.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">1905</td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">January</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">578,910</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">39,315</td>
- <td class="numb">6.8</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">February</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">578,708</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">35,778</td>
- <td class="numb">6.2</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">March</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">578,684</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">32,558</td>
- <td class="numb">5.6</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">April</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">575,968</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">32,348</td>
- <td class="numb">5.6</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">May</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">575,512</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">29,487</td>
- <td class="numb">5.1</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">June</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">576,346</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">29,995</td>
- <td class="numb">5.2</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">July</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">576,472</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">29,845</td>
- <td class="numb">5.2</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">August</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">578,444</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">31,046</td>
- <td class="numb">5.4</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">September</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">578,542</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">30,696</td>
- <td class="numb">5.3</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">October</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">584,288</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">29,560</td>
- <td class="numb">5.0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">November</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">586,040</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">27,769</td>
- <td class="numb">4.7</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">December</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">581,630</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">28,734</td>
- <td class="numb">4.9</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">1906</td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">January</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">588,121</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">27,614</td>
- <td class="numb">4.7</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">February</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">586,956</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">26,064</td>
- <td class="numb">4.4</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">March</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">585,376</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">22,465</td>
- <td class="numb">3.8</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">April</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">582,201</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">21,037</td>
- <td class="numb">3.6</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">May</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">590,919</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">21,080</td>
- <td class="numb">3.6</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">June</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">593,830</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">21,785</td>
- <td class="numb">3.7</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">July</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">595,637</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">21,464</td>
- <td class="numb">3.6</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">August</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">596,010</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">22,528</td>
- <td class="numb">3.8</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">September</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">598,611</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">22,826</td>
- <td class="numb">3.8</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">October</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">600,122</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">26,313</td>
- <td class="numb">4.4</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">November</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">604,370</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">27,446</td>
- <td class="numb">4.5</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">December</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">597,198</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">29,212</td>
- <td class="numb">4.9</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">1907</td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">January</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">617,911</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">25,990</td>
- <td class="numb">4.2</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">February</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">618,574</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">23,932</td>
- <td class="numb">3.9</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">March</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">618,230</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">22,058</td>
- <td class="numb">3.6</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">April</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">619,591</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">20,310</td>
- <td class="numb">3.3</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">May</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">624,993</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">21,081</td>
- <td class="numb">3.4</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">June</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">622,584</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">22,189</td>
- <td class="numb">3.6</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">July</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">631,158</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">23,291</td>
- <td class="numb">3.7</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">August</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">632,068</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">25,458</td>
- <td class="numb">4.0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">September</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">631,241</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">28,914</td>
- <td class="numb">4.6</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">October</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">638,788</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">30,079</td>
- <td class="numb">4.7</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">November</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">639,678</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">32,010</td>
- <td class="numb">5.0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">December</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">644,298</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">39,343</td>
- <td class="numb">6.1</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">1908</td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">January</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">649,789 </td>
- <td class="numb rlin">40,580</td>
- <td class="numb">6.2</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">February</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">639,073</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">40,900</td>
- <td class="numb">6.4</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">March</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">639,716</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">43,853</td>
- <td class="numb">6.9</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">April</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">638,237</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">48,035</td>
- <td class="numb">7.5</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">May</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">627,613</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">49,515</td>
- <td class="numb">7.9</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">June</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">653,327</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">53,766</td>
- <td class="numb">8.2</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">July</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">646,511</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">53,163</td>
- <td class="numb">8.2</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">August</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">648,585</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">57,912</td>
- <td class="numb">8.9</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">September</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">593,444</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">55,793</td>
- <td class="numb">9.4</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">October</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">591,053</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">56,200</td>
- <td class="numb">9.5</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">November</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">644,770 </td>
- <td class="numb rlin">58,349</td>
- <td class="numb">9.1</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">December</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">679,060</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">61,619</td>
- <td class="numb">9.1</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">1909</td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">January</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">688,588</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">59,786</td>
- <td class="numb">8.7</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">February</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">696,688</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">58,670</td>
- <td class="numb">8.4</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">March</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">700,654 </td>
- <td class="numb rlin">57,450</td>
- <td class="numb">8.2</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">April</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">700,867</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">57,250</td>
- <td class="numb">8.2</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">May</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">699,779</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">55,473</td>
- <td class="numb">7.9</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">June</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">698,284</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">55,331</td>
- <td class="numb">7.9</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">July</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">693,848</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">54,877</td>
- <td class="numb">7.9</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">August</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">697,268</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">53,918</td>
- <td class="numb">7.7</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">September</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">695,720</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">51,749</td>
- <td class="numb">7.4</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">October</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">694,930</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">49,664</td>
- <td class="numb">7.1</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">November</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">696,415</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">45,569</td>
- <td class="numb">6.5</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">December</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">692,153</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">45,963</td>
- <td class="numb">6.6</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">1910</td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">January</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">694,456</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">47,259</td>
- <td class="numb">6.8</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">February</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">701,252</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">40,121</td>
- <td class="numb">5.7</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">March</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">701,766</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">36,543</td>
- <td class="numb">5.2</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">April</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">699,932</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">30,475</td>
- <td class="numb">4.4</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">May</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">703,439</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">29,787</td>
- <td class="numb">4.2</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">June</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">702,522</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">25,866</td>
- <td class="numb">3.7</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">July</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">698,888</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">26,664</td>
- <td class="numb">3.8</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">{118}</a></span>
-As to the amount of short time worked between 1900
-and 1910, we have no adequate information, but as to
-unemployment the evidences have forced themselves upon
-public attention in every part of the country.</p>
-
-<p>How ruthlessly the workman is made to bear the chief
-burden of bad trade and how, even in the best years, there
-is always a surplus of unemployed labour, can be clearly
-shown.</p>
-
-<p>There are about 2,000,000 men and women Trade
-Unionists in the United Kingdom, belonging to some
-1,300 Trade Unions, and forming but about one-seventh
-of the manual workers of the United Kingdom. Some of
-these Unions pay "unemployed benefits," and are therefore
-enabled to record accurately how many of their
-members are out-of-work. The membership of these
-particular Unions is about 650,000. The Board of Trade
-collects from them, monthly, details of the members
-out-of-work and these details are published in the official
-"Labour Gazette." From that publication I have compiled
-the table on pages 116-117, which shows faithfully,
-so far as about half a million of our workmen are concerned,
-how capital deals with labour. It covers the
-years since 1900, and continues the record printed on
-pp. 106-107 of "Riches and Poverty," edition 1905.</p>
-
-<p>The period examined covers a complete trade cycle,
-with its fat years and lean years. I think the reader
-cannot fail to be struck with the extraordinary variations
-in the state of employment shown in the table. Even in
-the best year of the period, 1900, and in March, the best
-month of that year, 11,821 members were receiving out-of-work
-pay out of a total of 524,199, and before a month
-had passed 1,200 more men had been discharged. By
-January, 1901, the number of unemployed exceeded
-21,000, or 4.0 per cent. By the end of 1901 the employers
-had rid themselves of 26,000 men out of 554,000.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">{119}</a></span>
-Throughout 1902 the number receiving out-of-work pay
-was round about 25,000 at the end of each month, the
-figure rising to 30,000 in December. By the end of
-1903 another 7,000 were discharged, and in December
-1904 the total rose to over 43,000 out of 574,000, or
-7.6 per cent. In 1905 there was improvement, continuing
-in 1906-7. At the end of 1907, however,
-39,000 out of 664,000 were out of work, and a year
-later 62,000 out of 679,000, or 9 per cent., were unemployed.
-1909 saw recovery, which has happily continued
-until now (August 1910). At the end of July
-1910 the unemployment rate had fallen to 3.8 per cent.</p>
-
-<p>These facts relate, not to casual labourers, but to the
-flower of our skilled workmen—to a class of men who
-are least likely to suffer (1) because they are the most
-needed instruments of capital, and (2) because they are
-organized and best able to resist injustice. If we were
-able to set out the facts relating to all manual labourers
-we should probably get a picture even more distressing.
-It is at any rate unlikely that, amongst manual labourers
-as a whole, employment is better than in the chief Trade
-Unions.</p>
-
-<p>In December 1904, the Hackney Town Council conducted
-a census of the unemployed of Hackney. It was
-carried out in a very sensible way. At a cost of about
-£150 every house in the borough was canvassed between
-December 12th, 1904, and January 31st, 1905, and particulars
-obtained from every person over 16 years of age
-found to be unemployed. The results were:—</p>
-
-<table class="gt1" style="max-width:22.5em" summary="gt1-42">
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="cent">Population<br />(1901)</td>
- <td class="cent">Houses.</td>
- <td class="cent">Unemployed.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>North</td>
- <td>Hackney</td>
- <td class="numb">45,110</td>
- <td class="numb">9,152</td>
- <td class="numb">465</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Central</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td class="numb">69,368</td>
- <td class="numb">9,837</td>
- <td class="numb">1,090</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>South</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">104,794</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">14,751</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">2,963</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td>Totals</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">219,272</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">33,740</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">4,518</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">{120}</a></span>
-South Hackney, which contains the poor Homerton Ward,
-of course gave the worst results. The unemployed in
-South Hackney actually numbered 3 per cent. of its whole
-population, men, women, and children! Taking the
-borough as a whole, including well-to-do Stamford Hill,
-the unemployed rate came out at nearly 7 per cent. of
-the "employable" population of all classes. 530 cases of
-"pawning and selling home" were discovered. Thus, for
-all classes of workers in Hackney, the unemployment rate
-was almost precisely the same as the rate in the Trade
-Unions paying unemployment benefit. It is also worthy
-of note that, out of a total number of 4,315 males
-unemployed, as many as 1,477 were "labourers," and
-1,167 of these "general labourers." These facts, impressive
-as they are, amount to an understatement of the case,
-however. Many of the unemployed, from feelings of
-delicacy, failed to record their condition for fear of public
-attention being directed to them personally. Mr Councillor
-Fairchild of Hackney told me that he knew of forty cases
-of unemployment not returned in the census. This goes
-to show that we are justified in taking the unemployed
-Trade Union rate as really representative of the whole
-body of labour. While, on the one hand, it excludes
-postmen, railway servants, policemen, and others who have
-quite regular work, it does not include the great mass of
-"labourers" and other casual workers whose state of
-employment must always be worse than that of the men
-belonging to the benefit-paying Trade Unions.</p>
-
-<p>It is well to point out, for the facts are little known, the
-enormous sums expended by the chief Trade Unions in
-out-of-work pay. For recent years the figures have been:—</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">{121}</a></div>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">EXPENDITURE ON UNEMPLOYED BENEFIT<br />
-BY CERTAIN TRADE UNIONS HAVING A<br />
-TOTAL MEMBERSHIP OF ABOUT 650,000</p>
-
-<table class="gt1" style="max-width:15em" summary="gt1-43">
-
-<tr>
- <td class="small">Year.</td>
- <td class="small">Expenditure.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr><td>1898</td><td class="numb">£234,000</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1899</td><td class="numb">185,000</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1900</td><td class="numb">261,000</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1901</td><td class="numb">325,000</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1902</td><td class="numb">429,000</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1903</td><td class="numb">516,000</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1904</td><td class="numb">655,000</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1905</td><td class="numb">523,000</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1906</td><td class="numb">424,000</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1907</td><td class="numb">466,000</td></tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>Thus, even in the best recent years, 1899 and 1900,
-these Unions had to pay out £185,000 and £261,000
-respectively to sustain members out-of-work. Modern
-industry works with a constant margin of unemployed
-labour, a margin which ever tends to depress wages and to
-place the employed at a disadvantage in bargaining for
-the sale of their services.</p>
-
-<p>The sums above named are part, of course, of the alleged
-working class "capital" referred to on page 56, and often
-advanced as proof of the <i>riches of the poor</i>. In plain fact
-they are abstracted from poor wages in order to keep the
-home together when those poor wages fail altogether in
-seasons of unemployment. To term them "capital," or
-to flaunt them as "wealth," shows a curious perversity of
-ideas.</p>
-
-<p>While we do not know how many workers are unemployed
-at any given time, it is probable that, as the whole
-body numbers about 15,000,000, and 60,000 are sometimes
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">{122}</a></span>
-unemployed out of a group of 650,000 of these, the
-total may reach 500,000 or 600,000 or more in bad
-years.</p>
-
-<p>Yet, when we obtain particulars of the profits of capital
-in "bad years of trade," we see little diminution in the
-handsome sums confessed to the Commissioners of Inland
-Revenue, and we understand how profits are sustained at
-the expense of the suffering and partial degradation of a
-great body of British citizens larger in number than the
-entire landowning and capitalist classes. I shall be surprised
-if it does not occur to some of those who read these
-lines that in view of the extraordinary profits shown in
-the totals on page 112 the wholesale dismissal of workmen
-at the first symptom of slackening trade is a disgrace to
-our civilization.</p>
-
-<p>As I have remarked earlier in these pages, unemployment
-is by no means confined to the manual labour classes.
-All the humbler units of commercial life are subject to
-treatment which is little better than that accorded the
-"workman." As I write there are thousands, if not tens
-of thousands, of clerks, writers, warehousemen, shop assistants,
-travellers, canvassers, agents, and others out of work
-and undergoing terrible sufferings in the endeavour to keep
-afloat. Cases are frequent in which advertisements offering
-berths of small account are hungrily applied for by
-hundreds of applicants. It is a sad reflection that for the
-vast majority of our people there is no such thing as
-security of tenure of employment. The profits assessed
-to income tax, the income, that is, of about one-ninth of
-our population, continue to rise by leaps and bounds, but
-the state of employment remains very much as it was.
-After a careful examination of the employment records
-of forty years the Board of Trade gave their verdict in
-1904 (Cd. 2337, p. 84), that "the average level of employment
-during the past four years has been almost
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">{123}</a></span>
-exactly the same as the average of the preceding forty
-years."</p>
-
-<p>But, as our population to-day is very much greater than
-in 1860, the same "average level of employment" means
-that there are far more unemployed workmen in England
-to-day than was the case forty years ago. The proportion
-of out-of-works is neither larger nor smaller, but the
-magnitude of the problem is greater because there are
-more of us.</p>
-
-<p>No attempt is yet made by our inadequate Census to
-obtain particulars of the number of unemployed. The
-Census Bill of 1910 led to a wrangle as to whether a
-religious census should be taken, but there was not even
-a wrangle as to whether the golden opportunity should
-be seized to ascertain the number of unemployed. So
-the Census of 1911 will come and go. Before the
-Census of 1921 is taken many proposals will be made
-for dealing with unemployment, but no one will know
-the size of the problem to be dealt with.</p>
-
-<p>There is, of course, no remedy for unemployment under
-present economic conditions. All that can be done by
-the State, consistently with the private ownership of land
-and industrial capital, is to <i>remedy the distress arising
-from unemployment</i>, and as I write (1910) the Government
-are contemplating a scheme for unemployment insurance,
-based on contributions by men and masters, with
-aid from taxation. Such a scheme should be strongly
-supported, but there should be clarity of ideas as to what
-is effected by insurance. Unemployment insurance no
-more cures unemployment than life insurance cures death.
-All that is done by it is to <i>relieve the distress caused by the
-unemployment</i>. It is a great and worthy object, but the
-unemployed workman drawing his out-of-work pay, <i>is still
-unemployed</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The Labour Party has propounded a "Right-to-Work"
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">{124}</a></span>
-Bill, but this again, on examination, suggests work <i>or
-maintenance</i>, its promoters seeing clearly that economic
-work cannot be made to order by a State which is as
-poor in property as the workmen themselves. The Right-to-Work
-Bill is thus no more a <i>remedy for unemployment</i>
-than an insurance scheme is such a remedy.</p>
-
-<p>Nor can the State, by pursuing its few public works
-chiefly in bad seasons, level unemployment as between
-good years and bad, or as between good seasons and bad.
-The troughs of the waves of depression are too great to
-be filled by such means, and they deceive themselves who
-think that they can rule those waves by the manipulation
-of Government contracts.</p>
-
-<p>The Labour Exchange is a useful machine for organizing
-labour to meet the vicissitudes of individualistic
-industry. It has been described as equivalent to the
-<i>organization of industry</i>, but that is a misnomer. The
-organization of industry can only begin with the organization
-of the means of production. If we organize production
-we necessarily organize labour. If we enrol unemployed
-workmen, and move them about as pawns to suit
-the uneconomic conditions of unorganized capital units
-("Come and tell us if you want a man;" "Come and tell
-us if you want a job") we may save the workman some
-trouble and loss of self-respect in finding new jobs, and
-render more tolerable his periods of idleness, but most
-surely we neither organize industry nor increase the
-volume of employment.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">{125}</a></span>
-
-<h3>CHAPTER X<br />
-<small>PART OF THEIR WAGES</small></h3>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">IN considering the earnings, as distinguished from the
-rates of wages, of the manual labour classes, we have
-found it necessary to make an allowance for time lost
-through sickness and accidents. Let us now examine
-the available records of the industrial accidents and
-diseases of occupations which are part of the wages of
-the working classes, and at the price of which the comforts
-of the well-to-do are purchased.</p>
-
-<p>As to persons employed in factories and workshops,
-we have the reports made to the inspectors under the
-Factory and Workshop Act of 1901. By Section 19
-of the Act it is provided that where there occurs an
-accident which either</p>
-
-<div class="subpara">
-
-<p>(<i>a</i>) Causes loss of life to a person employed in a
-factory or workshop; or</p>
-
-<p>(<i>b</i>) Causes to a person employed in a factory or
-workshop such bodily injury as to prevent
-him on any one of the three working days
-next after the occurrence of the accident from
-being employed for five hours on his ordinary
-work, written notice shall forthwith be sent
-to the factory inspector for the district.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>If the accident arises from special causes defined as
-machinery moved by power, boiler explosions, escape of
-gas or steam, or use of hot liquid or molten metal, the
-casualty has to be reported to a Certifying Surgeon as
-well as to the Inspector.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">{126}</a></span>
-It is also provided that if any notice required by Section
-19 as to an accident in a factory or workshop is not
-sent to the local inspector, the occupier of the factory or
-workshop shall be liable to a fine not exceeding £5.</p>
-
-<p>Thus, under the Factory and Workshop Act, an accident
-is not always a reportable accident. One worker
-may meet with a trivial accident which, though he is
-able to continue work, prevents him from doing his
-ordinary work for, say, the next six hours only after the
-accident. This would be a reportable accident. A
-second worker may meet with an accident which, though
-it does not prevent him from continuing his ordinary
-work for five hours on "any one of the three working
-days next after the occurrence of the accident," may
-afterwards develop into a permanent partial disablement,
-so that for weeks, or even months, he may be unable to
-do any work. This accident would not be "reportable"
-under the Factory Act.</p>
-
-<p>But there is a more important reason why the official
-records of accidents are incomplete. It lies in the fact
-that the administration of the Factory and Workshop Act
-by the Home Office is lax, and the staff of men and
-women inspectors ridiculously inadequate. The number
-of factories and workshops under inspection in 1908 was
-as follows:</p>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">FACTORIES, WORKSHOPS, ETC.,<br />
- UNDER INSPECTION, 1908</p>
-
-<table class="gt1" style="max-width:15em" summary="gt1-44">
-
-<tr>
- <td class="small">Class of Works.</td>
- <td class="small">Number of Works.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Factories</td>
- <td class="numb">110,691</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Workshops</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">149,398</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="numb ulin">260,089</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">{127}</a></span>
-The staff of inspectors and assistant inspectors in 1908
-was stated officially to be of an authorized strength of
-200. This is an improvement upon the 152 recorded in
-"Riches and Poverty," edition 1905, p. 115, but it cannot
-be termed adequate. If we imagine the 260,000 registered
-workplaces divided equally amongst the staff we see that
-each inspector has to deal, on the average, with 1,300
-workplaces. If, then, each registered workplace were
-inspected only once in each year, each inspector would
-need to inspect 32 factories or workshops per week. As
-this is a physical impossibility, it is clear that each
-registered workplace is not called upon even once in each
-year.</p>
-
-<p>Whether an employer does or does not report a reportable
-accident largely depends upon the vigilance of the
-local inspector, and as it is physically impossible for a few
-inspectors to be vigilant in regard to many employers
-there can be no question that an exceedingly large number
-of accidents go unreported. No reflection is made here
-upon the inspectors themselves; it is simply pointed out
-that, however devoted they may be, they cannot properly
-carry out the work which needs to be done.</p>
-
-<p>The Factory Report for 1908 (Cd. 4664) enables us to
-make the following comparison with the 1903 figures
-given in "Riches and Poverty" (1905 edition).</p>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">CASUALTIES IN FACTORIES<br />AND WORKSHOPS, 1903-8</p>
-
-<table class="gt1" style="max-width:12.5em" summary="gt1-45">
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="cent small">Fatal Accidents.</td>
- <td class="cent small">Non-Fatal Accidents.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>1903</td>
- <td class="numb">1,047</td>
- <td class="numb">92,600</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>1908</td>
- <td class="numb">1,042</td>
- <td class="numb">121,112</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>The fatal accidents have remained stationary; the non-fatal
-accidents have curiously increased. The explanation
-is largely that the additional staff of inspectors has led to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">{128}</a></span>
-better reporting of accidents. Probably many still go
-unreported.</p>
-
-<p>However, merely to take the list of "reported" accidents
-as it stands, we get the gruesome total of 1,042 persons
-killed and 121,000 wounded in factories and workshops in
-a single year.</p>
-
-<p>A considerable number of the non-fatal accidents are of
-a serious character, as may be judged from the following
-details showing the cases reported to certifying surgeons
-as arising from the "special causes" already referred
-to:</p>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">FACTORIES AND WORKSHOPS: ACCIDENTS<br />
-REPORTED TO CERTIFYING SURGEONS, 1908</p>
-
-<table class="gt1" style="max-width:20em" summary="gt1-46">
-
-<colgroup>
- <col style="width:75%" />
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent small">Degree of Injury.</td>
- <td class="cent small">Number.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Fatal</td>
- <td class="numb">1,042</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Loss of hand or arm</td>
- <td class="numb">126</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Loss of part of hand</td>
- <td class="numb">3,303</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Loss of part of leg or foot</td>
- <td class="numb">78</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Fractures</td>
- <td class="numb">1,680</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Loss of sight</td>
- <td class="numb">44</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Injuries to head or face</td>
- <td class="numb">5,109</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Burns and scalds</td>
- <td class="numb">5,617</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Other injuries</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">24,902</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="numb ulin">41,901</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>The number of reports to the Certifying Surgeons in
-1903 was 30,509 ("Riches and Poverty," edition 1905,
-p. 117).</p>
-
-<p>Having formed an idea, if an inadequate one, of the
-deaths, mutilations and injuries which occur in our factories
-and workshops in a single year, let us pass to the
-question of diseases of occupations. The particulars on
-page 129 are taken from the Factory Reports.</p>
-
-<div class="section">
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">{129}</a></div>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">DISEASES OF OCCUPATIONS IN FACTORIES<br />
- AND WORKSHOPS<br />
-<small>(Cases reported under the Factory and Workshop Act)</small></p>
-
-<table class="gt2" style="max-width:35em" summary="gt2-15">
-
-<colgroup>
- <col style="width:50%" />
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
- <td rowspan="3" class="cent ulin rlin">Disease and Industry.</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="cent smc ulin rlin">Cases.</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="cent smc ulin">Deaths.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="cent ulin rlin">Year ended December.</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="cent ulin">Year ended December.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent ulin rlin">1908</td>
- <td class="cent ulin rlin">1903</td>
- <td class="cent ulin rlin">1908</td>
- <td class="cent ulin">1903</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smc rlin">Lead Poisoning</td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">&nbsp;&nbsp;Smelting of Metals</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">70</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">37</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">2</td>
- <td class="numb">2</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">&nbsp;&nbsp;Brass Works</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">6</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">15</td>
- <td class="numb rlin"></td>
- <td class="numb"></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">&nbsp;&nbsp;Sheet Lead and Lead Piping</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">14</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">11</td>
- <td class="numb rlin"></td>
- <td class="numb"></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">&nbsp;&nbsp;Plumbing and Soldering</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">27</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">26</td>
- <td class="numb rlin"></td>
- <td class="numb"></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">&nbsp;&nbsp;Printing</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">30</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">13</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">2</td>
- <td class="numb">2</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">&nbsp;&nbsp;File Cutting</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">9</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">24</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">2</td>
- <td class="numb">2</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">&nbsp;&nbsp;Tinning and Enamelling of Iron<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Hollow-ware</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">10</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">14</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">0</td>
- <td class="numb"></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">&nbsp;&nbsp;White Lead Works</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">79</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">109</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">3</td>
- <td class="numb">2</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">&nbsp;&nbsp;Red and Yellow Lead Works</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">12</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">6</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">0</td>
- <td class="numb"></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">&nbsp;&nbsp;China and Earthenware</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">117</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">97</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">12</td>
- <td class="numb">3</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">&nbsp;&nbsp;Litho-transfer Works</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">2</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">3</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">0</td>
- <td class="numb"></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">&nbsp;&nbsp;Glass Cutting and Polishing</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">3</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">4</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1</td>
- <td class="numb"></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">&nbsp;&nbsp;Enamelling of Iron Plates</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">7</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">4</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">0</td>
- <td class="numb"></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">&nbsp;&nbsp;Electrical Accumulator Works</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">25</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">28</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1</td>
- <td class="numb"></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">&nbsp;&nbsp;Paint and Colour Works</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">25</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">39</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">0</td>
- <td class="numb">1</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">&nbsp;&nbsp;Coach Making</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">70</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">74</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">3</td>
- <td class="numb">5</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">&nbsp;&nbsp;Shipbuilding</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">15</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">24</td>
- <td class="numb rlin"></td>
- <td class="numb">1</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">&nbsp;&nbsp;Paint used in other Industries</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">47</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">46</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1</td>
- <td class="numb">1</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">&nbsp;&nbsp;Other Industries</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">78</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">40</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">5</td>
- <td class="numb ulin"></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Total Lead Poisoning</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">646</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">614</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">32</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">19</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smc rlin">Mercurial Poisoning</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">10</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">8</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin"></td>
- <td class="numb ulin"></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smc rlin">Phosphorus Poisoning</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">1</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin"></td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin"></td>
- <td class="numb ulin"></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smc rlin">Arsenic Poisoning</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">23</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">5</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">1</td>
- <td class="numb ulin"></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smc rlin">Anthrax</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">47</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">47</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">7</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">11</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smc rlin">Total Factories and Workshops</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">727</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">674</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">40</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">30</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smc rlin">Lead Poisoning amongst House<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;Painters and Plumbers</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">239</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">201</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">44</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">39</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="smc rlin">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Grand Total</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">966</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">875</td>
- <td class="numb rlin ulin">84</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">69</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">{130}</a></span>
-The greater part of the table, it will be seen, refers to
-factories and workshops, but a line is added to show the
-cases of lead poisoning amongst house painters.</p>
-
-<p>Thus, in 1908, 84 workpeople, and in 1903, 69 workpeople,
-succumbed to poisoning or anthrax, while about
-966 non-fatal cases were reported in the later year.
-Hundreds more, of course, go unreported, but the figures
-as they stand, representing only part of the terrible truth,
-make one shudder.</p>
-
-<p>Most of the lead poisoning cases under china and
-earthenware refer to women and young girls, and it should
-be noted that the figures for 1903 are very much better
-than those of previous years. Prior to 1899 one in every
-fifteen of the persons employed in lead processes was
-reported as suffering from plumbism! Stringent new rules
-were made in 1898, a monthly medical examination being
-provided for, and in 1899 the reported cases fell from
-457 to 249. Now they have fallen, as our table shows, to
-about 100 per annum. That is bad enough, for only some
-6,000 pottery workers are employed in the lead processes.
-The improvement, however, shows how much can be done
-to protect the factory worker. Pity it is that such steps
-were not taken before the people of the Potteries were
-stunted by their deadly employment.</p>
-
-<p>The horrible disease, anthrax, is responsible for about
-ten deaths per annum, and as its bacillus lurks in wool,
-hair, hides and skins imported from many countries for
-many industries, a large number of workers, from warehousemen
-to woolcombers, regularly run the risk of
-contagion.</p>
-
-<p>Turning to mining, the public is reminded at intervals,
-by a large scale disaster, of the work of the coal-miner.
-Momentarily, we think of the perilous nature of the
-industry upon which our wealth is built, and then the
-tide of events sweeps on—and we forget.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">{131}</a></span>
-Who remembers the last Rhondda holocaust? Was
-it in 1904 or in 1906? How many men perished?
-What was the cause? Few could answer these questions.
-Perhaps the 1910 disaster at Whitehaven will be more
-easily remembered because of its picturesque horror;
-because the sea washes over the miners' tomb; because
-reluctant hands were compelled to build a wall between
-the dead and the living. But these things are but the
-scenery of tragedy. It is the deaths that matter, and
-Whitehaven, awful as it is, accounts for but about one-ninth
-or one-tenth of the deaths in or about coal-mines
-of which the year 1910 will take toll.<span class="fnanchor"><a
-name="Ref_31" id="Ref_31" href="#Foot_31">[31]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>There will be the usual inquiry in the matter of this
-disaster, and I assume that the gravest consideration
-will be given to the circumstances. It appears to have
-been forgotten that on November 26th, 1907, five men
-were killed and seven injured at this same Whitehaven
-Colliery under circumstances which involved breaches of
-the Coal-Mines Regulation Act, and that on that occasion
-nearly 200 miners were imperilled. The cause was
-careless shot-firing, the same cause which destroyed 120
-miners in the Rhondda in 1905—and in his official
-report Mr R. A. S. Redmayne said:—</p>
-
-<p>"Had the flame reached the haulage road, the loss of
-life would have been very great, as probably all the
-morning shift, amounting to 180 persons ... would
-have lost their lives."</p>
-
-<p>Thus there was very grave and recent warning as to
-the need for care in this fiery mine underneath the sea.</p>
-
-<p>That in passing. My immediate purpose is to point out
-that such disasters as that of 1905 or 1910, destroying
-over 100 lives at a single blow, barely disturb the average
-loss of life in coal-mines, so great is the yearly loss.</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">{132}</a></div>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">DEATHS FROM ACCIDENTS AND EXPLOSIONS<br />
- IN COAL-MINES, 1851-1908</p>
-
-<table class="gt1" style="max-width:15em" summary="gt1-47">
-
-<colgroup>
- <col style="width:70%" />
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
- <td>1851 to 1900</td>
- <td class="numb">54,322</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">1901</td>
- <td class="numb">1,131</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">1902</td>
- <td class="numb">1,053</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">1903</td>
- <td class="numb">1,097</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">1904</td>
- <td class="numb">1,049</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">1905</td>
- <td class="numb">945</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">1906</td>
- <td class="numb">1,040</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">1907</td>
- <td class="numb">1,136</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">1908</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">1,116</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Total, 58 years</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">62,889</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Average per annum</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">1,083</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>Loss of life in getting coal is not a spasmodic thing
-for occasional tears; it is a day by day matter. The
-public at large is stricken with horror by such a disaster
-as Whitehaven. Miners' widows are made every day
-by trifling accidents of which the public never hears.
-It is bad that 133 men have been buried and burned
-off the coast of Cumberland in 1910; it is worse that
-from 1,000 to 1,500 men will have perished in our coal-mines
-between January 1 and December 31, 1910.</p>
-
-<p>And what of the maimings? Under the Mines Acts,
-notification of accidents in mines and quarries is also
-compulsory. Three classes of accidents are distinguished
-under the Acts: (1) Fatal accidents; (2) injuries from
-special causes, viz. explosions of gas, accidents in the use
-of explosives, and boiler explosions; (3) other injuries
-not of a "serious" character, no definition being given
-of serious personal injury. When death occurs from a
-case already reported as an injury, a further notification
-is required.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">{133}</a></span>
-In 1908, the casualties in British mines and quarries
-were as follows:</p>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">MINES AND QUARRIES, 1908</p>
-
-<table class="gt1" style="max-width:25em" summary="gt1-48">
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="cent small">Killed</td>
- <td class="cent small">Injured. (Cases of Disablement for more than 7 days).</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td style="width:17.5em">Coal and Metalliferous Mines—</td>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;1. Underground Accidents:-</td>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(<i>a</i>) Explosions</td>
- <td class="numb">128</td>
- <td class="numb">139</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(<i>b</i>) Falls of ground</td>
- <td class="numb">603</td>
- <td class="numb">52,579</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(<i>c</i>) Shaft accidents</td>
- <td class="numb">90</td>
- <td class="numb">1,010</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(<i>d</i>) Miscellaneous</td>
- <td class="numb">373</td>
- <td class="numb">78,489</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;2. Surface accidents</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">151</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">11,041</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="numb">1,345</td>
- <td class="numb">143,258</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Quarries</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">92</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">4,809</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="numb ulin">1,347</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">148,067</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>(The above table gives fuller particulars than that on
-page 120 of "Riches and Poverty," edition 1905; the
-latter gave particulars of "serious" accidents only.)</p>
-
-<p>One miner in about 600 is killed, and one miner in six
-is more or less seriously injured in the course of a year.
-The incapacity of the injured included in these figures
-and proportions ranges from one week to life-long disablement.</p>
-
-<p>In the slate quarries of North Wales, one man in
-every three is injured in the course of a year. The
-wages paid are very low.</p>
-
-<p>Returning now to the figures of the table on p. 132, it
-will be observed that the deaths in recent years are
-almost precisely the same in number as the average of
-the fifty-eight years examined. That, of course, points
-to great improvement, because the number of miners at
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">{134}</a></span>
-work and the quantity of coal got has rapidly increased
-in the period. With regard to explosions alone, the
-saving of life under the Coal-Mines Acts has been very
-great. In his valuable paper on the effect of British
-labour laws upon industrial occupations, read to the Royal
-Statistical Society in 1905, Mr Leonard Ward, H.M.
-Inspector of Factories told us:</p>
-
-<p>"The total number of deaths from explosions which
-occurred during the five years 1856-60 was 1,286, and if
-the number of persons employed and the death-rate from
-that cause had remained constant, the total deaths for
-fifty years would be 12,860; allowing for increase in
-numbers employed, the total deaths during that period
-would probably have exceeded 25,000, instead of which
-the actual total is about 15,000 less than that, hence it would
-seem that by the prevention of explosions alone, no less
-than 15,000 lives have been saved during the last fifty
-years by the operation of the statutes which regulate the
-hygienic conditions of employment in coal-mines."</p>
-
-<p>That is to say, legislative insistence on ventilation of
-coal-mines saved some 15,000 lives in fifty years.</p>
-
-<p>This fact should, in the first place, give pause to those
-who have no faith in legislation, and in the second place
-it should give encouragement to those who believe that
-further great improvements can be effected. The law
-prevented 15,000 deaths in fifty years; it permitted
-10,000 to occur. It is impossible to read such an official
-report as that upon the Whitehaven explosion of 1907
-without being impressed by the great carelessness which
-still obtains in dangerous mining operations. The last
-great Rhondda accident occurred through wanton carelessness.
-I do not know the cause of the Whitehaven
-disaster, but, speaking of fiery mines generally, it does
-appear that there is a strong case for the total prohibition
-of shot-firing. One may hedge round this labour-saving
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">{135}</a></span>
-process with what restrictions one will; if it is done
-under any conditions serious accident or disaster must
-come sooner or later. Can there be any justification for
-labour saving of such character?</p>
-
-<p>That is to speak of but one factor in the production
-of mining accidents. Other considerations, and serious
-ones, arise in connexion with such a case as that of
-Whitehaven where workings extend for miles under the
-sea and where yet there is no attempt made to provide
-egress to an emergency shaft. The men went down at
-Whitehaven and out to their work under the sea. They
-had either to return the way they came or to return not
-at all. It may be that the provision of a return passage
-to an emergency shaft would have burdened the undertaking
-with such a capital expenditure as to prevent the
-economic working of the mine. If that is so, a nation
-which owes its industrial greatness to coal should consider
-whether it is desirable to work this under-sea coal
-or not, for it would appear obvious that a mine as fiery as
-the 1907 inquiry proved the Whitehaven colliery to be,
-must sooner or later be the scene of serious disaster under
-the given conditions. To pass to another point, a large
-proportion of mining accidents occur in the shafts. It
-would be interesting to know the ages of many of the
-cages and of much of the winding machinery which are
-employed in our coal-mines. From reading official reports
-on mining accidents I have come to the uncomfortable
-conclusion that far too many of the appliances are fit
-for the scrap heap.</p>
-
-<p>In the figures relating to mining casualties, many young
-children are included. In the ten years 1895 to 1904,
-414 children between the ages of 12 and 16 years
-were reported as killed underground, under the heads
-"haulage," "machinery" and "sundries."<span class="fnanchor"><a
-name="Ref_32" id="Ref_32" href="#Foot_32">[32]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">{136}</a></span>
-It is quite unknown to the general public how many
-women, girls and boys are employed in and about mines.
-The figures of the 1901 Census show that in the coal-mines
-of England and Wales only, 134,422 boys and 1,458 girls
-under 20 years of age are employed. Of the boys as
-many as 31,587 are between the ages of 10 and 15 years!
-I dwell upon these facts because I once had brought
-home to my mind in a very striking way the necessity of
-making them known. Speaking to an audience at the
-National Liberal Club, I mentioned incidentally that a
-very large number of children were employed in our
-mines. To my astonishment, I was loudly interrupted by
-a certain Liberal candidate for Parliamentary honours,
-who openly scoffed at the idea that children were so
-employed, while the audience clearly did not know which
-of us was in error.</p>
-
-<p>With railway accidents the public is more familiar,
-although it is questionable whether many people realize
-that, in an average week, 10 railway servants are killed
-and 250 are wounded.</p>
-
-<p>By a Board of Trade order, made under the Regulation
-of Railways Act of 1871, accidents on railways are
-compulsorily reported. Fatal accidents must be notified
-to the Board of Trade within 24 hours after the
-occurrence of the accident. Non-fatal accidents must be
-reported whenever they prevent the injured servant on
-any one of the three days following the accident from
-working for five hours. The "special causes" distinguished
-in the cases of Factories and Mines are not referred to.</p>
-
-<p>Legislation has done a little to protect the railway
-worker. While the number of railway employees has increased
-considerably in the last 20 years—from 350,000 to
-579,000—the number of accidents has remained about the
-same. Nevertheless, the death roll is still heavy and the
-number of wounded very great. In 1903 there were 497
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">{137}</a></span>
-killed and 14,356 injured. In 1908 there were 432
-killed and 24,181 injured. Of course the risk varies considerably
-as between one kind of railway employment and
-another. Railway mechanics have an accident death-rate
-of 1 in 4,524 and an injury rate of 1 in 147. Shunters, on
-the other hand, are killed at the rate of 1 in 264 per
-annum, while 1 in every 17 is injured! Goods guards,
-who are not brought into contact with the public as are
-their more fortunate and safer colleagues the passenger
-guards, suffer almost as badly as shunters—1 in 374 being
-killed and 1 in 18 injured per annum. Facts such as these
-show how great is still the risk of railway work and what a
-debt we are under to those who do it. As to the manner
-of repayment of the debt it may be again remarked
-that, in 1908, the 27 leading railway companies, employing
-something like 90 per cent. of the railway employees of
-the country, paid an average wage of only 25s. per week.
-There are probably 100,000 railway employees who receive
-less than 20s. per week.</p>
-
-<p>In the case of merchant seamen we have only the
-records of accidents resulting in death. Every illness or
-injury has to be recorded in the ship's log, but only death
-statistics are compiled. The fatalities from shipwreck and
-accident vary considerably in number from year to year,
-but appear to be falling.</p>
-
-<p>It remains only to record the accidents in engineering
-works covered by the Notice of Accidents Act of 1894.
-This Act provides for the notification of accidents in the
-construction of railways and in the construction, working
-or repair of tramways, canals, bridges, tunnels, or other
-works authorized by any local or personal Act of Parliament.
-Also it covers the use of any traction engine or
-other machine worked by steam in the open air. Under
-this Act there have been reported, in recent years, about
-60 deaths and 1,200 injuries per annum.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">{138}</a></span>
-Collecting the figures we have reviewed, we are able
-to construct the table below, which shows, for all occupations,
-the number of persons reported as having been
-either killed or wounded in 1908.</p>
-
-<div class="section">
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">REPORTED CASES OF INDUSTRIAL<br />
- ACCIDENT AND DISEASE, 1908</p>
-
-<p class="center">Number of Workpeople who suffered Death or Injury.</p>
-
-<table class="gt3" style="max-width:30em" summary="gt3-3">
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td class="cent rlin ulin">Killed, or Died from Disease.</td>
- <td class="cent ulin">Injured, or Suffered from Disease.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj rlin">Accidents in Factories and Workshops, etc.</td>
- <td class="rlin numb">1,042</td>
- <td class="numb">121,112</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj rlin">Accidents in Mines and Quarries</td>
- <td class="rlin numb">1,437</td>
- <td class="numb">148,067</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj rlin">Accidents on Railways</td>
- <td class="rlin numb">432</td>
- <td class="numb">24,181</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj rlin">Accidents on Ships, etc.:</td>
- <td class="rlin numb"></td>
- <td class="numb"></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj rlin">&nbsp;&nbsp;Merchant Vessels</td>
- <td class="rlin numb">999</td>
- <td class="numb">3,781</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj rlin">&nbsp;&nbsp;Fishing Vessels</td>
- <td class="rlin numb">212</td>
- <td class="numb">392</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj rlin">Accidents in Engineering Works (under Notice of Accidents Act)</td>
- <td class="rlin numb">32</td>
- <td class="numb">1,228</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj rlin">Diseases of Occupations</td>
- <td class="ulin rlin numb">84</td>
- <td class="ulin numb">966</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">Totals</td>
- <td class="ulin rlin numb">4,238</td>
- <td class="ulin numb">299,727</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>It should be distinctly understood that these figures
-refer to reported cases only and that they are far from
-complete. In the case of factories and workshops it is probable
-that the greater number of the serious accidents are
-reported, but thousands of minor cases escape record. The
-railway figures have been much more complete since 1896,
-in which year the number of accidents recorded jumped
-from 7,480 to 14,110 owing to a more stringent regulation
-as to reporting made by the Board of Trade. The
-figures as to accidents on ships and in engineering works
-are very incomplete.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">{139}</a></span>
-Cases of industrial disease form the smallest part of the
-table, but if the whole truth could be expressed in statistics,
-the result would be appalling. All that we have reported
-under this head are cases of metallic poisoning and of
-anthrax. Terrible as these are, they affect so few people
-as to be of far less consequence to the nation than the
-high death-rate of Lancashire cotton operatives or Belfast
-linen workers. Phthisis does not appear in official statistics
-as a "disease of occupation," but thousands of textile
-workers die of phthisis resulting from work done in a
-humid atmosphere. Physical degeneracy is not an
-"accident," for it progresses with our knowledge and
-deliberate consent, but how much graver is the deterioration
-of the jute workers of Dundee than the figures relating
-to railway accidents. In 1899, Mr H. J. Wilson, H.M.
-Factory Inspector for Dundee, measured and weighed 169
-boys and girls with a view to discovering the amount of
-degeneracy as compared with the recognized normal.
-Here is the melancholy result:</p>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">PHYSICAL DETERIORATION IN DUNDEE<span class="fnanchor"><a
-name="Ref_33" id="Ref_33" href="#Foot_33">[33]</a></span></p>
-
-<table class="gt2" style="max-width:25em" summary="gt2-16">
-
-<tr>
- <td rowspan="2" class="cent ulin rlin">Age.</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="cent ulin rlin">Height.</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="cent ulin">Weight.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent ulin rlin">Dundee.</td>
- <td class="cent ulin rlin">Normal.</td>
- <td class="cent ulin rlin">Dundee.</td>
- <td class="cent ulin">Normal.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td class="cent rlin">Inches.</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">Inches.</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">Lbs.</td>
- <td class="cent">Lbs.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">11 to 12—</td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">Boys</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">50.0</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">53.5</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">62.8</td>
- <td class="cent">72.0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">Girls</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">51.5</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">53.0</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">63.0</td>
- <td class="cent">68.1</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">14 to 15—</td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">Boys</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">54.0</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">59.0</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">70.5</td>
- <td class="cent">92.0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">Girls</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">55.7</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">59.7</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">77.5</td>
- <td class="cent">96.1</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">{140}</a></span>
-Speaking of the deaths from phthisis and diseases of the
-lungs in Belfast, Dr Whitaker, Medical Officer of Health
-for that city, says in his report for 1902: "Of the 2,911
-deaths reported from these causes, 1,779 were attributed
-to diseases of the respiratory organs and 1,132 to phthisis.
-It is therefore evident that these diseases caused upwards
-of one-third of the mortality in our midst. This is not to
-be wondered at when we remember the nature of the
-occupations in which so many of our people are engaged
-and the unhealthy surroundings which environ them."<span class="fnanchor"><a
-name="Ref_34" id="Ref_34" href="#Foot_34">[34]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The truth is that many thousands of the deaths which
-occur in the United Kingdom every year are really caused
-by "diseases of occupations," and that to the thousands of
-deaths must be added hundreds of thousands of cases of
-direct injury to health arising from work in unhealthy and
-insufficiently controlled factories and workshops.</p>
-
-<p>Death, injury and disease have thus been administered
-to our industrial population for several generations. To-day,
-conditions are better than of old, but they are still
-so bad that to speak of improvement is to indict the past
-as black indeed. Against the fact that industrial hygiene
-has improved, must be set the grave consideration that it
-is in part an enfeebled people which is now provided with
-a slightly better environment. We have effectually degraded
-no small proportion of the race; the present
-measures of industrial control are not strong enough to
-restore it.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_31" id="Foot_31" href="#Ref_31">[31]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Since these pages went to press, another large scale disaster at Bolton has
-killed over 300 miners.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_32" id="Foot_32" href="#Ref_32">[32]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-See Mr Fenwick's Return "Mines (Fatal Accidents)," No. 140. 1905.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_33" id="Foot_33" href="#Ref_33">[33]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Annual Report on Factories and Workshops, 1900, page 336.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_34" id="Foot_34" href="#Ref_34">[34]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-This and many other cognate facts were quoted by Mr Leonard Ward in
-his paper on Industrial Occupations read to the Royal Statistical Society on
-May 16th, 1905.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">{141}</a></span>
-
-<h3>CHAPTER XI<br />
-<small>CONSEQUENCES</small></h3>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">THE consequences of the error of distribution now
-demand our attention.</p>
-
-<p>The congestion of so much of the entire income and
-accumulated wealth of the United Kingdom in a few
-hands has a most profound influence upon the national
-development. It means that the great mass of the people—the
-nation itself—can progress only in such fashion as
-is dictated by the enterprise or caprice of a fraction of
-the population. The possessors of wealth exercise the real
-government of the country and the nominal government
-at Westminster but timidly modifies the rule of the rich.
-When we say that about one million people command one-third
-of the entire income of the nation we mean, broadly,
-that one million people have under their control the lives
-of one-third of the population or of 15,000,000 people.
-When we say that about five million people command
-one-half of the entire income of the country we mean,
-broadly, that five million people control the lives of
-one-half of the population, or of 22,000,000 people.
-Expenditure is a call for material or immaterial commodities,
-and a demand for commodities is a demand for
-labour. That call rules the continuous series of employments
-which form the main activities and which mould
-the lives and character of our people. If the call be for
-worthy things, our people are directed into noble occupations.
-If the call be for unworthy things, labour is
-misdirected and degraded.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">{142}</a></span>
-The self-degradation of a limited number of unduly rich
-persons would be a little thing from a national point of
-view if its effects could be confined to the rich themselves.
-Unfortunately, those effects are not a stagnant pool which
-we may avoid, but a stream which flows through and
-pollutes the lives of the majority of our people. A working
-man may resist the temptation to ape the vices which
-are bred of idleness, but the highest standard of morality
-cannot save him from degrading his manhood in the
-service of waste. Without his knowledge the product
-of his toil may be bartered for the toy of a moment,
-and the skill of his hands pass to the foreigner in exchange
-for the means of wanton luxury. The rare steam
-coal of South Wales, got in blood and tears in a fiery
-mine, may be exported to France in exchange for a racing
-automobile. It would matter little that a limited number
-of drones inhabited the hive if they had no command of
-the work of the community. It matters everything when
-these drones, by their expenditure, can each command
-thousands of workers to attend their idleness.</p>
-
-<p>There are certain well-defined servants of the rich wholly
-devoted to their pleasure, such as menial servants, grooms,
-stablemen, gardeners, makers of expensive articles of food,
-clothing, furniture, etc., hotel servants, many of the inhabitants
-of the rich quarters of towns and of fashionable
-pleasure resorts, many tradespeople and their shop assistants,
-and other workers. Again, there are certain well-defined
-servants of the poor, such as petty tradespeople,
-general storekeepers, the workmen and officials engaged in
-institutes, charities, free libraries, municipal tramways and
-other services, public gardens, and so forth. There is often,
-however, no clear distinction between those who serve the
-few rich and those who serve the many poor. Every trade,
-however useful nominally, has to give of its best to be
-poured into the cup of luxury and spilt in wanton extravagance.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">{143}</a></span>
-Our 1,300,000 builders, our 1,400,000 metal
-workers, engineers and shipwrights, our 1,300,000 textile
-workers, our 1,300,000 clothiers, and all the other persons
-engaged in our "useful" industries, furnish their large quota
-of products for the rich and their small quota of products
-for the poor. The edict of the rich man goes forth and
-industry hastens to obey it. Bricks from Berkshire which
-are sadly needed for the building of decent cottages for
-agricultural labourers are taken into Surrey to form part of
-one of the vulgar and pretentious red-brick villas which
-mock every canon of architecture and make hideous the
-most beautiful portions of that Garden of England. Good
-fir from Sweden, imported in exchange for the toil of
-Lancashire or the sweat of Cleveland, roofs in the tenth,
-fifteenth or twentieth bedroom of the man who has more
-rooms than children, and more menial servants than guests,
-while the Census shows us that in England and Wales
-there existed, in 1901, 3,286,526 tenements of fewer than
-five rooms, of which 251,667 had but one room, 658,203
-but two rooms, 779,992 but three rooms and 1,596,664
-but four rooms. The mechanic, the electrical worker, the
-girl at the loom, all appear to be usefully employed in
-contributing to the well-being of the nation. As a matter
-of fact, the lion's share of the wealth they create goes to
-add to the income of a few, while the remainder is distributed
-amongst a number so great as to constitute
-nearly the whole of the population. If we consider the
-case of the cotton industry alone, it appears, on the
-surface, that 582,000 workers (172,000 men and 410,000
-women and children) are most usefully employed in the
-production of articles of the first necessity. They do work,
-each year, upon some 16,000,000 cwts. of raw cotton which
-they manufacture into about £120,000,000 worth of cotton
-goods. But trace the history of these goods. Are they
-consumed by the countrymen of the people who make
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">{144}</a></span>
-them? Alas! no. Of the yearly output of £120,000,000,
-as much as £100,000,000 is exported to foreign countries
-and British Possessions, chiefly to foreign countries. Only
-£20,000,000 worth of the magnificent output of our cotton
-workers is retained by our 44,000,000 people. In addition
-there is a consumption of a few million pounds worth of
-imported cotton goods. Can it be true that our population
-need to renew their household and personal stock of
-cotton fabrics to the extent of a value of but 10s. per head
-per annum? Of course it is not true. From cotton is
-manufactured, for the person, dresses or blouses of muslin,
-lawn, cambric, prints, mercerized stuff, etc., shirts and
-underclothing in great variety for both sexes, handkerchiefs,
-lace, hosiery, etc., and for the household, cotton sheets and
-other bed furnishings, curtains of lace, cretonne and muslin,
-towels, dusters, and a host of other things. Yet so poor
-are the mass of our people that 10s. per head per annum
-furnishes them with all the cotton goods which they can
-afford to buy for both their persons and their households.
-Great is their need and small are the means
-available for its satisfaction. If it were not so, our cotton
-trade would need many thousands more bales of raw cotton
-per annum, first to supply a quite ordinary home demand
-and second to export to the foreigner to obtain in exchange
-the satisfaction of other ordinary needs.</p>
-
-<p>In the following table I have estimated a demand for
-cotton goods by a household of five persons. The prices
-are wholesale and relate to the <i>materials</i> only. It should
-be distinctly understood that nothing is included for retail
-profit or for the manufacture of the materials into garments.
-I have estimated for all the cotton goods used on the
-person or in the household, not forgetting the cotton
-linings commonly used in woollen clothing.</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">{145}</a></div>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">CALL (AT WHOLESALE PRICES) BY A HOUSEHOLD<br />
- OF 5 PERSONS, FOR COTTON MATERIALS</p>
-
-<table class="gt1" style="max-width:17.5em" summary="gt1-49">
-
-<colgroup>
- <col />
- <col style="width:70%" />
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="2">For the Person:</td>
- <td></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td style="width:1.5em"></td>
- <td>(1) The Man</td>
- <td class="numb">£0&nbsp;16&nbsp;0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td>(2) The Woman</td>
- <td class="numb">1&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;9&nbsp;0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td>(3) Three Children</td>
- <td class="numb">1&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2&nbsp;1</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="2">For the Household</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">1&nbsp;10&nbsp;6</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="2"></td>
- <td class="numb ulin">£4&nbsp;17&nbsp;7</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>In framing this estimate I have imagined an exceedingly
-modest standard of comfort, one such as few readers
-of these lines would probably care to adopt, and the
-prices, as I have said, refer to the wholesale cost of the
-material only. Yet, modest as it is, the estimate works
-out at nearly 20s. per head. Given such a modest demand,
-our cotton trade would need to produce about £45,000,000
-worth of cotton goods per annum for home consumption
-alone. As we have seen, it finds a call for only
-£20,000,000 worth, a great part of which, of course, is
-absorbed by the "rich" and "comfortable" classes.</p>
-
-<p>It is a deeply significant fact that a nation of 44,500,000
-people, producing by its manifold activities a total
-income of £40 per head per annum, should be able to
-afford to retain of its total output of cotton fabrics but 10s.
-per head per annum.</p>
-
-<p>Let us turn to our woollen and worsted industries.
-Here we have in an average year an output worth some
-£65,000,000 of which £23,000,000 is exported, leaving
-£42,000,000 for home consumption. In addition there is
-a considerable importation (£12,000,000) of woollen and
-worsted goods, chiefly woollen goods, of a character
-which we do not ourselves produce, from France. Thus
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">{146}</a></span>
-we have a total home consumption worth £54,000,000 per
-annum. This amounts to about 25s. per head per annum,
-a sum which, in view of our climatic conditions, is, if anything,
-less satisfactory than that for cotton consumption.
-Again let us picture our working-class household of five
-persons and inquire what might be its most modest
-imaginable expenditure upon articles made of wool:—</p>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">CALL (AT WHOLESALE PRICES) BY A HOUSEHOLD<br />
- OF 5 PERSONS, FOR WOOLLEN AND WORSTED GOODS.<br />
- MATERIALS ONLY</p>
-
-<table class="gt1" style="max-width:17.5em" summary="gt1-50">
-
-<colgroup>
- <col />
- <col style="width:70%" />
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="2">For the Person:</td>
- <td></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td style="width:1.5em"></td>
- <td>(1) The Man</td>
- <td class="numb">£3&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;7&nbsp;10</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td>(2) The Woman</td>
- <td class="numb">2&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;9&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;9</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td>(3) Three Children</td>
- <td class="numb">3&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;0&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="2">For the Household</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">3&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;0&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="2"></td>
- <td class="numb ulin">£11&nbsp;17&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;7</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>In working out this estimate in detail, I have again postulated
-a low standard of comfort. Thus the man is
-assumed to have but one new woollen suit and one new
-pair of trousers per annum, and an overcoat once in two
-years. It is also assumed that the children are partly
-provided for by adaptation of their parents' discarded
-garments. Even so, the estimate works out at 47s. per
-head. At this rate there would be a call for about
-£105,000,000 of woollen and worsted goods by the
-44,500,000 people of the United Kingdom. As a matter
-of fact, the call is for only £54,000,000 worth, or about
-25s. per head on the average. But who is the Average
-Man? He is a creature of the statistician. The real
-truth is, of course, that quite a small number of people consume
-a very great part of our total present annual call for
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">{147}</a></span>
-£54,000,000 worth of woollen and worsted goods. The
-masses of the people spend a sum which is a small fraction
-of the average expenditure of 25s. per head.</p>
-
-<p>Again, let us consider the boot and shoe industry. Here
-I have no reliable estimate as to the value of production,
-but we know that employment in the trade is sometimes
-exceedingly bad, and that in Leicester, Northampton and
-elsewhere the greatest distress exists from time to time
-because the boot manufacturers have <i>overtaken demand</i>.
-What does this mean? There are some 7,000,000 houses
-in England and Wales not assessed to the Inhabited House
-Duty because they are under £20 in annual value. It is
-safe to say that each of the inhabitants of each of these
-7,000,000 houses would gladly purchase three pairs of
-boots and shoes if they had the means to do so, and
-would then not be overburdened with footwear. That
-means that a need exists at this moment for 7,000,000
-× 5.2 (the average number of persons per house in this
-country) × 3 = 109,000,000 pairs. That great demand,
-obviously, could be renewed, did means allow, within 12
-months.<span class="fnanchor"><a
-name="Ref_35" id="Ref_35" href="#Foot_35">[35]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">{148}</a></span>
-Yet, in November 1904, the Mayor of Leicester (Mr S.
-Hilton, of Messrs S. Hilton &amp; Sons, boot factors) dealing
-with the question of want of employment in the boot
-industry said:</p>
-
-<p>"I think the present great need of Leicester is a new
-industry. We cannot expect, at any rate for some considerable
-time, that much more employment will be
-derived from the boot and shoe trade, at least, not sufficient
-for a growing population. The rapidity with which boots
-and shoes are turned out, owing to the improved machinery
-and modern methods, will supply all the demands for some
-time to come, and the man who may be the means of
-introducing some additional industry in this town, which
-will not only prove remunerative to the employer, but
-provide work for the many men and youths who are in
-need of it, will be a benefactor to the town."</p>
-
-<p>With improving methods and machinery, there must,
-sooner or later, arrive, in every industry, a time when
-output overtakes visible demand, and when that time
-arrives, as it is alleged to have done in Leicester, great
-suffering is caused to many hard-working people. Their
-trade slips from them, and the matter of re-adjustment,
-the establishment of new industries, the transition to
-other employments, entails severe distress. But who can
-truly say that the boot trade has yet reached, in this
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">{149}</a></span>
-country, the maximum of possible output? Certain it is
-that there are many who need new footwear and cannot
-afford it, even while Leicester men look vainly for
-employment. The real truth would appear to be that
-Leicester is suffering from the under-consumption of those
-who, if they had the means, would buy boots. I have
-shown that 100,000,000 pairs at least could be readily
-absorbed in Great Britain. Yet men are unemployed at
-Leicester and the Mayor calls for a new industry!</p>
-
-<p>The fact is, of course, that while 7,000,000 or more
-poor householders lack the means to buy boots, some tens
-of thousands of unduly rich households are squandering
-those means and in effect commanding men to leave
-the boot trade to take up industries which shall serve
-their pleasures.</p>
-
-<p>In relation to the trades which supply the materials of
-clothing the census returns give evidence that our industries
-are not developing healthily. It should be remembered,
-however, that it is impossible to measure the growth
-of luxury by the census returns, although it makes a
-certain impression in them. The labour of tens of
-thousands who follow nominally useful occupations is
-actually devoted to waste. This may be illustrated by
-two typical cases which recently were brought to the
-notice of the public. On February 8th, 1905, in the King's
-Bench Division, a millionaire, well-known in financial
-circles (his name matters not, for I take the case not to
-reproach an individual but because it is a typical one)
-sued a West-End firm of contractors and caterers for
-damages. It appears that in July 1903 he gave a dinner
-party with a concert and supper, and engaged the defendant
-firm to erect behind his residence in Grosvenor Square a
-temporary supper-room for the occasion. He gave instructions
-that "no expense was to be spared." The electric
-light was installed in the temporary structure, and from
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">{150}</a></span>
-this or another cause, a fire occurred, and the temporary
-structure perished a few hours before its time. Out of
-this arose the claim for damages, which failed, the jury
-awarding the contractors their counter-claim for the work
-done.</p>
-
-<p>It is not the merits of the action to which I direct the
-reader's attention. What would the mere statistics tell us
-of the men who were engaged in erecting the temporary
-supper-room "regardless of expense"? We should find
-them described as following quite useful occupations:</p>
-
-<div class="index">
-
-<ul>
-<li>Building Contractors.</li>
-<li>Electrical Engineers.</li>
-<li>Plumbers.</li>
-<li>Carpenters.</li>
-<li>Painters.</li>
-<li>Upholsterers.</li>
-<li>Carmen.</li>
-<li>Labourers, etc.</li>
-</ul>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>As a matter of fact the skill and labour of these honourable
-callings were turned to sheer waste at the command
-of the millionaire financier. With the same expenditure
-of time and effort, and with the same consumption of
-material, those men might have decently housed one or
-two families for life. Had they been free to choose between
-the housing of a poor family and the carrying out
-of a rich man's caprice, can we doubt which work they
-would have chosen? But they were not free to choose,
-and inquiry would probably show that they are constantly
-employed to do similar work in rich men's houses. Their
-lives are wasted to the nation at large, and devoted to the
-fancies of a few. In return, they are handed wage-money
-which is too often unearned by those who pay the bills.
-Thus A the financier commands B to waste his precious
-skill, and at the same time commands certain other persons,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">{151}</a></span>
-C and D, to devote part of their labour to sustaining B
-while he wastes his time and does nothing for them in
-return.</p>
-
-<p>Let me give another pertinent illustration:</p>
-
-<p>In July, 1904, a great deal of attention was aroused by a
-case in which a West-End dressmaker was fined for working
-her girls at illegal hours. Her excuse was that she
-was compelled to get finished at very short notice a frock
-to be worn at Ascot by a certain rich lady. Considerable
-comment was aroused by the case, especially in view of
-the fact that a play with a purpose in which a similar
-incident was introduced was being played at the time in
-a London theatre.<span class="fnanchor"><a
-name="Ref_36" id="Ref_36" href="#Foot_36">[36]</a></span> I was particularly struck with the
-fact that the fashionable customer who caused the trouble
-was chiefly censured for her dilatoriness and want of
-consideration in ordering her frock at the last moment.
-But the gravamen of the offence lay not in ordering
-the frock late but in ordering it at all. The chief point is
-not one within the scope of the consolidated Factory and
-Workshop Act of 1901, but a much greater one, which
-goes deep down into the roots of the problem of want and
-poverty in the richest country in the world. For the
-special Ascot frock, the garment costing anything from 10
-to 50 guineas, made to be worn once and then cast aside,
-is a perfect illustration of the misdirection of life and
-waste of labour which is caused by the error in the distribution
-of the national income. For every special Ascot
-frock worn by one woman, whether that frock be made
-in legal or illegal hours, a number of other women go
-insufficiently clad.</p>
-
-<p>Such illustrations might be multiplied indefinitely. At
-the great Albert Hall Charity Bazaar held in 1904 a titled
-lady present wore a magnificent dress which had been
-completed literally at the eleventh hour of the previous
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">{152}</a></span>
-evening by a number of young women whose economic
-condition is such that only the best of health and the best
-of fortune can save them from becoming the objects of
-"charity" in the time to come. As in the case of the
-temporary supper-room, these girls, to judge by the
-census of occupations, would appear as following useful
-occupations. From the point of view of the national
-welfare, they had better be paid wages for digging holes
-and filling them up again.</p>
-
-<p>While the rich consume the means of living of the poor
-we need not be surprised if useful trades languish. A
-rich person can but consume a limited quantity of useful
-commodities. After that consumption, having still a
-great superfluity, he seeks other diversions, and the
-orders go forth which swell the ranks of the wrongfully
-employed.</p>
-
-<p>At the other end of the scale, what is the possible
-expenditure upon goods by the poor? The answer which
-has been given to this question by the researches of Mr
-Charles Booth in London and of Mr Seebohm Rowntree in
-York is seen to be one which can only be regarded as
-inevitable in view of the figures we have examined. Mr
-Booth concluded that 30.7 per cent., or nearly one-third of
-the population of London were probably living in "poverty."
-Mr Rowntree found that in York, a typical provincial city,
-in a year of good trade, 7,230 persons, representing 15½ per
-cent. of the working classes, or 10 per cent. of the entire
-population of York, were living below a primary poverty
-line drawn at an income of 21s. 8d. per week for a family
-of five persons paying only 4s. per week for rent. Mr
-Rowntree also found 13,072 persons living in York under
-conditions which were but little above the primary line,
-making a total of 20,302 persons, or 28 per cent. of the
-population of York, living in want.</p>
-
-<p>Mr Rowntree's primary poverty line of 21s. 8d. per week
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">{153}</a></span>
-was arrived at thus.<span class="fnanchor"><a
-name="Ref_37" id="Ref_37" href="#Foot_37">[37]</a></span> He considered necessary expenditure
-under the three heads: (1) Food, (2) Rent, (3) Clothes,
-fuel and other necessaries. To begin with food, he framed
-a dietary which contained no butcher's meat or butter,
-and allowed such a luxury as tea but once a week. The
-only meat was bacon and very little of that. It was a
-dietary "more stringent than would be given to any able-bodied
-pauper in any workhouse in England or Wales."
-Taking the lowest co-operative store prices, he found that
-this dietary would cost 3s. each for the adults and 2s. 3d.
-each for the children per week. Thus the cost of food
-alone would be 12s. 9d. per week. Allowing for rent and
-rates 4s., we arrive at 16s. 9d. per week. To this Mr
-Rowntree added for clothing, fuel, and all other necessaries
-4s. 11d. per week, making, in all, the 21s. 8d. referred to.
-Here is the estimate in detail:—</p>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">MR ROWNTREE'S PRIMARY POVERTY LINE</p>
-
-<table class="gt1" style="max-width:20em" summary="gt1-51">
-
-<colgroup>
- <col style="width:60%" />
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="numb"><i>s.</i></td>
- <td class="numb"><i>d.</i></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td style="width:15em">Expenditure on Food</td>
- <td class="numb">12</td>
- <td class="numb">9</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Rent and Rates</td>
- <td class="numb">4</td>
- <td class="numb">0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Clothing, including Boots</td>
- <td class="numb">2</td>
- <td class="numb">3</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Fuel</td>
- <td class="numb">1</td>
- <td class="numb">10</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Lighting, washing materials, furniture, crockery, etc.</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">0</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">10</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="numb ulin">21</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">8</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>It will be seen that nothing is allowed for drink, or
-tobacco, or newspapers, or postage stamps, or any relaxation
-whatever. Yet 15 per cent. of the working people of
-York were found to be living <i>below</i> a primary poverty line
-conceived on such a scale as this. For boots, clothing,
-underclothing, hats, furniture, glass, crockery, utensils,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">{154}</a></span>
-curtains, washing materials, and gas or oil, only 3s. 1d. per
-week or £8 per annum (32s. per head per annum). Need
-we wonder, then, if Lancashire is only called upon by
-44,000,000 British people for £20,000,000 worth of cotton
-goods?</p>
-
-<p>The Board of Trade recently gave us (Cd. 2337) some
-useful studies of workmen's budgets which show that even
-Mr Rowntree's 3s. 1d. per week for goods is a larger sum
-than is expended by most workmen's families with about
-21s. per week. The Board of Trade examined 1,944 workmen's
-budgets with the following results:—</p>
-
-<div class="section">
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">AVERAGE EXPENDITURE ON FOOD BY URBAN<br />
- WORKMEN'S FAMILIES IN 1904</p>
-
-<table class="gt1 small" style="max-width:40em" summary="gt1-52">
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td>Number of Families.</td>
- <td>Average no. of children living at home.</td>
- <td colspan="2">Average weekly income.</td>
- <td colspan="2">Average expenditure on food.</td>
- <td colspan="2">Balance of income after expenditure on food.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="numb"><i>s.</i></td>
- <td class="numb"><i>d.</i></td>
- <td class="numb"><i>s.</i></td>
- <td class="numb"><i>d.</i></td>
- <td class="numb"><i>s.</i></td>
- <td class="numb"><i>d.</i></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td style="width:25em">Under 25s.</td>
- <td class="numb">261</td>
- <td class="numb">3.1</td>
- <td class="numb">21</td>
- <td class="numb">4½</td>
- <td class="numb">14</td>
- <td class="numb">4¾</td>
- <td class="numb">6</td>
- <td class="numb">11¾</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Between 25s. and 30s.</td>
- <td class="numb">289</td>
- <td class="numb">3.3</td>
- <td class="numb">26</td>
- <td class="numb">11¾</td>
- <td class="numb">17</td>
- <td class="numb">10¼</td>
- <td class="numb">9</td>
- <td class="numb">1½</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Between 30s. and 35s.</td>
- <td class="numb">416</td>
- <td class="numb">3.2</td>
- <td class="numb">31</td>
- <td class="numb">11¼</td>
- <td class="numb">20</td>
- <td class="numb">9¼</td>
- <td class="numb">11</td>
- <td class="numb">2&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Between 35s. and 40s.</td>
- <td class="numb">382</td>
- <td class="numb">3.4</td>
- <td class="numb">36</td>
- <td class="numb">6¼</td>
- <td class="numb">22</td>
- <td class="numb">3½</td>
- <td class="numb">14</td>
- <td class="numb">2¾</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Above 40s.</td>
- <td class="numb">596</td>
- <td class="numb">4.4</td>
- <td class="numb">52</td>
- <td class="numb">0½</td>
- <td class="numb">29</td>
- <td class="numb">8&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="numb">22</td>
- <td class="numb">4½</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>As the Board of Trade point out "It is not to be supposed
-that the returns received represent in their exact
-proportions the different grades of working-class incomes
-in the towns of the United Kingdom. The higher range
-of family incomes is unduly represented in the returns,
-partly owing to the fact that the more intelligent operatives
-have supplied returns more readily and more accurately
-than those belonging to the unskilled labouring classes."</p>
-
-<p>It is of interest to note that the 261 budgets under 25s.
-per week averaged 21s. 4½d. per week, which closely corresponds
-to Mr Rowntree's primary poverty line. The
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">{155}</a></span>
-expenditure on food is seen to be 14s. 4¾d. or 1s. 6¾d. more
-than was allowed by Mr Rowntree. Thus only 6s. 11¾d.
-per week is left for all other expenditures, including rent,
-fuel, light, clothes and furniture. If we take the class above,
-between 25s. and 30s., we see that only 9s. 1½d. is left after
-payment for food. Even in the class earning from 30s. to
-35s. the food bill leaves but 11s. 2d. per week for rent
-and all other requirements.</p>
-
-<p>If we pass from the town to the country and inquire
-into the condition of the agricultural labourer we find an
-even smaller command of comfort. At the census of 1901
-the number of agricultural labourers, shepherds, etc., was
-956,000. What of cottons or woollens or boots or furniture
-can these command? The late Mr Arthur Wilson Fox
-in the invaluable Report (Cd. 2376) on the wages of
-agricultural labourers, which was such a labour of love to
-him, shows that their total earnings including the value
-of all "truck" vary from 14s. 6d. per week in Oxfordshire
-to 22s. in Durham, the average being 18s. 3d. for the
-whole of England. In Wales the average is 17s. 3d.;
-in Scotland 19s. 3d. and in Ireland only 10s. 11d. The
-expenditure on clothing in England varies between £6
-and £10 by a family of six persons; in Ireland, of course,
-it is much less.</p>
-
-<p>The simple truth is that the total demand for clothes
-and underclothes, hats, boots, furniture, china, glass, ironmongery,
-domestic utensils and other comforts by about
-20,000,000 of people out of our population of 44,500,000 is
-exceedingly small. The greater part of slender incomes is
-absorbed by the cost of food and drink, and after provision
-is made for rent, fuel and lighting, the balance amounts to
-a few odd shillings. We need not wonder, then, that our
-textile industries have to meet such a modest home demand,
-or that the Mayor of Leicester cries out for a new industry
-to employ "surplus labour."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">{156}</a></span>
-Let us consider the position of bootmakers as customers
-for the textile trades. The Census figures of 1901 for the
-boot trade were as follows (England and Wales; 22,000
-dealers included):</p>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">PERSONS EMPLOYED IN BOOT AND SHOE TRADE,<br />
-1901, ENGLAND AND WALES</p>
-
-<table class="gt1" style="max-width:20em" summary="gt1-53">
-
-<colgroup>
- <col style="width:75%" />
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Men (over 20)</td>
- <td class="numb">165,589</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Women (over 20)</td>
- <td class="numb">31,734</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Boys and youths</td>
- <td class="numb">32,715</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Girls</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">21,105</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Total</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">251,143</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>The average earnings of these workers are actually less
-than £1 per week. The Board of Trade publish monthly
-the earnings of a representative number of them, derived
-from particulars furnished by employers. The "Labour
-Gazette" for August 1910 showed that in July 1910,
-60,337 boot workers took £58,147 in a week, or about
-19s. per week. After paying for rent and food, how little
-is left to provide custom for the makers of cottons or
-woollens. And equally, when textile workers draw meagre
-wages, how little is left, after the gratification of primal
-needs, to provide custom for the maker of boots.</p>
-
-<p>Thus the error in the distribution of income connotes an
-error in the distribution of our population amongst useful
-and useless, noble and ignoble, industries. Too few of
-our population are engaged in the manufacture of houses,
-boots, textiles, and furnishings. Too many of our population
-are engaged either in the direct production of luxuries
-or in the production of useful articles to be exchanged for
-foreign luxuries. The great masses of our people are
-under-served; a small proportion of our people are over-served.
-There is enough labour put forth to give material
-happiness and comfort to all, but so much of the labour
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">{157}</a></span>
-runs to waste that only one-ninth of our population can
-be said fully to possess the means of comfort.</p>
-
-<p>Considerations such as these make us understand how
-futile it is to boast of the aggregate trade, internal or
-external, of a nation, or to term that wealth "national"
-which is the possession of a few.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_35" id="Foot_35" href="#Ref_35">[35]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Some notes of mine on this subject in the "Daily News" brought me the
-following letter from the provinces:</p>
-
-<p>"You very rightly, I think, referred on Monday and Tuesday to the subject
-of boots. Here is my own experience. I am a railway man, in constant
-work at 30s. per week. I am the happy, or otherwise, father of six healthy
-children. Last year I bought twenty pairs of boots. This year, up
-to date, I have bought ten pairs, costing £2, and yet at the present
-time my wife and five of the children have only one pair each. I
-have two pairs, both of which let in the water; but I see no prospect
-at present of getting new ones. I ought to say, of course, that my wife is a
-thoroughly domesticated woman, and I am one of the most temperate of men.
-So much so, that if all I spend in luxuries was saved it would not buy a pair
-of boots once a year. But this is the point I want to mention. During
-1903 my wages were 25s. 6d. per week, and I then had the six children. My
-next-door neighbour was a bootmaker and repairer. He fell out of work, and
-was out for months. During that time, of course, my children's boots needed
-repairing as at other times. I had not the money to pay for them being
-repaired, so had to do what repairing I could myself. One day I found out
-that I was repairing boots on one side of the wall, and my neighbour on the
-other side out of work, and longing to do the work I was compelled to do
-myself. I shall never forget the feelings that passed through my mind as
-I thought of the circumstances; and so it came home to me again when
-I read your reference to the boot trade, and I decided I would forward
-this to you. Most surely, as you say, if the 30,000,000 could and would
-buy those 50,000,000 pairs of boots you mention, there need not be any
-slackness in the boot trade; but, as you say again, if your reference to the
-question is the means of making people think seriously about it, much good
-will be done."</p>
-
-<p>Thus between my correspondent who sorely needed boots, and his neighbour
-the bootmaker there stood a wall—and our commercial system.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_36" id="Foot_36" href="#Ref_36">[36]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-"Warp and Woof," by Mrs Alfred Lyttelton.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_37" id="Foot_37" href="#Ref_37">[37]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-"Poverty," a Study of Town Life, by B. Seebohm Rowntree (Macmillan).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">{158}</a></span>
-
-<h3>CHAPTER XII<br />
-<small>THE WASTE OF CAPITAL</small></h3>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">IT has been observed by Professor Marshall that "perhaps
-£100,000,000 annually are spent even by the working
-classes, and £400,000,000 by the rest of the population of
-England in ways that do little or nothing towards making
-life nobler or truly happier."<span class="fnanchor"><a
-name="Ref_38" id="Ref_38" href="#Foot_38">[38]</a></span> In view of the fact that the
-"working classes" are the bulk of the nation, and the "rest
-of the population" a relative handful, this estimate points
-to a little waste by the many, and much waste by the few.
-The fact is, of course, that if the working classes, after prolonged
-study of dietetics and hygiene, spent their incomes
-in the most economical way possible, and refrained entirely
-from alcoholic liquor and tobacco, they would still be
-unable, save in exceptional cases, to command the means
-of a noble and truly happy life. As for the "rest of the
-population," if we consider the 5,000,000 persons who
-enjoy an income of £909,000,000 per annum, we see very
-clearly that their superfluity is so great that they could
-easily add to the fixed capital of the nation at the rate
-of £500,000,000 per annum, and still have left incomes
-sufficient, if wisely expended, to command a very considerable
-degree of comfort. As things are, an enormous
-amount of wealth is wasted every year upon current
-expenditure of an ignoble character, even while every city
-and every industry needs the application of more capital.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing is more striking in the estimate of capital which
-we formed in Chapter 5 than the small proportions of the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">{159}</a></span>
-total when considered in relation to the extent of the
-national income. For the total, it should be remembered,
-includes the value of the land of the United Kingdom.
-Subtracting it, we see that the wealth which has been added
-to the land is worth not more than about £8,000,000,000,
-whereas the national income amounts to £1,840,000,000.
-Thus, in the United Kingdom we have accumulated stock,
-apart from the market price of the land, only to the extent
-of about four years' income.</p>
-
-<p>The facts which correspond to these figures are that, in
-every county and in every township, there are more ugly
-and uncomfortable houses than beautiful and convenient
-ones, more inefficient plants than well-equipped businesses,
-more badly clothed than well-clothed people, more
-evidences of poverty than of wealth. On every hand we
-see the need of capital, but while its application is so sorely
-needed, the few rich who command so much of the national
-income pour it out in wanton extravagance. The growth
-of luxury has been accompanied by an increasing want of
-enterprise in industry and commerce. Even in London
-the most fruitful opportunities lie neglected. The port is
-inefficient; the Thames highway has been neglected; north
-and south Londoners remain strangers because of lack of
-transit facilities; street traffic is archaic; the important
-railway termini are dirty, inconvenient and unconnected.
-All these and many less important things cry
-aloud for the application of capital. In London and in
-every other town there is a housing problem, and the
-housing problem is a problem of capital. If the income
-of the last 20 years had been patriotically expended there
-would be no housing problem to-day, and the fixed capital
-of the country would be very much greater than it is.</p>
-
-<p>Another significant fact is the very considerable investment
-of British capital abroad, probably amounting, as we
-have seen, to about £2,600,000,000. These investments
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">{160}</a></span>
-are often spoken of as "our foreign investments." There
-is a grim irony in the phrase. For what in essence are
-these investments? They left our shores, originally, in
-the form of exported manufactures, the product of British
-labour. We had no gold to lend, but some amongst us
-could command and lend the fruit of our work. These
-exported products were sent away from our shores by a
-mere handful of rich persons who saw in foreign or Colonial
-loans or enterprises the opportunity of gaining a higher
-rate of interest than at home. Year by year there is
-returned to those who made the investments, or to their
-successors in title, a tribute of foreign and Colonial commodities
-which goes to swell our imports. In 1908 this
-yearly tribute of imports, for which no present exports
-have to be exchanged, amounts to about £130,000,000 or
-£140,000,000. Whether the nation as a whole gains by
-this tribute depends entirely upon the wisdom and
-patriotism of those who receive it. If we could ensure its
-wise use as capital for the promotion of the general welfare,
-then the United Kingdom would gain materially by the lien
-which a few of its people possess upon foreign and Colonial
-activities. But we have no guarantee as to the manner of
-its use, and too often it but serves to bring to this country
-commodities which in no way make life "nobler or truly
-happier." I do not mean that articles of luxury are
-necessarily imported in payment of the interest on "our"
-oversea investments, but certain it is that the limited class
-which owns them are the chief consumers of luxuries.
-It should never be forgotten that, as has already been
-pointed out in these pages, the most ordinary raw material
-may become a vehicle of luxury, and the commonest forms
-of labour its servants. Certain imports, <i>e.g.</i> motor cars or
-Steinway grand pianos, can be ear-marked as luxuries, but
-potatoes from Jersey wasted in a long dinner or Douglas
-pine from Canada built into a racing pavilion are "luxuries"
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">{161}</a></span>
-more to be deplored than the importation of Valenciennes
-lace or Sèvres porcelain by persons of refinement.</p>
-
-<p>It may be well to remark, in passing, that to place a
-heavy customs duty upon imported luxuries would in no
-way benefit the nation at large. It would merely stimulate
-the production of luxuries in the United Kingdom,
-and so increase the already considerable number of persons
-engaged in the trades of luxury.</p>
-
-<p>That we have incidentally gained by acting as a world
-money-lender is indisputable. The case of Argentina is a
-familiar one. British exports have been largely lent to
-that country for the construction of railways. Those railways
-have cheapened Argentine transport, and so placed at
-our disposal cheap bread and meat. But this benefit has
-been incidental and, moreover, shared by the world at
-large. Against such incidental gains we have to place the
-criminal neglect of our own country. While capital has
-gone overseas in a never-ending stream, the people whose
-united activities produced the commodities embodied in
-that capital have remained poor for lack of the proper
-investment of capital at home. Large sections of the
-British people have unconsciously worked for the benefit
-of the foreigner and of the British Colonist, never realizing
-that their own country sorely needed all the capital that
-their labour could create.<span class="fnanchor"><a
-name="Ref_39" id="Ref_39" href="#Foot_39">[39]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>We cannot even lay the flattering unction to our souls
-that the British capital which has been sent abroad has
-gone entirely to build foreign or Colonial railways, or to
-develop other useful industries, nor, in so far as it has been
-usefully employed, can we claim much credit for the fact.
-The sole motive which has influenced the individuals
-who have thus disposed of the products of British labour
-has been individual gain. That gain they have sought
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">{162}</a></span>
-without regard to any consideration of patriotism. Foreign
-nations have had our capital indifferently for war or for
-peace, for building railways or for constructing warships.
-A generation ago we wickedly poured our capital into
-Turkey. A generation ago were born hundreds of
-thousands of British children who, for lack of the full
-employment of British capital on British soil, are to-day
-creatures of the abyss.</p>
-
-<p>The flow of capital to places abroad continues to this
-hour. If South Africa is booming, the possessors of
-capital hasten to gather dividends on soil thousands of
-miles away, and with the interest received in this country,
-direct British labour to noble or ignoble ends, as may
-seem good in their eyes. If a foreign war is proceeding,
-they hasten to lend the belligerents as many millions as
-may be required at anything from five to eight per cent.,
-and with the interest they give righteous or unrighteous
-"work" to other British sons of freedom. If a South
-African mine or a Japanese war loan offers apparent
-opportunities of quicker profits than putting fresh capital
-into British ironworks, or founding a new British industry,
-it is the end of South Africa or Japan which is served.
-Three per cent. gained at home, of course, is not so
-desirable as ten per cent. gained abroad. If, therefore, a
-housing scheme at home promises to yield but three per
-cent., while the employment of coolies in South Africa
-promises ten per cent., South Africa and the coolies are
-"developed"<span class="fnanchor"><a
-name="Ref_40" id="Ref_40" href="#Foot_40">[40]</a></span> and the housing scheme collapses. This is
-by no means a rhetorical flourish; it is the statement of a
-case not more extreme than hundreds which occur every
-year.</p>
-
-<p>If I have dwelt upon our oversea investments (I use the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">{163}</a></span>
-possessive pronoun for the sake of simplicity of expression)
-it is because they illustrate in a very forcible way the
-misuse of British capital. But the neglect of British
-interests which they illustrate is small indeed when compared
-with the waste of income upon the pursuit of
-pleasure and the foundation of worthless industries at
-home. If the whole of our oversea investments had been
-made since 1860, the average amount so invested would
-be not more than £50,000,000 per annum. That consideration
-enables us to view the matter in its due
-perspective. The foreigner and the Colonist have
-gained through the profit-hunting of the few possessors
-of British wealth, but only to the extent indicated.
-The oversea investments, with all the taint of
-national shame which attaches to many of them, sink
-into insignificance when we consider the wanton waste
-of labour which has occurred at home. Since 1860 probably
-as much as £6,000,000,000 of income which should
-have passed into reproductive capital has been thrown
-away in forms of expenditure which have been to the
-degradation of the community. Had that £6,000,000,000
-been employed in the promotion of cheap transport, in the
-attachment of agricultural workers to the soil, in the
-acquisition of land by municipalities, in the provision of
-healthy homes for the people, the problems which confront
-us to-day would be of a different order, and it would
-not be possible for the dire poverty of one-third of our
-people to be basely used as a weapon of political
-warfare.</p>
-
-<p>And while so much of the labour which might have
-added to the nobility and happiness of the British people
-has been wasted by direction of a small fraction of their
-number, no small part of our employed capital is but the
-tool of mischief. For just as individual capital goes abroad
-to seek its usury without regard to principle or patriotism,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">{164}</a></span>
-so at home it engages in the most profitable enterprise
-known to its limited intelligence, without regard to
-morality or the national welfare. It is often more profitable
-to appeal to what is worst in human nature than to
-seek to supply it with things healthy and honourable.
-"Is there money in it?" is the only touchstone which
-individual capital applies to enterprise.</p>
-
-<p>Obviously there must be reciprocation between the
-demand for luxurious articles and the capital employed in
-their production. The misdirection of labour which we
-examined in the last chapter connotes a considerable misdirection
-of capital. Thus the effects of luxurious expenditure
-are two-fold. There is dissipation of income in the
-payment for luxurious immaterial commodities which call
-for no fixed capital, and again there is the expenditure of
-income upon luxurious material commodities which call
-capital to their creation. In either case the result is waste.
-The menial servant is an illustration of the first process.
-He is divorced from production and his work lost to the
-nation at large. The commodity which he sells is
-obsequious hand-service, degrading alike to himself and
-the person he serves. The purchase of a motor-car is a
-striking example of the second process. To produce it a
-considerable plant is required and capital flows to a business
-profitable because its customers are rich persons who
-view low priced articles with suspicion.</p>
-
-<p>A striking illustration of a combination of the two processes
-is afforded by a fashionable hotel and restaurant.
-Here we have a large amount of capital sunk in an
-enormous building which is sustained entirely by the
-expenditure of the wealthy. A host of menial servants
-are employed, whose lives are a denial of manhood and
-womanhood. In addition there are nominally useful
-occupations associated with the conduct of the business.
-It calls for the manufacture of food, of utensils, and of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">{165}</a></span>
-furniture, and a large number of tradesmen and their
-nominally useful assistants are regularly employed in connexion
-with its supplies. A hotel of 700 bedrooms directs
-the services of an army of people, most of whom would
-appear in the Census as following useful occupations.
-The whole concern is for the most part an organization
-for the waste of capital and labour, and its manifold
-activities are called into existence by the orders of a
-very limited number of unduly rich people who desire
-that hand-service shall be at their command at a moment's
-notice wherever they may be.</p>
-
-<p>Even more extraordinary is the organization of entire
-districts in the service of wealth and luxury. Nothing
-can be more pitiable than the spectacle which is presented
-by a neighbourhood the inhabitants of which are
-economically dependent upon the patronage of a limited
-number of well-to-do residents. The local tradesmen, the
-local builders, the local carters, the local nurserymen, the
-local physician, the local boat-builders, the entire local
-organization, with its little capital and much labour, is
-under the economic over-lordship of a few persons whose
-patronage sustains the entire machinery. Little that is
-useful is produced in the district; but by a process which
-none of its inhabitants could explain there are imported
-into it commodities from all parts of the country. Parasites
-upon parasites, they scramble for the expenditure of the
-well-to-do, and often contrive to make fat livings out of
-them. Thus, through the initial evil, the underpayment
-of labour at one end of the scale, there is created at the
-other end a class of luxury providers who have no conception
-of their true position in our social system, or of
-their uselessness to the community at large.</p>
-
-<p>There remains to consider the tremendous waste of
-capital which arises from (1) unnecessary competition and
-(2) weak or bogus company promotion.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">{166}</a></span>
-In the game of competition frequent attempts are made
-to establish superfluous businesses in many branches of
-trade. While industry remains unorganized such waste of
-capital must continue, for lacking an estimate of the quantity
-of commodities required in any particular department, the
-limits of consumption can only be found by fruitless
-attempts to discover an unsatisfied demand. This blind
-application of capital, not to service, but in the hope
-of gain, accounts for the waste of large quantities of
-labour.</p>
-
-<p>Turning to company promotion, it is certain that hundreds
-of millions of capital have been wasted in the last twenty
-years through the dangling of fancy baits before the
-possessors of unearned increment. The company promoter
-obtains from Somerset House the names and
-addresses of shareholders in such concerns as those
-referred to in Chapter 8, and so is enabled to send to
-persons who have already tasted the joys of "waiting" a
-prospectus promising them even larger slices of unearned
-increment than they already receive. So other millions
-derived from labour pass into channels of waste.</p>
-
-<p>The waste and misdirection of capital is a far-reaching
-matter. Lacking capital, which simply means lacking
-tools, labour cannot be economically exerted, whether in
-agriculture, in manufacturing, or in distribution. For the
-use of tools we leave the great mass of our population
-dependent upon a comparative handful of rich persons.
-That dependence amounts to an economic serfdom which
-places the direction of the lives and labours of the people
-in the hands of the few. The unduly large share of the
-national dividend possessed by the rich produces in them
-grave faults of character and purpose which make them
-indifferent administrators of the capital without which
-labour is powerless. The unduly small share of the
-national dividend possessed by the poor is the source of a
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">{167}</a></span>
-stream of moral and physical evils which, mingling with
-the waters of death which descend from the high levels
-of luxury, produces effects whose causation is only
-obscure as long as we neglect the study of the Error
-of Distribution.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_38" id="Foot_38" href="#Ref_38">[38]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-"Principles of Economics," Vol. i., p. 786.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_39" id="Foot_39" href="#Ref_39">[39]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-The same is true of France. Our neighbours across the Channel have
-fully £1,500,000,000 invested in places outside the country.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_40" id="Foot_40" href="#Ref_40">[40]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-At Johannesburg on April 15th, 1905, Mr Lionel Phillips is reported to
-have said: "The Chinese were housed, fed and looked after better than the
-working population of England." It may well be.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">{169}</a></span>
-
-<h2>BOOK II<br />
-<small>TOWARDS ORGANIZATION</small></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">{171}</a></span>
-
-<h3>CHAPTER XIII<br />
-<small>THE GOLDEN KEY</small></h3>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">THE misdirection of labour and the waste of income
-can be checked if we would have it so. It is in
-our power, as a nation, to employ the wealth of the
-community for national ends and to increase abundantly
-the fertility of labour. It is true that we want "more
-trade," and it is also true that we need better use of
-the results of the trade that we have. The problem of
-poverty is neither obscure nor insoluble; its cause is
-clear from the extraordinary series of facts we have
-examined; its solution becomes equally clear when we
-realize what ample means of remedy we have at our
-command. We perceive that the chief ramifications of
-the social problem are but varying effects springing from
-one cause, the waste of labour. We realize that Poverty, in
-a nation of 44,000,000 persons possessing an aggregate
-exchange income of about £1,840,000,000, need be
-with us only as long as we care to tolerate it. Each
-social or political problem takes on a new aspect when we
-consider it, as we should consider it, in relation to the
-income of the nation and its distribution.</p>
-
-<p>Unfortunately, the facts of the case have been studied
-by few people, and, in so far as they have been published
-at all, it has been in pages inaccessible to the public.
-Of our 44,000,000 people, it is doubtful if as many as
-a hundred have studied the subject matter at first
-hand. Even in relation to taxation, the question
-of distribution is rarely discussed. It is but necessary
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">{172}</a></span>
-to listen to a debate on the income tax in the
-House of Commons to perceive that on the subject of
-"ability" the vaguest conceptions exist. Our most ardent
-reformers discuss their plans without reference to the
-economic framework of the society which they propose to
-reform. As a result, we get a vast amount of misdirected
-effort, a dreary outpouring of vague and empty rhetoric, a
-pitiful misconception on the part of the public as to the
-true condition of their finances, industries and commerce,
-and a succession of timorous proposals for reform ludicrous
-in relation to the nature and magnitude of the problems
-with which they seek to deal.</p>
-
-<p>In the following pages an attempt is made to correlate
-the facts as to the Error of Distribution with many of the
-problems of government. From the standpoint that we
-are a people with a great income, with a clear idea as to
-the ill-distribution of that income and the manner in which,
-through the joint operations of luxury and poverty, a
-nation may be devitalized even while its income is growing,
-let us consider the means of amelioration.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">{173}</a></span>
-
-<h3>CHAPTER XIV<br />
-<small>THE NATION'S CHILDREN</small></h3>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">LET us begin at the beginning with what should be
-the chief care of the reformer—the child.</p>
-
-<p>Every year in the United Kingdom there are some
-700,000 deaths and some 1,200,000 births. The social
-structure which we seek to improve thus offers us a double
-hope. However degraded, however enfeebled, however
-criminal many of the units of the present generation may
-be, they must pass away. Unit after unit is cancelled;
-unit after unit is replaced. The child, save in a small percentage
-of cases, is given to us an unsullied page, upon
-which we may write what we will.</p>
-
-<p>If the reader would realize fully the truth which I have
-just expressed, let him ponder the following utterance by
-Professor D. J. Cunningham when under examination by
-the recent Inter-Departmental Committee on Physical
-Deterioration. After referring to the manner in which
-changes in the condition of life affect the growth of an
-individual class, and more especially how poverty with its
-squalor, its bad feeding, and its attendant ignorance as to
-the proper nurture of the child, lowers the physical standard
-of the poor, he went on to say:</p>
-
-<p>"In spite of the marked variations which are seen in the
-physique of the different classes of people of Great Britain,
-anthropologists believe, with good reason, that there is a
-mean physical standard which is the inheritance of the
-people as a whole, and that no matter how far certain sections
-of the people may deviate from this by deterioration (produced
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">{174}</a></span>
-by the causes referred to) the tendency of the race
-as a whole will always be to maintain the inherited mean.
-In other words, those inferior bodily characters which are
-the result of poverty (and not vice such as syphilis and
-alcoholism) and which are therefore acquired during the
-lifetime of the individual, are not transmissible from one
-generation to another."</p>
-
-<p>I break the quotation to accentuate the conclusion:</p>
-
-<p>"Therefore, to restore the classes in which this inferiority
-exists to the mean standard of national physique, all that
-is required is to improve the standard of living, and in one
-or two generations the ground that has been lost will be
-recovered."</p>
-
-<p>According to Dr Alfred Eichholz, H.M. Inspector of
-Schools, fully 90 per cent. of the children born in poor
-neighbourhoods are healthy. Dr Edward Malins, President
-of the Obstetrical Society, gives it as his opinion that
-80 to 85 per cent. of children are born physically healthy,
-whatever the condition of the mother antecedently.<span class="fnanchor"><a
-name="Ref_41" id="Ref_41" href="#Foot_41">[41]</a></span> The
-weight of new-born children, he thinks, is, speaking
-generally, not below the average—there is a constant
-reversion to the race standard.</p>
-
-<p>It is probable that these statements of Dr Eichholz
-and Dr Malins require some modification. Other evidence
-goes to show that it is far from true that the majority of
-children born in poor neighbourhoods are healthy. Thus
-Dr Henry Ashby, of Manchester, a leading authority on
-the diseases of children, said in a letter to the "Lancet"
-on October 1st, 1904:—</p>
-
-<p>"My own experience in the out-patient room entirely confirms
-the opinion that the nutrition of the mother has a very
-important bearing on the nutrition of the fœtus and that the
-statement that the percentage of unhealthy births among
-the poor is small is not justified by facts. We constantly
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">{175}</a></span>
-see fully developed infants a day or two old brought by
-midwives or neighbours exceedingly badly nourished, blue
-and feeble, and who are clearly ill fitted, as the event indeed
-proves, to withstand the conditions of an external existence.
-There must be numbers of such born in this city that
-perish within a few weeks of their birth, and who fail to
-thrive for even a day. There is no question of syphilis;
-they are the children of poor mothers who have lived lives
-of hard wear and tear during pregnancy, are themselves
-badly nourished and weakly, and have felt the pinch of
-poverty, though often perhaps poverty of the secondary
-sort. I have a strong conviction also that the infants of
-the poorer and weaker mothers, even though they are born
-fairly well nourished, are difficult to rear, and easily waste
-even when under fairly favourable conditions in a home or
-hospital."</p>
-
-<p>Evidence to the same effect was given to the Physical
-Deterioration Committee, but unfortunately ignored in
-their report. It seems to a layman a common-sense view
-that if, in the period when a woman has to eat to "feed
-two," she is badly nourished, and exposed to undue
-fatigue, the child must suffer. Nevertheless, the striking
-phrase of Dr Malins, "Nature intends all to have a fair
-start," may be fully accepted, and Professor Cunningham's
-words of hope require no modification. What we have to
-remember is that pre-natal as well as post-natal conditions
-must be improved if we wish to rehabilitate our stock. If
-we have not a renewed opportunity with each birth, at
-least we have it, save in quite exceptional cases, in the
-person of each pregnant woman. The weight of evidence
-goes to show that the influence of heredity upon disease
-has in the past been greatly exaggerated. The chief
-causes of deaths from debility, atrophy and premature
-birth are to be found in the evil environment and malnutrition
-of the mother during pregnancy. The unborn
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">{176}</a></span>
-child fights hard for its life, but in a number of cases,
-sufficiently large seriously to affect the total population, it
-is born unfit. It either succumbs rapidly or lingers on to
-be a curse to itself and its kind.</p>
-
-<p>These all-important facts once realized, an avenue of
-hope stretches out before us. 1,200,000 new births every
-year; 1,200,000 new units added to the national stock,
-and the possibility of ensuring that nearly the whole of
-them shall be born healthy. Here is Nature ever endeavouring
-to reform the race—ever offering us opportunity.
-Combine with knowledge of this opportunity
-knowledge of the means to take advantage of it. Combine
-with the determination to secure reform the application of
-national wealth to truly national ends and all things
-become possible.</p>
-
-<p>Under what circumstances are the children of the new
-generation now born? It follows from our examination of
-incomes that a large proportion of our new births are of
-mothers who exist in conditions of extreme poverty. Fully
-one-fourth to one-third of the 1,200,000 are born to want
-and squalor. In England and Wales, at the census of
-1901, of a population of 32,527,843, there were 12,983,109
-persons belonging to families living in four rooms or less.
-In one room each lived families forming 507,763 people.
-In two rooms each lived families forming 2,158,644 people.
-In three rooms each lived families forming 3,186,640
-people. In four rooms each lived families forming
-7,130,062 people.</p>
-
-<p>If the one-third of very poor could be gifted with all the
-virtues, if drink were abolished and every penny spent
-upon scientific principles, we have seen that they would
-still be unable to command a healthy existence. One-third
-of our hope of the future is thus mortgaged. One-third
-of the new-born go to feed the ranks of misery and
-to form, such of them as do not perish in infancy, the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">{177}</a></span>
-raw material of the social problems of those who are to
-follow us.</p>
-
-<p>In England and Wales, in 1908, 940,000 children
-were born. In the same year 113,000 infants died under
-one year of age, or 120 per 1000 births. The conditions
-which exist in some of our towns can be gathered from
-the following figures:—</p>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">INFANT MORTALITY<br />
-(Rates per 1000 births in 1908)</p>
-
-<table class="gt3" style="font-size:100%" summary="gt3-4">
-
-<colgroup>
- <col />
- <col style="width:12.5%" />
- <col />
- <col style="width:12.5%" />
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="cent small rlin">Towns with High Rates.</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="cent small">Towns with Low Rates.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="town">Stalybridge</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">206</td>
- <td class="town">Reigate</td>
- <td class="numb">80</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="town">Farnworth</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">209</td>
- <td class="town">Tunbridge Wells</td>
- <td class="numb">83</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="town">Aberdare</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">198</td>
- <td class="town">Hornsey</td>
- <td class="numb">75</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="town">Rhondda</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">182</td>
- <td class="town">Guildford</td>
- <td class="numb">71</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="town">Burnley</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">194</td>
- <td class="town">Winchester</td>
- <td class="numb">88</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="town">Batley</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">186</td>
- <td class="town">Watford</td>
- <td class="numb">88</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="town">Longton</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">199</td>
- <td class="town">Ilford</td>
- <td class="numb">98</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="town">Tunstall</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">198</td>
- <td class="town">Salisbury</td>
- <td class="numb">95</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>The towns with low rates cannot be said to possess
-ideal conditions, but merely to take them as a standard
-we see how considerable is the wastage of life which goes
-on in Lancashire and Yorkshire and Staffordshire and
-South Wales. In some of the poorer wards of our great
-towns one in three of the children born perish within
-twelve months. That is the case in some parts of Birmingham,
-where the Medical Officer of Health recently
-stated that "a reduction of 50 per cent. in the rate of
-infant mortality in Birmingham would mean the saving
-of 1500 lives per annum."</p>
-
-<p>But death is only one of the symptoms we have to consider
-in this connexion, and death itself were preferable
-to the survival of a large proportion of the children of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">{178}</a></span>
-neighbourhoods where the rate of infantile mortality
-reaches one in every three or four births. Death is the
-extreme case. Those who do not die in infancy have
-physical degeneracy as their portion, and, in a world where
-virility and energy were never more needed by the labourer
-if he is to bargain successfully for a decent livelihood, enter
-the fierce lists of modern industry with enfeebled bodies.
-Docile units thus flood the casual labour market, or, totally
-unfitted for labour, swell the ranks of the "residuum."</p>
-
-<p>A woman ought not to work for the last three months
-of her pregnancy or during the three months after her
-child is born. Further, if the child is to be fed as Nature
-intended it should not be weaned until about the seventh
-or eighth month of its life.</p>
-
-<p>What cognizance does the law now take of these simple
-physiological facts? The Factory Act is not aware that
-pregnancy precedes childbirth. It recognizes, however,
-that children are born, and provides that the occupier of a
-factory or laundry shall not allow a woman to be employed
-"within four weeks after she has given birth to a child."
-Thus a feeble attempt is made to protect the working
-mother for a month after childbirth, but no law whatever
-protects the child. It is legal for the mother to go back
-to the factory on the twenty-ninth day and leave the child
-to take its pitiful chance.</p>
-
-<p>The "four week" provision is largely a dead letter.
-How is an employer to "know," when a woman applies to
-him for work, that she bore a child a fortnight before her
-application? And who shall blame the woman for seeking
-work, when she must work or starve? Miss A. M.
-Anderson, Principal Lady Inspector of Factories, gives the
-following three cases found in a single town in one week's
-inquiry:—<span class="fnanchor"><a
-name="Ref_42" id="Ref_42" href="#Foot_42">[42]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>A. B., aged 24, unmarried, jute worker, had to leave
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">{179}</a></span>
-work, being unfit, seven weeks before confinement. Became
-destitute, and found work with new employer, saying
-nothing about the baby. Earns 9s. 8d. per week.</p>
-
-<p>C. D., aged 34, married, jute spinner; the child illegitimate.
-Went back to work three weeks after childbirth.
-The new employer knew nothing of the confinement.</p>
-
-<p>F. F., aged 32, married, jute spinner. Went back to
-work in 15 days—to a new employer. Earns 11s. to 12s.
-per week. Father out of work and disappeared one week
-after the birth. The woman's mother "takes care" of the
-new baby and two other children, the eldest of whom earns
-8s. a week in a jute mill. Thus 19s. or so per week
-supports two adults and three children. They all live in
-a single room which is very dirty.</p>
-
-<p>In spite of an overwhelming mass of evidence as to the
-devastating effect of the employment in factories and workshops
-of pregnant women and mothers, the Physical
-Deterioration Committee's recommendations on the subject
-were exceedingly timid. They appear to have been
-impressed with the terrible consequences of the employment
-of women "from girlhood, all through married life
-and through child-bearing"; they realized that "the
-decreasing physical capacity of the child-bearing woman
-brings her at last some relief at the hands of the manager
-of the mill and she is sent away, often to take up the
-equally unsuitable occupation of charwoman or house
-scrubber." But, after setting out pages of good reason for
-action, the Committee, in effect, came to the conclusion
-that little or nothing could be done, because they were
-reminded of "the enormous practical difficulties that would
-accompany any sort of legal prohibition." Even as to
-extension of the period after confinement during which
-employment is forbidden, a point as to which, as in many
-other matters, we are falling behind Western civilization as
-a whole, the Committee did not advocate the enactment
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">{180}</a></span>
-of a longer period than four weeks. They pinned their
-faith to a medical certificate as to fitness, and production
-of proof that reasonable care is made for the child in a
-municipal crèche or otherwise. They also strongly urged
-the application of "voluntary assistance" in the shape of
-maternity funds.</p>
-
-<p>Thus lastly they came to the crux of the matter, the
-subject of "ways and means." The cause of the Committee's
-timidity is only too plain. It is impossible to
-make a recommendation of any value which does not entail
-expense. What is the use of talking of "medical certificates,"
-unless we can ensure that, when the medico has
-certified unfitness, the poor mother shall have the means
-of refraining from work? Of what use to talk of "reasonable
-care" of the infant, unless the means of reasonable
-care be provided, and what form of care other than that
-of the mother is "reasonable"?</p>
-
-<p>The whole aspect of the question is changed when we
-consider the extent of our national resources. Miss
-Anderson, in the invaluable memorandum on the subject
-which she supplied to the Committee, said: "It ought
-not to be impossible to link together in one great national
-provident and protective association all the isolated, half-informed
-societies and agencies at work in aid of maternity
-and for the saving of infant life. More than that, I believe,
-with Miss Squire (Lady Factory Inspector), that all over
-the country, but particularly in the great centres in the
-Midlands and the North, it needs only an organizing
-mind and purpose to bring such a national movement into
-being."</p>
-
-<p>The Committee did not take up the idea of a "national
-movement." They preferred to urge that "voluntary
-assistance" should devote itself to the formation of
-maternity funds. But a problem of so much gravity
-demands national effort, and the use of the national
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">{181}</a></span>
-purse. Out of the labour of the poor is drained the rents,
-profits and dividends which make the gross assessment
-to income tax in 1908-9 as much as £1,010,000,000.
-Of this sum, how much is needed to deal with the problem
-of the poor mother?</p>
-
-<p>We have to consider not alone the woman who works in
-the factory, but also the woman who works in the home.
-A large proportion of the latter are necessitous and
-ignorant, lacking both the means to feed themselves and
-their children properly, and the training to apply the
-means if they had them. The case is one in which education
-and supply must go hand in hand, and both education
-and supply should be provided for nationally.</p>
-
-<p>In the school the teaching of personal and domestic
-hygiene to scholars of both sexes should begin at an early
-age. In the case of girls, infant hygiene should be added
-in the higher standards. Girls should not leave school or
-continuation classes until they have been seriously trained
-in domestic duties. At present we herd them in classes
-of 60 or 80, and leave a teacher, herself often ignorant of
-the chief duties of womanhood, to impart to them a
-smattering of matters of secondary importance. Able to
-write badly, to cipher inaccurately, and to read a novelette,
-the girl goes forth from the school "educated," and more
-ignorant of essential things than the untutored savage.</p>
-
-<p>If we would have these children technically trained in
-domestic economy and hygiene, acquainted with the dietetic
-value of simple foods, and sent out into the world fit
-to take their places in the national economy, we must make
-up our minds to increase our expenditure upon education.
-We must have more teachers and better trained teachers.</p>
-
-<p>But, if we put our hands earnestly to this work tomorrow,
-many years would elapse before we could rear a
-new generation of mothers. What of the mothers who now
-lack education—of the vast number of girls who are now
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">{182}</a></span>
-passing from school into the world they are so unfit to
-play a part in? Work upon the right lines has already
-been commenced at Preston, St Pancras, and other places.
-Let me outline the admirable scheme of Dr J. F. J. Sykes,
-the Medical Officer of Health for St Pancras.</p>
-
-<p>St Pancras is a poor and crowded London Borough in
-which, as in many other such neighbourhoods, infants are
-dying at a younger and younger age from increased
-immaturity at birth, from diminished capacity to resist
-disease and from increased rearing "by hand." It is but
-necessary to take one walk through its mean streets to
-see that St Pancras is breeding a degenerate race. The
-Borough Council has awakened to the terrible evil which
-increasingly threatens them. They have a most capable
-medical officer and they have appointed women inspectors
-to act under his authority. These women inspectors
-perform the important function of following up the weekly
-official returns of births. There are about 130 births a
-week in St Pancras, and all of them cannot be visited by
-the present small staff, but an endeavour is made to visit
-every necessitous case. To all the mothers, whether visited
-or not, a card or leaflet of useful information is sent by
-post. Dr Sykes does not teach the mothers how to wean
-or artificially feed their children, but to suckle their babies
-and to avoid weaning them before their first teeth appear.
-To the many indigent mothers the women inspectors give
-advice as to regimen and diet and, where artificial feeding
-is absolutely necessary, how best to proceed. Endeavour
-is also made to reach and advise pregnant women.
-Throughout, the chief aim is to reduce hand-feeding to
-the smallest possible proportions.</p>
-
-<p>In cases of poverty requiring temporary assistance, the
-women inspectors give cards of introduction to the Charity
-Organization Society, or to the Poor Law Guardians.
-Where health is deranged or there is a desire or necessity
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">{183}</a></span>
-to wean, introduction to a doctor or a hospital is arranged
-for. Where the husband is out of work the case is notified
-to the Labour Bureau. In every case the hygienic, sanitary
-and domestic circumstances of the mother and infant are
-carefully inquired into and reported upon.</p>
-
-<p>This practical work, now in operation in St Pancras,
-and with variations in some other places, is what is wanted
-everywhere if we are to rescue the poor children of the
-new generation. The appointment of sufficient Women
-Health Inspectors by local authorities must be made compulsory.
-In "Riches and Poverty," edition 1905, I
-wrote: "The Health Inspectors must of course be directed
-by a capable Medical Officer enjoying a permanent appointment.
-It is most important that Medical Officers of Health
-everywhere should have the same security of tenure which
-they have in London. At present they hold office as a
-rule at the goodwill of the local authority." Mr Burns's
-Housing Bill of 1909 has secured this important reform.
-In future every county will have its independent Medical
-Officer, unafraid of local influence.</p>
-
-<p>Closely allied to the work of the Health Inspector is
-that of the medical man, and here is raised a point of the
-utmost importance. Above all, if we are in earnest about
-this matter of breed, the public medical service should be
-greatly enlarged as part of the machinery of a Ministry
-of Health, and the sale of soothing syrups and other
-"patent" medicines absolutely prohibited.<span class="fnanchor"><a
-name="Ref_43" id="Ref_43" href="#Foot_43">[43]</a></span> The Medical
-Officers of Health should be able to marshal a liberal
-service of trained medical skill in defence of the national
-well-being. Also at their command should be an ample
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">{184}</a></span>
-supply of Health Visitors and trained and certificated
-nurses. The creatures, nearly always ignorant and frequently
-unclean, who now "assist" poor women in their
-time of trouble, are responsible for part of the infant
-mortality which swells our death returns. I shall never
-forget some of the "monthly nurses" I have met in the
-homes of the poor. One ancient dame I found swilling
-stout. She leered at me out of a beery eye and explained
-that she liked stout "because it made her feel as though
-she could sing." Needless to say, she strongly recommended
-the same joyful fluid to her patients.</p>
-
-<p>The excellent Notification of Births Act of Lord
-Robert Cecil (1907) should be adopted (or its adoption
-enforced—the Local Government Board has power to
-enforce adoption) universally, in order that Health Visitors
-may do their work effectually.</p>
-
-<p>Given a properly organized public medical service we
-could begin at the beginning, with the unborn child. The
-pregnant woman could obtain, free of charge and as a
-matter of course, advice upon her diet and conduct.
-Through such a service, it would be a simple matter to
-administer a Public Maternity Fund. It is probable that,
-of the 1,200,000 births per annum, as many as 300,000 are
-in necessitous families. We cannot afford to allow 300,000
-children to be starved before and after birth every year.</p>
-
-<p>The nation must set its face against the employment of
-married women in factories or workshops, and gradually
-extend the period of legal prohibition. There is only
-one proper sphere of work for the married woman and
-that is her own home. In the case of factory workers
-the employer must be made to furnish a maternity fund if
-he wishes to employ married women. Thus penalized he
-will probably prefer not to employ them—to the very
-great advantage of the labour market and the nation.
-There are several model factories in the United Kingdom
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">{185}</a></span>
-where the female workers are dismissed upon marriage.
-This is found to prevent the girls falling victims to loafers
-who desire to play three days a week. The Jewish
-community amongst us, the very aliens who are despised
-by the race they are supplanting in the East End of
-London, set us an example which we should do well to
-imitate. The Jewish children are much healthier and
-stronger than their Gentile neighbours because they are
-better mothered. Jewish women find their true avocation
-at home. The Jew, however poor, does not live on his
-wife's earnings, and it would be counted shame for a
-Jewess to work during pregnancy or after childbirth.</p>
-
-<p>But what of the poor woman in her home? We can
-safely confer upon our medical officers and women inspectors
-power to report upon and advise the assistance of necessitous
-cases, before and after childbirth. The mother and
-child must be fed. Nature must be allowed to fulfil her
-desire to give the new unit of population a fair start in life.
-The cost would be surprisingly small. If 300,000 cases
-were assisted to the extent of £10 each it would entail an
-expenditure of only £3,000,000 per annum. With £10
-per case a great deal could be done.</p>
-
-<p>By assistance to the extent of £10 each I do not necessarily
-mean a money payment. Often the assistance which
-is most wanted is personal help. The poor Jewish women of
-East London have the aid of that excellent institution the
-Sick Room Helps Society, which is practically a charitable
-institution, the poor mothers contributing less than one-third
-of the expenditure. The "Sick Room Helps" provided
-by this Society are thus described by Miss Bella
-Löwy:</p>
-
-<p class="small">"They had to take the place of the house-mother when, through
-confinement or sickness, she was laid low, and when, were it not
-for their ministrations, the children and husband, and the home
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">{186}</a></span>
-(sometimes consisting of one room only) would be absolutely uncared
-for. The Helps were only sent in where there was no
-woman or girl old enough and able to do the work. The Sick
-Room Helps, for the time being, took the place of the housemother,
-washed the baby, got the children ready and sent them to
-school, cooked the food, tidied and cleaned up the home, saw that
-any accumulation of washing was done. In fact, she attended to
-the hundred and one little things which required to be seen to
-even in the most modest home, and they could readily understand
-how much more cleanliness and order became indispensable when
-the family had to live, eat and sleep in one room only. The advent
-of the Sick Room Helps also ensured for the mother peace
-of mind, as well as of body, at a time when she sorely needed both,
-and if she knew that her husband and children were well-cared for
-and well looked after she was assisted on the road to health and
-strength, and was, thereby, enabled to take up afresh the routine
-of her numerous daily duties. Formerly the poor mothers used
-to grudge themselves even a few days of enforced idleness, and,
-by premature activity in getting up and about, they but too often
-sowed the seeds of illness and sickness, and brought untold troubles
-on themselves and their families. Notwithstanding that these
-facts were well-known and were perfectly obvious to every thinking
-person, the opposition to what was erroneously termed a new
-form of pauperization had been very great. But an institution
-which not only benefited the recipients by nursing them when it
-was imperatively necessary, but, at the same time, gave employment
-to deserving women, enabling them to support themselves,
-and, perhaps, their family, could not be accused of encouraging
-pauperism in any way."</p>
-
-<p>Mrs Alice Model, the honorary secretary, tells me that
-the Jewish Board of Guardians applies a sum annually for
-the relief of destitute women in childbed, which is handed
-to this Society and applicants for relief are referred to it.
-If a case is found suitable, a nurse is sent in twice
-daily and milk and other suitable nourishment provided.
-Excellent results are obtained and many lives saved.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">{187}</a></span>
-Work on such lines might easily be carried on given a
-sufficient staff of Women Health Inspectors and an expenditure
-such as I have mentioned to provide nurses and
-nourishment.</p>
-
-<p>In this connexion a municipal milk service, which will
-be discussed in these pages hereafter, would be of the first
-importance, and it would be found a simple matter to
-supply pregnant women and nursing mothers with an
-ample quantity of pure milk. Such a supply might be
-made universal and be specially supplemented in necessitous
-cases. In any case, the mother has a special claim
-upon the community and that claim should be recognized.
-The birth of a child is a special tax upon the family in
-which it occurs, a tax which is deliberately avoided by
-many people. Yet the unit not only belongs to its family;
-it is an integral part of the nation, and entitled to the care
-of a country which desires strong and healthy citizens.</p>
-
-<p>Such provisions should be accompanied by drastic
-punishment of parents who neglect their duties. Upon
-report of the Health Officer, the prosecution and punishment
-of offenders against the nation's children would
-swiftly follow. We must make the man who neglects his
-child, which is also the nation's child, feel that he is the
-greatest criminal of them all.</p>
-
-<p>It is impossible to leave the subject of the birth of the
-new generation without reference to the necessity for the
-segregation of the unfit. It must be made no longer possible
-for the habitual drunkard, the vagrant, the criminal, the
-mentally defective, to reproduce their terrible kind. The
-subject is so rarely brought before the public that few
-people realize the nature and extent of the danger. <i>Fully
-two per cent. of our existing elementary school children will
-never be fit to direct their own lives.</i> The State has but one
-duty in the matter and that is to protect society from the
-breeding of the unfit, while protecting the unfit from themselves.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">{188}</a></span>
-The child of the habitual drunkard is often feeble-minded.
-The child of the feeble-minded is frequently an
-idiot. Need we wonder, while the State has no control of the
-feeble-minded, that our lunatic asylums are ever growing
-too small for their pitiable populations. Our criminal and
-workhouse records are full of testimony as to the terrible
-results of the unchecked propagation of the insane by the
-mentally weak. A few years ago, at Daventry, a couple
-were charged with neglecting their ten-year-old son. It
-was stated that the child was in the habit of smoking a
-pipe and drinking beer, supplied by the father. A doctor
-stated that the boy was a perfect savage. He was undersized
-and threatened to be an idiot or a criminal. The
-boy was sent to the workhouse while the mother and father,
-described as "mentally weak," were sentenced to one day's
-imprisonment and are now free to bring forth <i>sui generis</i>.
-Another recently reported case which I noted was that of
-a partly paralyzed old man who applied for out-relief to
-the Oulton Guardians. He has had thirty children and
-the youngest, a girl, is described as "practically an imbecile."
-From her, doubtless, and from others of the brood,
-the terrible strain will proceed. Mr Amos W. Butler,
-speaking at the American Association for the Advancement
-of Science, gave particulars of the descendants of
-a feeble-minded woman. She was the mother of two
-daughters, who were free to marry because, like their
-parent, they were not actually insane. One of them,
-Rachel, has married twice, and borne eleven children,
-three of whom are dead. One of the survivors is a criminal
-and the others are degenerates. The other daughter,
-Kate, has four children, all feeble-minded, two of them
-illegitimate. One of them became the wife of a feeble-minded
-paralytic and has had five awful children. The
-direct descendants of the woman first mentioned number
-twenty-nine, and in ten years twelve of them have
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">{189}</a></span>
-spent an aggregate of twenty-two years in asylums and
-orphans' homes.</p>
-
-<p>These details may be nauseating, but of what use to shirk
-them? It is only when we realize that such propagation
-is going on unchecked that we see our duty clear in the
-matter. We then also see that segregation of the unfit
-would not increase our burdens, but decrease them.</p>
-
-<p>Segregation recognized as a painful duty, it would no
-longer be necessary to make any reservation when speaking
-of the hope that lies in the child. Our 1,200,000 new
-births per annum would soon regenerate the race. <i>During
-the next twenty years about 25,000,000 children will be
-born in the United Kingdom.</i></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_41" id="Foot_41" href="#Ref_41">[41]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-See evidence before the Physical Deterioration Committee.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_42" id="Foot_42" href="#Ref_42">[42]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Cd. 2175, p. 117.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_43" id="Foot_43" href="#Ref_43">[43]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-In this connexion it should be observed that there are 28,000 surgeons,
-physicians and medical practitioners in the United Kingdom. The number
-(one to about 300 families) is probably larger than the nation needs, but even
-to organize the whole of them as public servants, and to make the medical
-service entirely free, would cost only about £10,000,000 per annum, allowing
-for salaries ranging from £250 to £1,000.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">{190}</a></span>
-
-<h3>CHAPTER XV<br />
-<small>THE SCHOOL</small></h3>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">IN a commonwealth a man would need a healthy mind in
-a healthy body to be true to himself, and to every man.
-In an unorganized community, in which each man must
-needs struggle with his fellow for the right to live, and in
-which to be unselfish is to be weak, and to be weak is to
-go to the wall, a man needs a healthy mind in a healthy
-body in order to set up himself and those dear to him in a
-fortress impregnable, with ramparts against competitors,
-secret stores against time of siege, and insurance policies
-against the horrors that threaten weak women and young
-children whose champion has departed.</p>
-
-<p>As things are now, we have then, not merely to train the
-boy to be a man for manhood's sake, but to fit him to
-fight what has been pleasantly called "the battle of life."
-He must be not only strong but artful, not only intelligent
-but cunning, not only brave but aggressive, not only fit
-to work but fit to bargain, not only an artist but a shopkeeper.</p>
-
-<p>Knowing what we do of the hardness of the competitive
-system, how unfair we are to these children whom we
-affect to "educate." We dose them with a little book-learning
-and pass them on to seek employers. Nothing
-has been taught them by way of preparation for the real
-education upon which they are about to enter. They are
-wholly ignorant of the nature of the machine of which they
-are about to become an insignificant part. They plunge
-into the hard work which henceforth is to be their portion
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">{191}</a></span>
-and little that has been taught them is of value in connexion
-with it. The boy is compelled to play a game for
-wages without knowledge of the rules. Business presents
-itself to him as an impenetrable mystery, the secrets of
-which are known but to a few. He becomes a producer
-of things which in some way, he knows not how, are sold
-and bought and come to yield him a certain or uncertain
-wage. He does not see, nor, if he saw, would he understand,
-the balance sheet which sums up the processes
-which yield him a part only of his production. He is not
-competent to measure the extent of the injustice which he
-suffers. It is a game played between a few who know and
-many who do not know.</p>
-
-<p>From the beginning of the child's life, the Error of
-Distribution plays its part. The opportunity offered the
-child varies directly with the income of its parent. The
-frontispiece of this volume measures not income alone; it
-measures also the degree of opportunity which is offered
-to the children respectively of the rich, the comfortable
-and the poor. Since the bulk of the people are poor, the
-greater number of the nation's children are handicapped
-at the start. Individually they are deprived of their
-birthright. Collectively the community is deprived of
-the proper value of their strength, their intelligence, their
-genius.</p>
-
-<p>The last point is rarely discussed. Intellect and genius
-are the possessions of no single class. Year by year we
-kill off units of our population who might live to work
-good for their kind. Year by year we brutalize men who,
-given opportunity, might enrich our literature or ennoble
-our art. Year by year we waste the greater part of the
-gifts of our people. Here and there some rare combination
-of muscle and brain rises superior to circumstance and lives
-to command the class which would have repressed him.
-These exceptional cases serve to remind us of the ability
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">{192}</a></span>
-which is lost. We know only of the soldiers who live to be
-commanders. Probably greater generals than Napoleon
-have perished as privates in their first battle. That is
-unavoidable, for in battle some must die. But in the
-arts of peace the sacrifice of potential commanders need
-not go on. Given equality of opportunity, the marshal's
-baton in each private's knapsack, and the nation need not
-waste one of its great men.</p>
-
-<p>If we are in earnest in this matter of the problem of
-poverty, we must hasten to equalize opportunity, and
-having begun with the unborn child, continue our work
-in the school. We must seek to make the school a preparation
-for life and endeavour to build up, out of the new
-generation, citizens who understand, and who, understanding,
-will see to it that they remain not poor.</p>
-
-<p>In the first place, we have to attend to the child's
-body. Through the school we can see that the child is
-properly clothed and properly fed. Through the school
-we can teach the child to understand its physical nature
-and to respect it. In a certain class of trumpery novel,
-the "tubbing" Englishman is distinguished from the unclean
-foreigner. The simple fact is that the Englishmen
-who "tub" are quite exceptional specimens of their kind.
-Few of the 9,000,000 houses of the United Kingdom are
-provided with tubbing apparatus, and even the London
-County Council has lately built "model" cottages which
-contain no bath. We must change all that. The Germans
-are setting us the example of introducing shower baths
-into their public elementary schools, and all the children
-are bathed once a week. They soon get to enjoy it, and it
-is rarely that a child objects. Mr George Andrew, in his
-valuable report to the Scottish Education Department on
-the schools of Berlin and Charlottenburg,<span class="fnanchor"><a
-name="Ref_44" id="Ref_44" href="#Foot_44">[44]</a></span> says that in the
-poorer localities this weekly bath system is found to have
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">{193}</a></span>
-an educational effect upon the parents. The mothers, influenced
-by the knowledge that their children's underclothing
-will be scrutinized, supply them with clean things.
-Thus even that least amenable of subjects, the parent, may
-be reached through the child.</p>
-
-<p>In "Riches and Poverty" edition 1905, I wrote:—</p>
-
-<p>"In the matter of school hygiene and the physical training
-of children, the introduction of the medico into the
-school is all-important. At present, proper hygienic inspection
-of our schools does not exist. Medical officers
-should be appointed both to see that school buildings are
-absolutely healthy and to care for the personal health of
-the pupils. Upon entering the school, the child should
-undergo a preliminary examination and from thence
-onward remain under the care of the school doctor.
-The preliminary examination would decide the question
-of fitness for normal instruction; defective children would
-be drafted into special classes."</p>
-
-<p>In 1907 the Education (Administrative Provisions)
-Act made it the "duty" of local education authorities
-"to provide for the medical inspection of children immediately
-before, or at the time of, or as soon as possible after,
-their admission to a public elementary school" and the
-"power" of such authorities to make arrangements "for
-attending to the health and physical condition of the
-children." It is earnestly to be hoped that this "power"
-will be exercised; at present many authorities are blind
-to it. The reader may judge from a single example
-the importance of using the schools as a means of
-physical control and training. Dr Ralph H. Crowley,
-the Medical Superintendent of the Bradford Education
-Authority, conducted an inquiry into the physical condition
-of the school children of Bradford in 1907. The
-results make painful reading.</p>
-
-<p>Let us begin with the "general condition" of the Bradford
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">{194}</a></span>
-children. The examination as to cleanliness was made
-by observations of the head, ears, and neck, and by rolling
-up the sleeves of the children. The following approximate
-figures were arrived at:</p>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">CONDITION AS TO CLEANLINESS</p>
-
-<table class="gt1" style="max-width:20em" summary="gt1-54">
-
-<colgroup>
- <col style="width:50%" />
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="small cent">Number.</td>
- <td class="small cent">Per Cent.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Clean</td>
- <td class="numb">10,000</td>
- <td class="numb">22.2</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Somewhat dirty</td>
- <td class="numb">22,000</td>
- <td class="numb">49.0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Dirty</td>
- <td class="numb">11,500</td>
- <td class="numb">25.5</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Very dirty</td>
- <td class="numb">1,500</td>
- <td class="numb">3.3</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>I think we must agree with Dr Crowley that these
-figures "show a deplorable state of things." What is to
-be said of "home life" and "education," which between
-them fail to teach a child to be clean?</p>
-
-<p>Here are some saddening details as to the condition of
-the heads of girls:</p>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">CONDITION OF GIRLS' HEADS</p>
-
-<table class="gt1" style="max-width:20em" summary="gt1-55">
-
-<colgroup>
- <col style="width:50%" />
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="small cent">No. of Girls.</td>
- <td class="small cent">Per Cent.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Clean</td>
- <td class="numb">7,000</td>
- <td class="numb">30</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Nits present</td>
- <td class="numb">8,500</td>
- <td class="numb">35</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Lice present</td>
- <td class="numb">8,500</td>
- <td class="numb">35</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>And these figures, we are told, exclude many children
-sent home because their heads had "broken out" through
-the presence of lice.</p>
-
-<p>As to clothing, here are the figures:</p>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">CONDITION OF CLOTHING</p>
-
-<table class="gt1" style="max-width:20em" summary="gt1-56">
-
-<colgroup>
- <col style="width:50%" />
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="small cent">No. of Children.</td>
- <td class="small cent">Per Cent.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Good</td>
- <td class="numb">10,000</td>
- <td class="numb">22</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Average</td>
- <td class="numb">19,000</td>
- <td class="numb">42</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Bad or very bad</td>
- <td class="numb">16,000</td>
- <td class="numb">36</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">{195}</a></span>
-As for boots, the results are worth the consideration of
-British bootmakers. As many as 6,500 children had
-foot-gear so bad that in many cases "it was difficult to
-see how what were meant for boots managed to keep on
-the feet."</p>
-
-<p>Condition as to nutrition was judged broadly, irrespective
-of cause. Dr Crowley divided the schools into three
-classes—better class schools, poor schools, poorest. I take
-the case of the poorest schools:</p>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">C. SCHOOLS—POOREST</p>
-
-<table class="gt1" style="max-width:25em" summary="gt1-57">
-
-<colgroup>
- <col style="width:44%" />
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="small cent">Nutrition.</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="small cent">Infants.</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="small cent">Upper School.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="small cent"></td>
- <td class="small cent">No.</td>
- <td class="small cent">Per Cent.</td>
- <td class="small cent">No.</td>
- <td class="small cent">Per Cent.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Good or sufficiently good</td>
- <td class="numb">51</td>
- <td class="numb">30.7</td>
- <td class="numb">105</td>
- <td class="numb">24.4</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Below normal</td>
- <td class="numb">58</td>
- <td class="numb">34.9</td>
- <td class="numb">183</td>
- <td class="numb">42.6</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Poor or very poor</td>
- <td class="numb">57</td>
- <td class="numb">34.4</td>
- <td class="numb">142</td>
- <td class="numb">33.0</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>Taking the three groups of schools together, we find
-that 1,019 children out of nearly 2,000 were "below
-normal" in point of nutrition. More than one-half, that is,
-were suffering from chronic semi-starvation. Of the 1,019,
-as many as 344 were described as "poor or very poor."</p>
-
-<p>Very instructively Dr Crowley measured nutrition
-against mental capacity, and showed clearly how often
-unhealthy minds are the product of unhealthy bodies.
-Of children of exceptional intelligence, 62.7 per cent. were
-of good nutrition. Of dull children only 24.9 per cent.
-were of good nutrition.</p>
-
-<p>Dr Crowley concluded his significant report with these
-words:</p>
-
-<p>"No increased facilities for higher education or technical
-instruction can in any way take the place of attention to
-the physical side of our children. The future of our
-nation will depend, not on the ability of the few, but on
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">{196}</a></span>
-the fitness of the many, and this fitness must be secured
-at all cost. It is for us as a nation a matter of life and
-death."</p>
-
-<p>To proceed, anthropometric statistics should be carefully
-compiled, and a sickness register kept, so that the
-nation may judge of the progress made in restoring its
-stature. The teeth would have special attention and the
-school dentist would work hand in hand with the school
-doctor. Children need few dosings, but in special cases
-cod liver oil or a suitable tonic could be administered, as
-is done in Belgium.</p>
-
-<p>In cases of defective nourishment the child must be fed,
-whatever the character of the parent. No fears as to the
-loosening of parental responsibility need stand in the way
-in this essential matter, for drastic punishment of neglectful
-parents should go hand in hand with our care of the
-child. Nothing, in my opinion, is so likely to encourage
-the feeling of parental responsibility, and to shame
-careless mothers, as the knowledge that at the school the
-child is regarded as a valuable commodity. In this connexion
-it would be well for the Board of Education to
-insist upon periodical reports, not less frequently than
-every three months, to parents upon their children.
-A carefully written report upon the progress of the scholar
-in all departments would be calculated to stimulate the
-better feelings of the parent.</p>
-
-<p>The greatest timidity was shown by the Physical
-Deterioration Committee in dealing with the important
-subject of underfed children. The report runs:</p>
-
-<p>"By a differentiation of function on these terms—the
-School Authority to supply and organize the machinery,
-the benevolent to furnish the material—a working adjustment
-between the privileges of charity and the obligations
-of the community might be reached. In some districts it
-still may be the case that such an arrangement would
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">{197}</a></span>
-prove inadequate, the extent or the concentration of
-poverty might be too great for the resources of local
-charity, and in these, subject to the consent of the Board
-of Education, it might be expedient to permit the application
-of municipal aid on a larger scale."</p>
-
-<p>It is the State that must furnish the "material," not as
-a matter of charity, but from motives of the purest common
-sense. The timidity of the Committee is the more
-remarkable when the evidence presented to them is examined.
-Dr Eichholz made a special investigation into
-the conditions of the Johanna Street Board School,
-Lambeth, as a type of school in a very bad district, and
-he considers that 90 per cent. of the children are unable,
-by reason of their physical condition, to attend to their
-lessons in a proper way. His estimate of the underfed
-children in the elementary schools of London is 122,000,
-or 16 per cent. of the whole.<span class="fnanchor"><a
-name="Ref_45" id="Ref_45" href="#Foot_45">[45]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Those alone who have had to do with voluntary free
-breakfast schemes can have any idea of the terrible hunger
-of the children who attend them. The hugging of the mug
-of cocoa, the ravenous swallowing—it cannot be called
-eating—of the slices of bread, make one shudder to think
-that, but for such isolated voluntary effort, the poor
-children would in an hour or so be entering a school at
-which their attendance is compulsory to—study! And
-for one helped by voluntary effort how many go hungry to
-their tasks, utterly unable, through physical weakness, to
-do their work!</p>
-
-<p>Those who have grasped the importance of the utterance
-of Dr D. J. Cunningham, quoted in the last chapter, will
-heartily agree with Sir Shirley Murphy, L.C.C. Medical
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">{198}</a></span>
-Officer of Health, that "the child has got to be fed." The
-chief deterrent to many is fear that parents will be demoralized
-by free meals at the schools. It must be
-realized by those who entertain this fear that the parents
-are often already thoroughly demoralized, and that their
-demoralization in the great majority of cases has resulted
-from the conditions imposed upon them from their birth
-by our social system. They are what they are because of
-circumstances over which their control was nominal. <i>The
-reader, or myself, if transplanted to Lambeth at a few
-months old, and nurtured as they were nurtured, would at
-this moment be what they are.</i> "There, but for the Grace
-of God, goes myself," is the reflection which every man
-should make when he contemplates the waste products of
-the civilization of which he himself is a favoured part.
-That truth realized by any man, it is never again possible
-for him, if he has more than the average share of the
-nation's income, to grudge a part of the amount by which
-his income exceeds the average to raise to a higher level
-the children of those whose lives have been a crying injustice
-from their cradles—of those who have, with all
-their faults, done more than their share of the hard labour
-of the world.</p>
-
-<p>In 1906 the Education (Provision of Meals) Act
-enacted that a local education authority "may take such
-steps as they think fit for the provision of meals for
-children in attendance at any public elementary school
-in their area" to the extent of a halfpenny rate and no
-more. So, with extreme timidity, the legislative machine
-advances.</p>
-
-<p>Games, physical drill, gardening and swimming, should
-be taught to every child, under proper medical control.
-I assume the existence of playgrounds in some ample
-shape—each school having its indoor and outdoor places
-of recreation and its school garden. A great object
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">{199}</a></span>
-is to keep the child from the street. For the same
-reason, the school grounds should be open on summer
-evenings and during all vacations. It is a simple matter
-to make the vacations a time of real holiday for every
-child—filled with lively interest and healthful sport. With
-the physical exercises and teaching of games and, indeed,
-with all other departments of school life should be associated
-what Rousseau considered to be the chief moral
-principle that a child should learn—to do harm to no one.
-That carries with it the teaching of "manners" in their
-best sense. Nor should graces of person be neglected.
-The boy should not be allowed to slouch about with his
-hands in his pockets. If he does, he is only too likely to
-slouch into casual labour hereafter.</p>
-
-<p>Clean, neatly clad, healthy, well-nourished, upright, self-respecting
-and therefore respectful of others, feeling its
-strength in every limb, well-mannered, capable of lucid
-expression—is it beyond our powers to make the average
-child all this? Not if these things are as well worth consideration
-as the resistance of an armour-plate, the trajectory
-of a rifle-bullet, or the virtues of a smokeless powder.
-Not if the proper study of mankind is man.</p>
-
-<p>Having made provision for the body, we may now turn
-to the mind. I have referred to the child's power of expression,
-and I think that the average elementary scholar's
-incapacity to think clearly or to express its ideas with
-lucidity show how much we have missed the way in our
-educational methods. We have forgotten that to "educate"
-is literally to "lead out." The two guiding principles
-or characteristics of the German school curriculum as
-described by Mr George Andrew are: (1) The principle
-of "<i>Anschauung</i>" (observation, intuition, concrete), and
-(2) The development of oral expression.</p>
-
-<p>"Anschauung" literally means "looking at" and as an
-educational principle it means observation of the concrete
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">{200}</a></span>
-as paving the way to the abstract. The child begins
-school with the supply of words and conceptions which
-it has gained from infancy in its own house. These have
-to be corrected and completed; the child's concepts are
-enriched by fresh observations and by gradual steps it is
-advanced from the familiar to the strange, from the known
-to the unknown. In the youngest classes the instruction
-in reading, writing, arithmetic, drawing, nature study, is all
-in varying degrees based on "Anschauung," and later the
-same principle of observation is to be traced in the teaching
-of such subjects as geometry, geography, and history,
-where models, pictures, maps, and plans are continually
-resorted to in order to deepen and vivify the ideas gained
-from the printed page. Mr Andrew thus contrasts infant
-teaching in Scotland with that in Berlin:</p>
-
-<p class="small">"In Scotland, infant classes generally begin with the alphabet
-and the elementary reading-book, the object-lesson being something of
-an "extra," in which much useful and stodgy information
-is often imparted to the youthful mind—not always on
-subjects within its range of actual experience—and then retracted
-under an incessant fire of jerky interrogatories.</p>
-
-<p class="small">"The Berlin child begins in a different way. With him the
-"observation lesson" is the starting-point. It is maintained that
-the child in his natural intercourse at home with his parents,
-brothers and sisters, and playmates, has equipped himself with a
-certain rudimentary supply of words and ideas, which concern
-themselves mainly with objects that have fallen within his own
-range of vision. He has learned to speak in a language, the
-purity or corruptness of which will largely depend on his environment.
-It is on these two lines, his rudimentary knowledge of
-simple objects and his power of simple speech, that his first
-school instruction proceeds, individual words and their constituent
-<i>sounds</i> with (the corresponding letter names) being reached by a
-gradual analytical process. In the "observation lesson" such
-objects as are in the schoolroom, or again, the child's body and
-limbs, his food, his clothes, his home, his street, etc., anything,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">{201}</a></span>
-in fact, which he can see, or has seen, are made use of. But even
-in this early "observation lesson" one cannot fail to note how
-the foundations are laid for developing oral expression—for
-teaching the child <i>Sprachfertigkeit</i>. Just as the child comes to
-school with his rudimentary ideas, and has these gradually
-corrected and extended by "observation," so also in this lesson
-the power of speech he brings with him is taken up and developed
-from the beginning. He is asked to describe what is placed before
-his eyes; he is made—and this is naturally the first difficulty—to
-speak in a distinctly loud tone of voice; and he is made to
-answer in a sentence or sentences. For example, the teacher's
-watch was taken as the subject of an "observation lesson" in a
-class of pupils newly come to school. One heard such little
-sentences as "This is a watch"; "from the watch hangs a
-chain"; "on the face of the watch are figures," etc. Every now
-and then some child is made to recapitulate the whole account,
-e.g. to repeat the above three sentences—a process to which great
-importance is attached."</p>
-
-<p>Thus from the beginning the child is taught to observe
-and to express lucidly what it has observed, and this
-excellent principle—this real "education"—is followed
-throughout its school life. As a result the children become
-self-reliant in utterance, able to think clearly and to express
-their ideas orally or in writing in logical order and appropriate
-language. Thus, whatever the influence of the
-home the child gains a proper use of its mother-tongue.
-In our own country the vocabulary of the home remains
-the vocabulary of the child, and I know of nothing more
-painful than to listen to the talk of our "educated"
-elementary school children in poor neighbourhoods.</p>
-
-<p>There is no subject in the curriculum to which the
-principles of observation and development of expression
-are not applied with success. Thus, arithmetic is not taught
-by rule-of-thumb, as is too often the case in our schools,
-but from the beginning the child is led to "count with
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">{202}</a></span>
-understanding." The child does not merely learn a series
-of mechanical rules. He understands the process he
-employs and can give a lucid account of his knowledge.
-It is perhaps hardly necessary to add that he studies the
-metric system, and becomes familiar with the arithmetic
-of business operations.</p>
-
-<p>Our elementary school curriculum must be made to
-include the study of the sciences as a matter of course
-and not as special subjects. Unfortunately, public opinion
-is still lamentably absent on this point. An ex-Prime
-Minister is not ashamed to state publicly that he is
-ignorant of science, and the majority of those who have
-received what is known as a "liberal" education could not
-intelligently explain the ringing of an electric bell or the
-action of their own hearts. This deplorable neglect of
-science is sadly handicapping us as a nation in every
-department, and it is a notable fact that the majority of
-recent scientific discoveries have been made in other lands.
-In "Riches and Poverty," 1905, I mentioned the following
-as especially notable: X-Rays, Germany; Radium,
-France; Synthetic indigo, Germany; Artificial Silk, France
-and Germany; Incandescent gas light, Germany; Wireless
-telegraphy, Italy. Since then the English Channel has
-been crossed by a flying machine—from the French side.
-I notice that Mr Andrew, in the report already referred
-to, while acknowledging that science was generally treated
-excellently in the German schools, obtained a "vague impression
-that rather much was attempted." Is that vague
-impression to be wondered at, in view of the pitiable
-condition of science teaching in the United Kingdom?</p>
-
-<p>As a matter of fact, nothing is more fascinating to the
-average child than the science-lesson. The child is instinctively
-a scientist; its mind is ever searching for the
-reason of things, and the average British parent is every
-day through his ignorance of science compelled to evade
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">{203}</a></span>
-the simple but very reasonable inquiries of his offspring.
-It should be our object at the school to encourage the
-child's wonderings, and to do what we can to cherish the
-wise habit of wondering. The savage at least wonders
-when he sees a locomotive. The average "educated"
-citizen has long ceased to wonder either about the science
-that moves his train or the science that lights his house.</p>
-
-<p>It is easy to understand how well the two guiding
-principles of German teaching fit the study of science, or
-of nature-knowledge, to use the terminology of the Charlottenburg
-curriculum. The material aim of the course is
-to give the pupil knowledge of nature in a form suited to
-his grasp, including, be it observed, the laws of health.
-Then there is the formal aim—to train the pupil's powers
-of observation, and to develop his powers of thinking, and
-to awaken his sympathy with plant and animal life and
-admiration for the beauty of Nature. At Charlottenburg
-Natural History is taught under the three sub-divisions
-A. Botany, B. Zoology, and C. Anthropology. Under the
-third is taught animal physiology, the laws of health, and
-first aid in cases of accident. In connexion with Botany,
-school excursions for the study of plant life are organized.
-I can imagine no more useful discipline for a town
-dweller. In the domain of physical science, the pupils are
-led on to the knowledge of Nature's laws and to the causes
-of common things. Particular attention is paid, Mr Andrew
-tells us, to such phenomena or principles as are of importance
-in domestic, industrial and commercial life—those of
-domestic life applying to the girls, the latter two to the
-boys. Light, heat, magnetism, electricity, mechanics,
-sound, chemistry and mineralogy are taken. Experiment
-is largely employed, and the apparatus used is adequate
-and admirable, in this respect being a striking contrast to
-the mean outfit which is usually considered good enough
-in the United Kingdom. The reflection is forced upon one
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">{204}</a></span>
-that, in the region of foreign competition, with which this
-work is not concerned, they will be formidable antagonists,
-these scientific German children, in the time to come.</p>
-
-<p>In connexion with the teaching of hygiene in schools
-we can do much to encourage abstinence from intoxicating
-liquors. If in the study of physiology the harmful effects
-of alcohol upon the kidneys and other organs is made
-clear to the children, a very wholesome fear of "drink"
-will be bred in them.</p>
-
-<p>The little we are doing in the way of teaching domestic
-economy and cooking to girls needs much strengthening.
-These subjects should be compulsory in the highest classes
-of all girls' schools. There is perhaps no other country in
-which poor women are so ignorant of cooking as in the
-United Kingdom. There is no simple national dish which
-every one knows how to make, and it is rarely that poor
-Englishwomen can make a decent soup or have any idea
-of the proper cooking of vegetables.</p>
-
-<p>As a preliminary to the abolition of child labour under
-the age of 16, the introduction of the principle of compulsion
-in connexion with continuation classes is badly
-needed. The children are now set free at the most
-dangerous period of their lives, and nothing but good
-could arise from compelling their attendance at classes
-which, in the case of girls, should deal with infant and
-domestic hygiene, cookery, and dressmaking, and in the
-case of boys with science, technics and languages.</p>
-
-<p>In 1908 I introduced into the House of Commons a
-measure to establish compulsory day continuation schools
-in England and Wales. The Bill was prefaced with a
-memorandum which pointed out:</p>
-
-<p>"According to the census of 1901 there were in
-England and Wales about 4,600,000 persons of both
-sexes between the ages of 14 and 21 years. According
-to the reports of the Board of Education the number of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">{205}</a></span>
-pupils aged 15 to 21 years attending day and evening
-continuation schools of all sorts is only about 387,000."</p>
-
-<p>The Bill itself was as follows:</p>
-
-<div class="small">
-
-<p>1. This Act may be cited as the Continuation Schools Act,
-1909.</p>
-
-<p>2. The earliest age at which a child shall be entitled to any
-exemption from obligatory school attendance shall be fourteen
-years, and the Education Acts, 1870 to 1902, are hereby repealed
-in so far as they permit the partial or total exemption from school
-attendance of children under fourteen years of age.</p>
-
-<p>3. Every child whose age exceeds fourteen but does not exceed
-seventeen years shall be deemed to be a continuation scholar,
-and is hereinafter so termed in this Act.</p>
-
-<p>4. Every education authority shall establish classes (hereinafter
-termed a continuation school) for the continued education
-and technical training, without fees, of all continuation scholars
-in its district who do not attend approved day secondary or day
-technical schools.</p>
-
-<p>5. The continuation school shall be carried on at hours which
-do not terminate later than six o'clock p.m., and every continuation
-scholar shall attend the continuation school for a period of
-not less than six hours per week.</p>
-
-<p>6. Sufficient school places, and sufficient teachers, scientific
-and technical apparatus, material, tools, or plant, et cetera, shall
-be provided to enable every continuation scholar controlled by
-the education authority to be instructed in industry or agriculture,
-or in domestic economy, in the English language and literature,
-in the principles of hygiene, and in the duties and obligations of
-citizenship, and the scheme and curriculum of each continuation
-school shall be subject to the approval of the Board of Education.</p>
-
-<p>7. For the purposes of the administration of this Act, the
-education authority may co-opt any number of local employers
-not exceeding six.</p>
-
-<p>8. Every employer shall permit every continuation scholar in
-his employ time in which to attend the continuation school, and,
-failing to permit such attendance, shall be liable on summary
-conviction to a penalty not exceeding <i>two pounds</i> for every day
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">{206}</a></span>
-upon which his employee therefore fails to make his due attendance
-at the continuation school.</p>
-
-<p>9. Every parent or responsible guardian of a continuation
-scholar who fails to attend a continuation school shall be liable
-on summary conviction to a penalty not exceeding <i>ten shillings</i>
-for every day upon which the continuation scholar fails to attend
-the continuation school, unless the non-attendance is due to the
-fault of the scholar's employer, or to illness, accident, or other
-unavoidable cause.</p>
-
-<p>10. It shall be the duty of the education authority to prosecute
-the parent or responsible guardian or the employer of any continuation
-scholar who is absent from the continuation or other
-approved school save through illness, accident, or other unavoidable
-cause:</p>
-
-<p>Provided that no continuation scholar shall be required to
-attend a continuation school held beyond two miles, measured
-along the nearest road, from the residence of the continuation
-scholar.</p>
-
-<p>11. <i>The cost of carrying out the provisions of this Act shall be
-paid out of moneys provided by Parliament.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>So much is said about the example of Germany that
-it may serve as a stimulus to those who think the above
-provisions too drastic to observe that my Bill was based
-upon the scheme which is in actual operation at Munich
-and which may soon be in operation for all German
-children.</p>
-
-<p>It is by the adoption of such rational methods in our
-schools that we may give opportunity to the new generation.
-If they exhibit ability they can advance to, and
-benefit by, a secondary education which shall fit them to
-perform the highest service for the State. If their abilities
-are of a meaner order, we shall at least send them out into
-the world well-equipped mentally and physically for their
-life's work and keep a guiding hand upon them after their
-school days are ended.</p>
-
-<p>With such an education the individual unit of industry
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">{207}</a></span>
-would have strength and understanding to contend for a
-better wage and be fitted to do better work. He would
-also take thought as to the constitution of the society of
-which he forms a part, and employ intelligently the franchise
-which in the past he has so frequently used to his own
-undoing. In an individualistic society such a unit would
-be better fitted to hold his own. In the wise collectivism
-towards which we are steering, he would be fitted to do
-his whole duty to his fellows and himself.</p>
-
-<p>The relevance of education to the main theme of this
-book demands little comment. It is obvious that, if we
-are to provide a proper physical and mental training for
-our people we must spend more money. Better schools,
-better playgrounds, better apparatus, more and better
-trained teachers, classes not exceeding 30 pupils per class,
-the introduction of the school doctor and school dentist,
-the provision of meals, the compulsory continuation schools—all
-these things are needed and all these things are costly.
-It is only want of reflection upon the enormous resources
-at the disposal of the State which makes so many people
-timid in educational reform. Take the matter of school
-doctors, for instance. On page 64 of the Report of the
-Physical Deterioration Committee will be found:</p>
-
-<p>"Dr Eichholz thought it (the medical inspection of
-school children) was the greatest need in school organization."</p>
-
-<p>Therefore, you would say, Dr Eichholz and the Committee
-would urge that the "greatest need" be properly
-supplied. Alas! the report goes on:</p>
-
-<p>"On the ground of expense he would confine a general
-examination to the poorest schools, and considered that in
-London the work could be done by ten young men at £250
-each."</p>
-
-<p>The Committee, speaking for themselves, say:</p>
-
-<p>"The Committee believe that, with teachers properly
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">{208}</a></span>
-trained in the various branches of hygiene, the system
-could be so far based on their observation and record,
-that no large and expensive medical staff would be
-necessary...."</p>
-
-<p>Always the idea appears to be uppermost that this is
-a poor, a very poor, country, which cannot afford to do
-the things which it would wish to do. That teachers
-"properly trained in the various branches of hygiene,"
-which certainly do not cover the diagnosis of disease,
-should be considered competent to decide which children
-should or should not undergo medical examination
-amounts to an expression of opinion that we cannot
-afford to provide the schools with their "greatest need."</p>
-
-<p>I refer the timid to the fact that the gross assessments
-to Income Tax in 1908-9 were over £1,000,000,000. The
-practical point is this. Of the £1,000,000,000, can we
-spare a few millions for the purposes mentioned in this
-chapter?</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_44" id="Foot_44" href="#Ref_44">[44]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Cd. 2120.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_45" id="Foot_45" href="#Ref_45">[45]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-It is of interest to observe that Mr Robert Hunter estimates that 70,000
-of the school children of New York arrive at school either breakfastless or
-underfed. This estimate accounts for 13 per cent. of the school children of
-the city.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">{209}</a></span>
-
-<h3>CHAPTER XVI<br />
-<small>THE HOME</small></h3>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">IT is an amusing statistical fact that at the census of 1901
-our "overcrowded" England had but 558 persons to
-the square mile, or one person to 1.15 acres, or one family
-to about 6 acres. If in 1901 the population of England and
-Wales had been distributed evenly over the area there
-would have been a distance of 240 feet between each
-person. In 1871 a similar distribution would have removed
-each person from his neighbour by 288 feet. Thus
-England is little more "crowded" to-day than it was a
-generation ago. It is useful to remind ourselves by these
-statistical exercises that the country is indeed nearly
-empty, and the towns very full. In the 75,000 acres of the
-administrative county of London were crowded, at the
-census of 1901, 4,536,541 people, a number as great as the
-entire population of Australia, almost as great as the entire
-population of the Dominion of Canada, and more than
-one-tenth of the entire population of the United Kingdom.
-In London and 75 other great towns in England and
-Wales are crowded about 15,000,000 persons or about
-one-half of the entire population of the country. As
-London and the great towns grow, the countryside is
-increasingly depopulated, and not the countryside alone.
-Many small towns are decreasing in size. Thus an
-increasing population is ever huddling closer together in
-a diminishing number of centres.</p>
-
-<p>The greater number of our new births, then, are in
-crowded districts. The figures of Book I. tell us, also
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">{210}</a></span>
-that the greater number are in urban houses of a rental
-under £20 per annum. The rental values of the houses
-of Great Britain in 1907-8 were as follows:</p>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">HOUSES OF GREAT BRITAIN, 1907-8</p>
-
-<div class="tbl-hdg" style="max-width:30em">
-
-<p class="nodent small">The figures do not include Ireland, but they include all residential shops,
-lodging-houses, hotels, farm-houses, etc., in Great Britain.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<table class="gt1" style="max-width:24em" summary="gt1-58">
-
-<colgroup>
- <col style="width:75%" />
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Under £20 (Exempt from House Duty),</td>
- <td class="numb">6,875,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>£20 and over (Charged to House Duty).</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">1,912,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="numb ulin">8,787,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>Of the 8,787,000 houses fully 7,000,000 are obviously
-the homes of the very poor, as we should expect if the statements
-made in the earlier parts of this book are true.
-In various districts the accommodation which can be
-bought for £20 a year varies greatly, as has been already
-pointed out. £20 per annum may command a decent
-home in some parts of the provinces or Scotland, or a filthy
-tenement in East London or Manchester. Broadly
-speaking, the majority of the houses under £20 are fit for
-demolition. They rank in our estimate of capital (Chapter 5)
-for a great deal of money; they command an enormous
-amount of rent, but, I repeat, they are chiefly fit for destruction.
-In a minority of cases they are indecent or
-insanitary; in a majority of cases they are either old or
-ugly or uncomfortable. Rarely are they fit habitations for
-a self-respecting people. The same is true of many of the
-houses up to £40 and even £50 per annum in London
-and other crowded centres. Many £40 dwellings in
-London are crowded tenement houses, each of several
-reeking floors.</p>
-
-<p>What overcrowding means to the lives of those who
-suffer it may be illustrated by the table prepared by Sir
-Shirley Murphy, which compares the sanitary areas of
-Hampstead and Southwark in respect of expectation of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">{211}</a></span>
-life. I have added the fourth column to give prominence
-to the accusing fact that <i>the poor are robbed not of means
-alone but of life itself</i>:</p>
-
-<div class="section">
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">EXPECTATION OF LIFE IN HAMPSTEAD<br />
- AND SOUTHWARK, MALES ONLY, IN 1897-1900</p>
-
-<table class="gt1" style="max-width:22.5em" summary="gt1-58">
-
-<colgroup span="4" style="width:25%" />
-
-<tr>
- <td class="small cent">Age</td>
- <td class="small cent">Hampstead</td>
- <td class="small cent">Southwark</td>
- <td class="small cent">Expectation of life in Southwark less than that in Hampstead by</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="small cent">——<br />Years</td>
- <td class="small cent">——<br />Years</td>
- <td class="small cent">——<br />Years</td>
- <td class="small cent">——<br />Years</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">At birth</td>
- <td class="cent">50.8</td>
- <td class="cent">36.5</td>
- <td class="cent">14.3</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">5</td>
- <td class="cent">57.4</td>
- <td class="cent">48.7</td>
- <td class="cent">8.7</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">10</td>
- <td class="cent">53.3</td>
- <td class="cent">45.0</td>
- <td class="cent">8.3</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">15</td>
- <td class="cent">48.7</td>
- <td class="cent">40.6</td>
- <td class="cent">8.1</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">20</td>
- <td class="cent">44.2</td>
- <td class="cent">36.4</td>
- <td class="cent">7.8</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">25</td>
- <td class="cent">39.8</td>
- <td class="cent">32.4</td>
- <td class="cent">7.4</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">30</td>
- <td class="cent">35.5</td>
- <td class="cent">28.6</td>
- <td class="cent">6.9</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">35</td>
- <td class="cent">31.3</td>
- <td class="cent">25.0</td>
- <td class="cent">6.3</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">40</td>
- <td class="cent">27.5</td>
- <td class="cent">21.9</td>
- <td class="cent">5.6</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">45</td>
- <td class="cent">23.8</td>
- <td class="cent">18.9</td>
- <td class="cent">4.9</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">50</td>
- <td class="cent">20.3</td>
- <td class="cent">16.2</td>
- <td class="cent">4.1</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">55</td>
- <td class="cent">17.0</td>
- <td class="cent">13.6</td>
- <td class="cent">3.4</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">60</td>
- <td class="cent">14.1</td>
- <td class="cent">11.3</td>
- <td class="cent">2.8</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">65</td>
- <td class="cent">11.5</td>
- <td class="cent">9.1</td>
- <td class="cent">2.4</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">70</td>
- <td class="cent">9.2</td>
- <td class="cent">7.0</td>
- <td class="cent">2.2</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">75</td>
- <td class="cent">7.1</td>
- <td class="cent">5.2</td>
- <td class="cent">1.9</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>In Hampstead only 6.3 per cent. of the population live
-more than two in a room in tenements of less than five
-rooms, and only 11.1 per cent. of the population live in
-tenements of one or two rooms. In Southwark, on the
-other hand, 22.3 per cent. of the population are in the first
-category, and 31.6 per cent. in the second category. The
-table enables the reader to measure the years which are
-stolen from the lives of the inhabitants of Southwark.
-The area of Hampstead is 2,248 acres and the population
-68,416. The area of Southwark is 544 acres and the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">{212}</a></span>
-population 89,800. We should never forget that there are
-two sorts of crowding, one of which is measured by room
-or tenement, the other by area.</p>
-
-<p>The Census definition of "overcrowding" by room or
-tenement is a very modest one. It applies to tenements
-containing more than two occupants per room, bedrooms
-and sitting-rooms included. Accepting this definition
-there were 392,414 overcrowded tenements in England
-and Wales at the Census of 1901, which were the homes
-of 2,667,506 people, or 8.2 per cent. of the total population.</p>
-
-<p>That is bad enough, but if we take a more reasonable
-definition of "overcrowding" and apply the term to all
-tenements (by tenement is meant a separate occupation,
-whether a house or part of a house) of three rooms or less
-we find that in 1901, in England and Wales, as many as
-5,853,047 or 18 per cent, of the entire population occupied
-tenements of either one, two or three rooms. A further
-7,130,062 persons or 21.9 per cent. of the population of
-England and Wales were housed in 4-roomed tenements.
-The complete tenement figures are as follows:</p>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">TENEMENTS (SEPARATE OCCUPATIONS,<br />
-WHETHER HOUSES OR PARTS OF HOUSES)<br />
-IN ENGLAND AND WALES. 1901</p>
-
-<table class="gt2" style="max-width:30em" summary="gt2-17">
-
-<colgroup span="5" style="width:20%" />
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin ulin">Number of Rooms in Tenements.</td>
- <td class="cent rlin ulin">Number of Tenements.</td>
- <td class="cent rlin ulin">Occupants of Tenements.</td>
- <td class="cent rlin ulin">Percentage of Total Population in each group of Tenements.</td>
- <td class="cent ulin">Average Occupants per Room.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">1 Room.</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">251,667</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">507,763</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1.6</td>
- <td class="numb">2.02</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">2 Rooms.</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">658,203</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">2,158,644</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">6.6</td>
- <td class="numb">1.64</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">3 Rooms.</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">779,992</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">3,186,640</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">9.8</td>
- <td class="numb">1.36</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">4 Rooms.</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,596,664</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">7,130,062</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">21.9</td>
- <td class="numb">1.12</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">5 or more<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Rooms.</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">3,750,342</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">19,544,734</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">60.1</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">——</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td class="numb rlin">7,036,868</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">32,527,843</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">100.0</td>
- <td class="numb">——</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">{213}</a></div>
-
-<p>It will be seen that, even in the 4-roomed tenements,
-there was an average of 1.12 persons per room (room
-meaning every apartment in the tenements, including
-sitting-rooms, attics, box-rooms, kitchens or sculleries), and
-when we remember the small cubical content of many of
-these "rooms" we see that as many as 12,983,109 persons,
-or 39.9 per cent. of the population of England and Wales
-were certainly crowded, if not "overcrowded."</p>
-
-<p>In Scotland, at the Census of 1901, 969,318 families
-occupied 3,022,077 rooms, giving an average of only 3
-rooms per family. Into the 3,022,077 rooms of all sorts
-were crowded 4,472,000 people.</p>
-
-<p>While overcrowding, measured by room, slightly decreased
-between 1891 and 1901, overcrowding on area
-considerably increased. In the ten years a considerable
-number of model dwellings—models, that is, of everything
-that dwellings should not be—were erected, and much
-ground in London and elsewhere which should have been
-left open, was covered with buildings of every conceivable
-degree of ugliness.</p>
-
-<p>As for existing houses, thirty years after the passing of
-the Public Health Act of 1875, and fifteen years after the
-passing of the Housing of the Working Classes Act of
-1890, a considerable proportion are actually insanitary,
-and only a minority conform to the most modest standard of
-convenience and comfort. In the North of England and in
-the Midlands there remain tens of thousands of houses built
-back-to-back, so that there is no passage of air through them.</p>
-
-<p>The Manchester Citizens' Association recently published,
-from the pen of its secretary, Mr T. R. Marr, a
-little book,<span class="fnanchor"><a
-name="Ref_46" id="Ref_46" href="#Foot_46">[46]</a></span> which shows, by a coloured map, that slum
-property, including many back-to-back and "converted"
-back-to-back houses, form a great ring round the offices
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">{214}</a></span>
-and factories of Central Manchester. Its lessons are enforced
-by a series of photographs of slum property. Here
-is a picture of a Salford court, upon which face the living
-rooms of eleven houses. Standing out in the court, as a
-public exhibition, are three rotten places of convenience, only
-one of them usable. Here, again, is a photograph taken
-in St Michaels' Ward—taken, let us hope, in the absence of
-St Michael. A group of four closets open on the street,
-and beside them, surrounded by a group of slum children
-curiously watching the photographer, is a tap which is the
-sole water supply of 22 houses. A third picture, also taken
-in St Michaels' Ward, shows a stone-paved court of eleven
-houses. There is one tap, an open ash-box, and several
-closets the doors of which are torn from their hinges.</p>
-
-<p>In Liverpool, according to a paper read before the Royal
-Sanitary Institute in April 1905 by Mr Fletcher T.
-Turton, the Liverpool Deputy Surveyor, there were still
-8,600 back-to-back houses standing, the death-rate in their
-area being about 60 per 1,000! Further erection of
-such houses is forbidden by Mr Burns's Housing Act of
-1909, but there are tens of thousands already in existence.</p>
-
-<p>In Leeds there are many of these back-to-back houses,
-without ventilation, or yard, or private sanitary arrangements,
-let at rentals varying from 3s. 6d. to 7s. 6d. per
-week. As many as three and four houses join at one closet.
-The closets are frequently in yards, forty yards from the
-house. In wet weather, rather than carry the waste water
-from the bedrooms the length of the street, women may
-often be seen pouring it down the street gully. On Sundays,
-when the inhabitants are all at home, the difficulty as to
-sanitary accommodation is intensely aggravated.</p>
-
-<p>In Sheffield, in the Potteries, and many other places,
-these abominable back-to-back houses are to be found.
-Few workers' houses in the Potteries have more than two
-bedrooms. The back-to-back houses in Sheffield number
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">{215}</a></span>
-15,000, and sometimes as many as eight or ten persons are
-to be found in their three little rooms. If we take only
-7 persons to the house there are 105,000 Sheffield people
-living in these dens.</p>
-
-<p>If there are not back-to-back houses or cellar dwellings
-in London, there are many squalid areas which contain
-greater aggregations of the poorest of the poor than can be
-found in any other part of the country. In Marylebone,
-Southwark, St Pancras, Holborn, Bethnal Green, Shoreditch,
-Stepney, and Finsbury upwards of 30 per cent. of
-the inhabitants live in tenements of one or two rooms. In
-Finsbury the proportion reaches 45 per cent.; in Shoreditch
-and St Pancras 37 per cent. In Lambeth, Westminster,
-Paddington, Chelsea, Kensington, Islington and
-Bermondsey 20 per cent. and upwards of the population
-live in tenements of one or two rooms. Only, indeed, in
-Lewisham, Wandsworth, Stoke Newington, Hampstead,
-Woolwich, Greenwich, Deptford, Camberwell, Hackney
-and Fulham, do less than 15 per cent. of the inhabitants
-occupy tenements of one or two rooms. Not even the
-school children of Ancoats or Deansgate, Manchester,
-exhibit the degree of physical deterioration of those of
-Lambeth or West Ham.</p>
-
-<p>It cannot be too strongly insisted that in connexion
-with the problem of housing the people there is not merely
-the question of "overcrowding" or of "crowding," whether
-in rooms or on area, to be considered. Not only death
-and disease but ugliness and inconvenience have to be
-fought. The speculative builder is covering suburban
-areas with mile after mile of amorphous dwellings. Acre
-after acre of smiling meadow is disfigured. Street after
-street of buildings of unredeemed ugliness reach out into
-the beautiful country which lies so near to the 75,000 acres
-of London. Trees are felled; every particle of verdure is
-scraped away. The town advances, and before its grim
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">{216}</a></span>
-threatenings Beauty flies. The lane becomes the street;
-the hedge is replaced by cast-iron palings; beyond the
-hedge there arises the row of "bay windows with venetian
-blinds" which figure in the advertisements. Pass to the
-rear and you will find the 16 or 18 feet frontage which the
-builder thought beautiful balanced by a "back addition"
-which even the builder knew to be ugly. Facing the back-additions,
-across two "gardens" together not so long as a
-cricket pitch, another row of rear elevations, and so on, row
-after row. Such is the vision with which we stimulate the
-fancy of the more fortunate of the children of the people.
-We teach them drawing on the latest principles—free-arm—in
-the school. We give them infinite ugliness as their
-environment outside the school. We have still to learn
-that while the dwellings and surroundings of the people
-are unlovely we cannot hope for a gifted race. We have
-yet to understand that education begins when the child
-opens its eyes and ears to the sights and sounds of the
-home and its surroundings. It is not alone that the people
-lack monetary income. To the ill-distribution of wealth
-is added the ill-distribution of the means of a beautiful
-life. The majority of our people are denied the vision of
-beauty, and even those who receive fair wages perish
-morally for lack of that vision.</p>
-
-<p>From the centre to the circumference there passes all
-the evil thinking and evil doing which the unnatural conditions
-of the centre have created in the minds of men.
-The workman who leaves the centre for the new suburb of
-Walthamstow is not surprised to find there the ugliness
-which he left behind him. He does not expect to find
-Beauty—that is a commodity confined to pictures. He
-does not wonder that man could be so blind as to create a
-sore on the borders of one of the most beautiful spots which
-this earth has to show. He owns his cottage with a smile,
-oblivious of the might-have-been, and rarely if ever wonders
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">{217}</a></span>
-why in a country containing nearly 80,000,000 acres his
-considerable rental can command so small a share of the
-surface of his native land.</p>
-
-<p>And surely it is for lack of vision that our efforts in
-connexion with the housing problem are so misdirected.
-The rulers of our towns instead of directing their attention
-to the outskirts have practically confined themselves
-to tinkering at the centre. Blocks, palatial in size and
-unholy in principle, have been erected and ironically
-dubbed "model dwellings." It is true that in all big
-towns there are a certain number of workmen who must
-live near their work, but there is usually a far larger
-number who have no such tie. And the model dwellings
-referred to usually succeed in housing not the class which
-must live near their work but the class who could well go
-out beyond the suburbs. Thus the effect of tinkering in
-the centre is often but to set free for the poorest of the
-poor the tenements deserted by the better class who pass
-to the new dwellings. That is good in its way, but how
-much better it would have been to relieve the centre by
-emptying out its streets into the places beyond. To buy
-up slums in the centre and create model dwellings is to
-play into the hands of the landlords—to increase the value
-of the unbought slums. To empty out the centre of its
-movable population is to leave a better selection of homes
-for those who must remain, and to leave the slum landlord
-to mourn a fall in the value of his "property."</p>
-
-<p>A great deal is often said about unoccupied sites in
-towns and their suburbs and it has even been suggested
-that efforts should be used to force them into the market
-and compel building upon them. Here again is exhibited
-a most lamentable lack of vision. In so far as town sites
-are unbuilt upon let them remain so, and if their owners are
-waiting for a rise in value let us take measures to make
-that waiting prolonged.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">{218}</a></span>
-In a widely circulated leaflet on the land question I
-read: "If we pass through the outskirts of any of our great
-centres of population, we see pieces of land left practically
-derelict, with perhaps an old horse grazing there disconsolately,
-or a few hens investigating a rubbish heap. A
-little farther on we see houses being built and roads being
-laid out. We know that still more houses are badly
-wanted, and we wonder why the land between is not being
-utilized."</p>
-
-<p>Here we have a reformer ardently desirous of filling up
-an open urban space which, if he were wise, he would use
-his best endeavour to keep open for ever. Seeing houses
-being built and roads being laid out "a little farther on"—what
-kind of houses and what sort of roads, I wonder?—he
-is anxious to turn out the disconsolate horse and pile
-up more houses in the intervening space. It apparently
-does not occur to him that yet "a little farther on" there
-is land enough for the housing of an army, and that a horse,
-however disconsolate, is at the worst a prettier object than
-a speculative builder's "villa."</p>
-
-<p>Two things are necessary if the housing problem is to
-be grappled with seriously and not resigned to private
-profit timorously modified by municipal tinkering. The
-first is the control of land, and the second ready access
-to capital. As has been truly said, the housing question
-is a land question; as has been too rarely remembered,
-it is even more a capital question.</p>
-
-<p>There is only one effective way in which the community
-can control land and that is to become its landlord. It is
-also true that there is only one effective way in which the
-community can keep in its own hands the "unearned increment"
-arising from the enhanced value of land created
-by the presence and work of the community, and again
-that effective way is for the community to own the land.
-There is no necessity, however, for the town to play into
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">{219}</a></span>
-the hands of suburban landlords by purchasing dear land.
-It can evade attempts to corner land required by the community
-by going out and beyond that land if it is held for
-a rise. Indeed it is better to leave a zone between its
-present circumference and the site of its new housing
-area. Even in London, it is a simple matter to reach
-land cheap enough for successful housing operations. It
-is of the utmost importance that all municipalities should
-without further delay secure considerable areas of the agricultural
-lands which surround their townships.<span class="fnanchor"><a
-name="Ref_47" id="Ref_47" href="#Foot_47">[47]</a></span> By doing
-this well in advance of their building operations they can
-insure that, as they themselves raise the value of the land
-by developing it and establishing means of transit, the
-whole of that value will remain in their hands. Moreover,
-if the owners of the intermediate land thus see their market
-failing they will gladly place a reasonable price upon their
-holdings. In this connexion it is probable that the taxation
-of land upon its selling value may prove to be of
-assistance. The man who controls a part of the area of
-his country and who will neither use it himself nor allow
-others to use it should in any case be taxed. I attach
-more importance, however, to the simple and effective
-policy of widening the radius of operations until cheap
-land is reached.</p>
-
-<p>It cannot be too clearly understood that simply to tax
-land on its selling value is of itself no solution either of
-the land question or the housing question. If land is
-priced by its owner at £1,000 per acre and he is holding
-it to obtain that figure, we should not necessarily bring it
-into the market by taxing it on its selling value. The
-price asked obviously includes all the rise in value expected
-by the present owner in the near future; that is why the
-price is held out for. If the land be taxed upon the capital
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">{220}</a></span>
-value the owner, unless very strong financially, would probably
-have to sell. To do so, he would reduce the price
-and the land would be taken up by a second owner. The
-expected rise in value would thus be discounted, and the
-second owner having obtained the land at a lower rate,
-would be able to hold the land for the rise in spite of the
-tax payable. Thus the tax would not necessarily bring
-the land into use. Nor, if it did, would it necessarily be
-devoted to a desirable use. Owner B is not necessarily
-more moral or public spirited than owner A. Owner A
-held up the land, but owner B, having bought it, may put
-it to such base uses that we could wish it had been held
-up a little longer. Above all, therefore, we must have
-public control of area.</p>
-
-<p>As the owner of its own sites, the township can be the
-arbiter of its own developments. This has been clearly
-recognized in Germany, where, under the encouragement
-and stimulation of the State governments, municipalities
-are acquiring land beyond their existing borders. Considerable
-areas are owned by many German towns.
-Stettin has 12,500 acres; Mannheim has 5,000 acres;
-Breslau has 12,000 acres; Frankfort has 11,000 acres.</p>
-
-<p>Large as our population is, it is really remarkable to
-note how little area would be required to rehouse the
-people of the towns. Taking the number of families in the
-United Kingdom at 9,000,000, only 1,800,000 acres, or
-less than one-fortieth part of the area of the country, would
-be required to house five families to the acre. This simple
-calculation helps us to realize the point referred to in a
-former page—how tiny an area now contains nearly the
-whole of our 44,500,000 people.</p>
-
-<p>Having wisely purchased land upon its borders, the
-municipality must take thought as to the distribution of
-the population upon its new territory. Plans must be
-made of the new roads, streets, open spaces, and transit
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">{221}</a></span>
-facilities long before they are actually required, so that
-each step in development may be taken deliberately and
-that no new difficulties may be built up to be the despair
-of the future. The well-governed city should study its
-present and future area as the artist regards his prepared
-sheet of canvas. Within its borders what varying effects
-may be produced! With the loving care that the old
-Italians bestowed upon the preparation of their panels, the
-municipality should plan the ground upon which the life
-of the city is to move. It is a picture the arrangement
-of which means life or death to the citizens; it may easily
-be made to glow with health and beauty.</p>
-
-<p>Mr Burns's important Housing Act of 1909 has made
-it possible for local authorities to plan out the future
-extensions of towns; it will be interesting to see whether
-there is sufficient imagination in our local rulers to make
-the provision fructify.</p>
-
-<p>In one of the most valuable contributions to this subject
-which have been published in recent years,<span class="fnanchor"><a
-name="Ref_48" id="Ref_48" href="#Foot_48">[48]</a></span> Mr T. C.
-Horsfall describes the thought and trouble which is
-given to the planning of the extension of municipalities by
-German Town Councils. Thus Stuttgart, in 1901, when
-preparing for a large extension of the town borders
-(its present population is about 182,000), obtained the
-advice of skilled architects, engineers, medical authorities,
-and <i>artists</i>. The politico-economic aspect of the matter
-was also carefully considered. The opinions, plans, and
-suggestions were then published in a volume to enable
-all the people of Stuttgart to study the proposals for
-extension.</p>
-
-<p>Mannheim, again, which is chiefly a manufacturing town,
-prepared in 1901 building plans which provide for the
-requirements of industry and housing, while always
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">{222}</a></span>
-remembering the claims of Beauty. I quote the following
-from Mr Horsfall: "The description of the building plan
-for Mannheim, prepared by Professor Baumeister, which is
-published in Numbers 69, 70, and 71 of the 'Centralblatt
-der Bauverwaltung,' shows that the new part of the town
-will be provided with a remarkably complete system of
-narrow railways for passenger traffic, and with an equally
-complete system of railway lines of the ordinary width
-leading from goods-stations in all directions, for goods
-traffic, which will enable every manufactory to load goods
-on to trucks on its own premises. Carriage, therefore,
-will be exceptionally cheap in the town. Yet the Town
-Council, who are thinking so much of economical working,
-recognize that even their poorest fellow-citizens are men
-and women, whose bodies and minds need wholesome
-recreation and an abundant supply of fresh air, of light,
-and of the influence of flowers and trees. The building
-plan, therefore, provides for the creation of avenue streets
-of widths varying from 24 to 43 yards; and Professor
-Baumeister adds: 'Of course care has been taken to provide
-open spaces, decorative shrubberies, parks and sites
-for public buildings.' The width of ordinary streets varies
-from 8⅓ to 21⅓ yards."</p>
-
-<p>The German building plans provide in what districts
-factories may be erected and determine (1) how much of
-building sites may be covered by houses, and (2) the
-height of all buildings. Thus, even in cases where the
-municipality does not own its own sites, it can in some
-measure control the greed of the houselord. It cannot too
-strongly be insisted upon, however, that absolute sovereignty
-of the manner of distribution of the people upon area can
-only be obtained by acquisition of the land.</p>
-
-<p>The practicability of going out and beyond the township
-and emptying into the open country the crowded and enfeebled
-inhabitants of the cities has been amply demonstrated
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">{223}</a></span>
-in the United Kingdom. An object-lesson of the
-most practical character is afforded by the beautiful garden
-city of Bournville, which the beneficence and wisdom of
-Mr George Cadbury have raised four miles from the gloomy
-city of Birmingham.</p>
-
-<p>Most people have heard of Bournville, but few are aware
-that it is not merely a village erected for the accommodation
-of Mr Cadbury's employees, but a working model of
-what may be done to solve the housing problem of great
-cities. The village of Bournville now no longer belongs
-to Mr Cadbury, for he has bestowed it upon the nation,
-the gift being worth not less than £200,000. In December
-1900, the estate was handed over to the Bournville Village
-Trust, which is under the final control of the Charity Commissioners.
-In the Deed by which the property was made
-over to the Trustees the founder has thus set forth its
-objects: "The founder is desirous of alleviating the evils
-which arise from the insanitary and insufficient accommodation
-supplied to large numbers of the working classes
-and of securing to workers in factories some of the advantages
-of outdoor village life, with opportunities for the
-natural and healthful occupation of cultivating the soil....
-The object is declared to be the amelioration of the condition
-of the working-class and labouring population in and
-around Birmingham, and elsewhere in Great Britain, by
-the provision of improved dwellings, with gardens and
-open spaces to be enjoyed therewith."</p>
-
-<p>The objects thus outlined have been carried out by the
-provision of beautiful homes set in gardens which are at
-once a source of revenue and of healthful recreation to their
-possessors.</p>
-
-<p>Less than one-half of the breadwinners of Bournville are
-employed by Mr Cadbury himself. The village is not a
-private preserve, as is so often imagined, in which patronized
-cottagers live a bounty-fed existence, but a free independent
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">{224}</a></span>
-and public-spirited community which rules itself in matters
-of detail through a Tenants' Committee or Council. A
-census of the inhabitants made in December 1901 gave the
-following results:—</p>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2"><i>Proportion of Bournville Householders working in</i></p>
-
-<table class="gt1" style="max-width:20em" summary="gt1-59">
-
-<colgroup>
- <col style="width:80%" />
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="small cent">Per Cent.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Bournville</td>
- <td class="numb">41.2</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Birmingham</td>
- <td class="numb">40.2</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>King's Norton and Selly Oak<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(manufacturing villages within<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;a mile of Bournville)</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">18.6</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="numb ulinb">100.0</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2"><i>Occupations of Bournville Householders</i></p>
-
-<table class="gt1" style="max-width:20em" summary="gt1-60">
-
-<colgroup>
- <col style="width:80%" />
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="small cent">Per Cent.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Factory workers</td>
- <td class="numb">50.7</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Clerks and Travellers</td>
- <td class="numb">13.3</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Mechanics, Carpenters, Bricklayers<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;and others</td>
- <td class="numb">36.0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="numb ulinb">100.0</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>Having this working population of people paying rentals
-between 5s. 6d. including rates and 12s. 6d. excluding rates,
-the rate of infantile mortality in Bournville in 1903 was only
-65 per 1,000 against 331 in the district of Birmingham
-known as St Mary's.</p>
-
-<p>The architectural beauty of Bournville has not been
-secured by extravagant expenditure, but by tastefully
-treating good and simple materials with due regard to
-utility. Mr W. A. Harvey, the architect, says: "The idea
-of a cottage home that I have always endeavoured to keep
-in view is one in which beauty is based on utility." There
-is nothing tortured, nothing deliberately and queerly
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">{225}</a></span>
-"quaint," no plastering of ornament. The houses look
-comfortable because they are comfortable. The windows
-are pretty because they are simple casements, the best
-possible sort of window.</p>
-
-<p>A type of house which particularly pleased me had the
-following accommodation:</p>
-
-<div class="subpara">
-
-<p>Ground floor:</p>
-
-<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Living room, 17 feet by 16 feet with ingle-nook and
-bay window.</p>
-
-<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Scullery, 13 feet by 11 feet 3 inches, with bath sunk in
-floor.</p>
-
-<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Larder, 5 feet by 4 feet 6 inches. Coal cellar, watercloset,
-tool shed and small paved yard. Verandah
-in front.</p>
-
-<p>First floor:</p>
-
-<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Bedroom No. 1, 17 feet by 13 feet 6 inches.</p>
-
-<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Bedroom No. 2, 13 feet by 8 feet.</p>
-
-<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Attic Bedroom, 10 feet by 8 feet 7 inches.</p>
-
-<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Linen cupboard.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The total cost, including fencing, laying out garden, etc.,
-was £280. The house, it will be seen, has no "parlour,"
-but one large living room measuring 17 feet by 16 feet
-without the ingle-nook and large square bay window. It
-is an exceedingly attractive and comfortable room, and the
-sensible idea is appreciated by many of the tenants. The
-tastes of others are met by the ordinary arrangement of a
-separate kitchen and parlour.</p>
-
-<p>The picturesque and comfortable houses have a charming
-setting. They are set back from the road and grouped in
-such manner as to give each house the best use of the sun—an
-important matter often neglected in the planning of
-even expensive houses, and absolutely ignored by the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">{226}</a></span>
-speculative builder. It follows that there are no monotonous
-roads in Bournville; natural grouping arises from
-attention to aspect. Each cottage has one-eighth to one
-tenth of an acre of garden. The gardens are laid out when
-the houses are built, so that the tenant has not to begin
-by breaking up uncultivated land. Lines of fruit trees
-are planted, and these, besides yielding a good supply of
-fruit, form a pleasant screen between the gardens. As a
-rule, the tenants take a keen interest in their gardens, and
-cultivate them with great success. In addition to the
-cottage gardens there are about 100 allotments, which are
-eagerly sought after by the inhabitants of the neighbouring
-manufacturing villages. There are two gardening classes
-for young men. Two professional gardeners with a staff
-are in charge of the gardening department, and are always
-ready to give whatever information and advice may be
-required, but each tenant is responsible for the cultivation
-of his own garden. It is a notable fact that the
-gardens are found to yield, on the average, 1s. 11d. each
-per week. Gardening is lovingly fostered by the Village
-Council already referred to. The members of this Council,
-whose services are rendered voluntarily, are elected by
-ballot, and the annual elections and by-elections evoke
-considerable interest. Through this body arrangements
-are made for the co-operative purchase of plants, shrubs,
-and bulbs in great numbers; gardening tools such as
-mowers, rollers or shears, bought for the purpose, are let
-on hire; a loan library of gardening books has been
-formed; also a gardening association with periodical inspections
-of gardens; while lectures are arranged for the
-winter, and excursions for the summer. Further, the
-Council has established and managed with conspicuous
-success flower shows and an annual fête for the children.
-The bath-house and children's playground are also under its
-control.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">{227}</a></span>
-The roads are 42 feet wide, and are all planted with
-trees. Out of the 100 acres laid out for building 14 acres
-have been reserved as open spaces, including parks, green,
-and children's playgrounds. It is part of the plan that
-in no part of the little community should children be far
-removed from a proper playground.</p>
-
-<p>I have already referred to the rate of infantile mortality
-in Bournville. It may be added that the death-rate for
-1904, as certified by the local Medical Officer of Health,
-was 6.9 per 1,000. The rate for Birmingham for the same
-year was 19.3. In his report for 1900 the Medical Officer
-of Health referred to Bournville as follows:—"I have in
-my previous reports made mention of the model buildings
-on the estate which has been laid out by Mr George
-Cadbury. I cannot refrain from again mentioning how
-much I admire the system he has adopted. The object of
-the dwellings has been to give plenty of light and air with
-a good deal of air space to each house with sufficient land
-adjoining, and so insure a 'breathing lung' for the inhabitants
-of these houses. The houses are moreover built on
-modern principles, and no pains have been spared to make
-them as dry and free from insanitary conditions as possible.
-In addition, open spaces have been laid out so that at all
-times there can never be any danger of increasing the
-density of the population over the area on which the
-buildings have been erected. I cannot speak too highly
-of these dwellings, and I can only hope that we may be able
-to keep all dwellings as far as possible up to this standard."</p>
-
-<p>To pass to the all-important financial side of the matter,
-the balance sheet for 1909 gives the following results:</p>
-
-<div class="section">
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">{228}</a></div>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">BOURNVILLE VILLAGE TRUST INCOME<br />
- AND EXPENDITURE, YEAR ENDED<br />
- DECEMBER 31ST, 1909</p>
-
-<table class="gt1" style="max-width:30em" summary="gt1-61">
-
-<colgroup>
- <col style="width:32.5%" />
- <col />
- <col style="width:37.5%" />
- <col />
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="cent small">Income.</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="cent small">Expenditure.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj" style="padding-left:2em">Total rents</td>
- <td class="numb">£9,249</td>
- <td class="subj" style="padding-left:2em">Salaries</td>
- <td class="numb">£1,313</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj" style="padding-left:2em">Other incomes</td>
- <td class="numb">1,042</td>
- <td class="subj" style="padding-left:2em">Office expenses</td>
- <td class="numb">164</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj" style="padding-left:2em"></td>
- <td class="numb"></td>
- <td class="subj" style="padding-left:2em">Rates, taxes, etc.</td>
- <td class="numb">754</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj" style="padding-left:2em"></td>
- <td class="numb"></td>
- <td class="subj" style="padding-left:2em">Maintenance, repairs and renewals</td>
- <td class="numb">1,531</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj" style="padding-left:2em"></td>
- <td class="numb"></td>
- <td class="subj" style="padding-left:2em">Legal expenses</td>
- <td class="numb">73</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj" style="padding-left:2em"></td>
- <td class="numb"></td>
- <td class="subj" style="padding-left:2em">Miscellaneous</td>
- <td class="numb">143</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj" style="padding-left:2em"></td>
- <td class="numb"></td>
- <td class="subj" style="padding-left:2em">Maintenance of roads and open spaces</td>
- <td class="numb">244</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj" style="padding-left:2em"></td>
- <td class="numb ulin"></td>
- <td class="subj" style="padding-left:2em">Depreciation on fencing, etc.</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">229</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj" style="padding-left:2em"></td>
- <td class="numb ulin">£10,291</td>
- <td class="subj" style="padding-left:2em"></td>
- <td class="numb ulin">£4,451</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p class="center">Balance excess of Income over Expenditure, £5,840.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The whole of this surplus profit is devoted to building
-new houses and to buying and developing more land, so
-that Bournville automatically increases in size year by
-year. At the present time it is growing at the rate of
-about 50 houses, or say, 250 persons, per annum, and the
-rate of increase will, of course, be progressive.</p>
-
-<p>In considering the above figures it must be remembered
-that the Bournville Trust in 1900 had the whole estate
-handed over to it by Mr Cadbury as an absolute gift.
-No capital charges had therefore to be met. I am informed
-by Mr L. P. Appleton, the building manager, however,
-that, with regard to the houses erected by the Trust itself,
-they all show a net return of 4 per cent. on the capital,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">{229}</a></span>
-after providing for ground rent, rates and taxes, repairs,
-management and all out-goings.<span class="fnanchor"><a
-name="Ref_49" id="Ref_49" href="#Foot_49">[49]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The respective parts played by land and capital in such
-a scheme should be carefully noted. If a municipality
-acquired land at £100 per acre, and laid out roads and
-sewers at a cost of £400 per acre, and erected upon each
-acre ten houses costing £280 each, the total outlay per
-acre would be £3,300, and per house £330. How little
-a considerable variation in the cost of land affects the
-result will be realized from the following table:</p>
-
-<table class="gt3" style="font-size:100%" summary="gt3-5">
-
-<colgroup>
- <col span="5" style="width:20%" />
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="small rlin cent">Cost of Land per Acre.</td>
- <td class="small rlin cent">Cost of Land per House. 10 to the Acre.</td>
- <td class="small rlin cent">Cost of Roads, Sewers etc., per House (£400 per Acre).</td>
- <td class="small rlin cent">Cost of building House.</td>
- <td class="small cent">Total cost of each House and its Land.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin cent">£</td>
- <td class="rlin cent">£</td>
- <td class="rlin cent">£</td>
- <td class="rlin cent">£</td>
- <td class="cent">£</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">50</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">5</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">40</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">280</td>
- <td class="cent">325</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">100</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">10</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">40</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">280</td>
- <td class="cent">330</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">200</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">20</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">40</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">280</td>
- <td class="cent">340</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">300</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">30</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">40</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">280</td>
- <td class="cent">350</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">{230}</a></div>
-
-<p>It is not commonly realized by many of those who write
-on the housing question that building land is a manufactured
-article, and that when raw land is secured housing is as far
-off as ever unless capital can be secured to develop it.
-It would rarely be necessary for a municipality to pay
-more than £200 per acre, but whether it paid £20 or £200
-the cost of making roads, sewers, etc., and of erecting the
-houses would remain the same. To house all our people
-on the scale of ten families to the acre as at Bournville
-would absorb only 900,000 acres of land, which could be
-acquired for quite a moderate sum of money at a small
-remove from crowded centres, but the cost of manufacturing
-the land and of manufacturing the houses would be
-great.</p>
-
-<p>Given the provision of healthy houses by a municipality,
-would they be appreciated by those for whom they were
-intended? Here the experience of Bournville is conclusive.
-The village has never a house untenanted and the new
-houses are eagerly sought after long before they are completed.
-There is a constant stream of applications, and
-this in spite of the fact that Birmingham is distant four
-miles. Many of the men cycle to and from their work in
-the big city. They do not come to Bournville for charity
-rents. They have to pay about the same rentals as in
-Birmingham. The difference lies in the substitution of a
-healthy and lovely home for a gloomy and uncomfortable
-tenement.</p>
-
-<p>There is nothing in the Bournville scheme which cannot
-be effectively carried out by any municipality. Under the
-housing acts local authorities possess the power to acquire
-land for present or future building operations, the power to
-raise loans, and the power to build. The explanation of
-their sluggishness in putting the acts into effect is to be
-found in the fact we have already noted, viz. that the
-housing question is chiefly a capital question. This was
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">{231}</a></span>
-slightly recognized by the Housing of the Working Classes
-Act of 1903 which extended the period allowed by the
-1890 Act for the repayment of loans from 60 years to 80
-years.</p>
-
-<p>The vital importance of good housing makes it necessary
-to do something to put capital cheaply at the disposal of
-local authorities for the purpose. The housing question is
-a national one, and demands the use of national capital.
-Again we touch the matter of ways and means and again
-we see the advantage of considering social problems in
-relation to the income and accumulated wealth of the
-country. Year by year, as we have seen, an enormous
-amount of capital is wasted. British workmen, denied
-proper housing, are paid something less than the value of
-their product, while the margin is largely wasted in luxury
-at home or even sent out of the country to establish water
-works in Argentina, supply the sinews of war to Japan, or
-employ Chinese Coolies in South African mines. The
-time has come when the nation must consider the nature
-of its resources, and study its own development. We must
-see to it that the demand for houses, the primary demand
-of a civilized man, is answered, not by the speculative
-builder, but by the nation itself.</p>
-
-<p>The proposal here made is a simple one. It is that
-National Housing Loans should be raised and the proceeds
-placed in the hands of a permanent Housing Board or
-Commission which should be empowered to guide, assist
-and if necessary stimulate local authorities to rehouse their
-poor. The Housing Board should have power to lend
-money to local authorities, for the execution of approved
-schemes, for a period of 100 years at a nominal rate of
-interest, say 1½ or 2 per cent., the loss to be made up out
-of the proceeds of Imperial taxation. To deal effectively
-with the question, a yearly loan of at least £20,000,000
-would be needed for some years. Borrowing this at 3 per
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">{232}</a></span>
-cent. and lending it out at 2 per cent. would create a charge
-of only £200,000 for each £20,000,000. If then we
-authorized an annual issue of £20,000,000 for ten years—in
-all £200,000,000, the total annual charge through loss of
-interest would be but £2,000,000. Such a loan, about two-thirds
-of the cost of the late South African war, would
-not only rehouse one-tenth of our people, but place local
-authorities in possession of assets yielding a fine revenue,<span class="fnanchor"><a
-name="Ref_50" id="Ref_50" href="#Foot_50">[50]</a></span>
-which on the Bournville plan, could be used for the progressive
-extension of housing schemes. With access to
-capital for housing at 2 per cent., and 100 years in which
-to repay it, local authorities would be eager to claim their
-share of the national housing provision. The loan would
-only be granted on the approval of plans for the extension
-of the town boundaries, for transit facilities, and
-of plans of the houses, gardens and recreation grounds for
-which the loan was desired.</p>
-
-<p>Failing action by the local authority, the Housing Board
-would make a compulsory housing scheme<span class="fnanchor"><a
-name="Ref_51" id="Ref_51" href="#Foot_51">[51]</a></span> upon representation
-by the persons lacking accommodation.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">{233}</a></span>
-A drastic housing policy is needed as much in rural as
-in urban districts. Want of housing accommodation is
-helping to thin our country population, and the Housing
-Acts have been simply ignored in the past by Rural
-Sanitary Authorities. On this head the Housing Bill of
-1909 makes salutary provisions giving county councils
-power to act in default of rural district councils, and also
-giving power to the Local Government Board to order
-schemes to be carried out within a reasonable time.</p>
-
-<p>We have to do something more for the agricultural
-labourer than house him, however, and here we touch
-another question intimately bound up with national
-development—the land in its primary aspect as the basis
-of agriculture and the source of food and material. This
-brings us to the consideration of the empty country.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_46" id="Foot_46" href="#Ref_46">[46]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-"Housing Conditions in Manchester" (Manchester University Press
-price 1s.).</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_47" id="Foot_47" href="#Ref_47">[47]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-This point should be read in connexion with the more drastic proposal
-made in the next chapter.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_48" id="Foot_48" href="#Ref_48">[48]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-"The Example of Germany," by T. C. Horsfall. Published by the
-Manchester University Press.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_49" id="Foot_49" href="#Ref_49">[49]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Near York Mr Joseph Rowntree has successfully carried out a housing
-scheme upon Bournville lines, and provided at the modest rental of
-4s. 6d. a week (the rates are an additional 8d. per week) houses within the
-reach of unskilled workmen. The cottages are thus described:</p>
-
-<p>On the ground floor is a large living room (12 ft. 6 in. by 20 ft. 6 in.) with
-a bay window and plenty of cupboard accommodation, a small pantry, and a
-scullery fitted with a copper, bath, and sink. The copper is fitted with a
-patent exhaust to carry the steam direct into the flues, thus preventing the
-discomfort which often arises in small houses on washing day. The bath is
-fitted with a drop-down lid, forming a table when the bath is not in use.
-Upstairs there are three bedrooms, each fitted with a fireplace, and there is a
-large wardrobe on the landing. The walls are plastered internally with
-adamant cement, which dries very quickly, and assumes a smooth hard surface,
-and is thus more sanitary than the ordinary plaster. All the rooms are fitted
-with picture mouldings. Gas is supplied throughout the house, and city water
-is laid on.</p>
-
-<p>The gardens are not so large as at Bournville and the houses of cheaper
-construction. The rental named, 4s. 6d. a week, is found to yield a clear
-profit of 4 per cent., which is devoted, in happy emulation of the Bournville
-scheme, to the extension of the little community.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_50" id="Foot_50" href="#Ref_50">[50]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-On this point the experience of Richmond, Surrey, is of great value. In
-the "Housing Handbook" Alderman W. Thompson shows what great
-financial advantages Richmond will reap from its cottage building, although
-this was carried out on land costing £700 an acre. The houses, built in 1894
-and 1900, cost from £162 to £276 each and let from 6s. to 8s. per week.
-Altogether there are 132 houses containing 650 rooms and 132 sculleries,
-on six acres of ground costing £4,250 for site; £1,857 for roads and sewers;
-£505 for sundries, and £31,200 for building, being a total cost of £37,812
-and an average inclusive cost of £58 per room. The income gives a gross
-profit which provides interest at 3¼ per cent. on capital outlay, a sinking fund
-contribution of £486 per annum, and a net profit of £38 per annum. Thus a
-large number of people have been well housed at a profit to Richmond.
-At the end of 42 years from 1897 Richmond will have paid off the entire
-loan through the operation of the sinking fund and be in possession of a
-property worth £35,000 and producing a net income of over £1,600 a year.
-It is found that the tenants take a great pride in their dwellings, and that their
-social habits have greatly improved.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_51" id="Foot_51" href="#Ref_51">[51]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-The Grand Duchy of Hesse compels municipalities to borrow money
-whether they like it or not. Hesse has determined that her people shall be
-properly housed—a most wise and patriotic determination. The Duchy
-therefore lays it down that the first duty of a municipality is to buy land that
-its borders may extend in a proper and healthful manner. Further, under
-the law of 1902, Town Councils which decline to build houses for the people
-can be compelled to accept a loan from the bank and to lend the money so
-obtained to a building society which is willing to do the work.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">{234}</a></span>
-
-<h3>CHAPTER XVII<br />
-<small>THE EMPTY COUNTRY</small></h3>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">ALTHOUGH it is a well-known fact that the increase
-of population of the United Kingdom is practically
-an addition to the urban population, it may be well to
-preface consideration of the land question in its relation
-to the national wealth and income by reminding the
-reader of the precise facts of the case.</p>
-
-<p>If we have regard only to the technical "Urban" and
-"Rural" Districts, we get the following figures:</p>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">ENGLAND AND WALES: POPULATION OF URBAN<br />
- AND RURAL DISTRICTS RESPECTIVELY</p>
-
-<table class="gt1" style="max-width:22.5em" summary="gt1-62">
-
-<colgroup>
- <col span="3" style="width:33.33%" />
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="small cent">Census of</td>
- <td class="small cent">Urban Districts.</td>
- <td class="small cent">Rural Districts.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">1891</td>
- <td class="numb">21,745,286</td>
- <td class="numb">7,257,239</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">1901</td>
- <td class="numb">25,058,355</td>
- <td class="numb">7,469,448</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>Thus the urban population increased by 15.2 per cent.,
-while the rural population increased by 2.9 per cent.</p>
-
-<p>Many of the so-called "Urban" Districts, however, are
-quite rural in character, being often small towns dependent
-as business centres upon the agricultural areas in which
-they are situated. In 1901 there were 215 Urban Districts
-with populations below 3,000; 211 with populations
-between 3,000 and 5,000; and 260 with populations
-between 5,000 and 10,000.<span class="fnanchor"><a
-name="Ref_52" id="Ref_52" href="#Foot_52">[52]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">{235}</a></span>
-Having regard to these considerations the following
-figures are arrived at:</p>
-
-<div class="subpara">
-
-<p>(1) Classing with the Rural Districts all those Urban
-Districts which had in 1901 populations below 10,000
-we get:</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<table class="gt1" style="max-width:22.5em" summary="gt1-63">
-
-<colgroup>
- <col span="3" style="width:33.33%" />
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="small cent"></td>
- <td class="small cent">Urban Population.</td>
- <td class="small cent">Rural Population.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">1891</td>
- <td class="numb">18,964,882</td>
- <td class="numb">10,037,643</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">1901</td>
- <td class="numb">21,959,998</td>
- <td class="numb">10,567,845</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>This gives an urban increase of 15.8 per cent. and a
-rural increase of 5.3 per cent.</p>
-
-<div class="subpara">
-
-<p>(2) Classing with the Rural Districts those Urban
-Districts which had in 1901 populations below
-5,000 we get:</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<table class="gt1" style="max-width:22.5em" summary="gt1-64">
-
-<colgroup>
- <col span="3" style="width:33.33%" />
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="small cent"></td>
- <td class="small cent">Urban Population.</td>
- <td class="small cent">Rural Population.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">1891</td>
- <td class="numb">20,576,448</td>
- <td class="numb">8,426,077</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">1901</td>
- <td class="numb">23,803,714</td>
- <td class="numb">8,724,129</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>This gives an urban increase of 15.7 per cent. and a
-rural increase of 3.5 per cent.</p>
-
-<p>Combining the three tests, we see that the truth broadly
-stated is that the rural population is almost stationary
-while the urban population is rapidly increasing. The
-rural population is thus a diminishing proportion of the
-whole.</p>
-
-<p>In 23 rural counties in England and Wales actual
-depopulation occurred between 1891 and 1901, ranging
-from a decrease of 7.5 per cent. in Montgomeryshire to
-a decrease of 1.9 per cent. in Cornwall.</p>
-
-<p>The Census Commissioners make an interesting test of
-depopulation of rural areas by taking the 112 Registration
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">{236}</a></span>
-Districts which are entirely rural, and which had in 1901
-an aggregate population of 1,330,319. Their population
-at each census back to 1801 has been approximately as
-follows:</p>
-
-<div class="section">
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">POPULATION OF 112 RURAL REGISTRATION<br />
- DISTRICTS, 1801-1901</p>
-
-<table class="gt1" style="max-width:15em" summary="gt1-65">
-
-<colgroup>
- <col style="width:10%" />
- <col style="width:50%" />
- <col style="width:10%" />
- <col style="width:30%" />
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="small cent">Census Year.</td>
- <td class="small cent">Population.</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="small cent">Increase + or Decrease - in preceding decennium.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">1801</td>
- <td class="numb">932,364</td>
- <td class="cent"></td>
- <td class="numb"></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">1811</td>
- <td class="numb">997,494</td>
- <td class="cent">+</td>
- <td class="numb">6.99</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">1821</td>
- <td class="numb">1,139,137</td>
- <td class="cent">+</td>
- <td class="numb">14.20</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">1831</td>
- <td class="numb">1,216,872</td>
- <td class="cent">+</td>
- <td class="numb">6.82</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">1841</td>
- <td class="numb">1,288,410</td>
- <td class="cent">+</td>
- <td class="numb">5.88</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">1851</td>
- <td class="numb">1,324,528</td>
- <td class="cent">+</td>
- <td class="numb">2.80</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">1861</td>
- <td class="numb">1,321,870</td>
- <td class="cent">-</td>
- <td class="numb">0.20</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">1871</td>
- <td class="numb">1,321,377</td>
- <td class="cent">-</td>
- <td class="numb">0.04</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">1881</td>
- <td class="numb">1,313,570</td>
- <td class="cent">-</td>
- <td class="numb">0.59</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">1891</td>
- <td class="numb">1,304,827</td>
- <td class="cent">-</td>
- <td class="numb">0.67</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">1901</td>
- <td class="numb">1,330,319</td>
- <td class="cent">+</td>
- <td class="numb">1.95</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The great advance in 1811-1821 was presumably due
-to the cessation of the long war. In 1851-1891 actual
-depopulation occurred, but in 1891-1901 there was a gain
-of 1.95 per cent. Of the 112 districts, however, 73 showed
-actual decrease in 1891-1901, the total increase being
-entirely due to an advance in a few of the districts containing
-mines. It is clear that in the last 50 years
-there has been actual depopulation of strictly rural
-areas.</p>
-
-<p>This becomes still plainer when we examine the facts
-given in the table on page 237 as to the natural growth
-of the rural areas.</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">{237}</a></div>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">THE MIGRATION FROM THE COUNTRY</p>
-
-<table class="gt2" summary="gt2-18">
-
-<colgroup>
- <col style="width:30%" />
- <col span="5" style="width:14%" />
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
- <td rowspan="2" class="rlin ulin"></td>
- <td colspan="2" class="small cent rlin ulin">Population.</td>
- <td rowspan="2" class="small cent rlin ulin">Increase of Population.</td>
- <td rowspan="2" class="small cent rlin ulin">Excess of Births over Deaths.</td>
- <td rowspan="2" class="small cent ulin">Loss by Migration.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="small cent rlin ulin">1891</td>
- <td class="small cent rlin ulin">1901</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj rlin" style="padding-left:1.5em">112 Registration Districts entirely Rural</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,304,827</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,330,319</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">24,492</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">150,437</td>
- <td class="numb">124,945</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj rlin" style="padding-left:1.5em">222 Registration Districts which
- contain urban districts with
- populations under 10,000</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">4,176,219</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">4,215,326</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">39,107</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">414,816</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">375,709</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj rlin" style="padding-left:1.5em">Total of 334 Registration Districts</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">5,481,046</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">5,545,645</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">64,599 </td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">565,253</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">500,654</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">{238}</a></div>
-
-<p>It will be seen that in a rural population of nearly 5½
-millions, the natural increase by excess of births over
-deaths was, in 1891-1901, 565,253, but in the same time
-500,654 persons left these districts either for urban
-England or for places abroad, so that the total increase
-in population was only 64,599.</p>
-
-<p>Turning to the number of persons employed in agricultural
-operations of all kinds, the table on page 239 shows
-the decline which has occurred.</p>
-
-<p>This extension of the table given in "Riches and
-Poverty," Edition 1905, p. 223, modifies it somewhat.
-The reduction of agricultural labourers is not so great
-as the crude totals suggest. It is the women and boys
-who have chiefly disappeared from British agriculture, and
-it should be observed that 248,500 wives and daughters
-disappeared in 1871 as compared with 1861 merely by
-reason of the fact that they were enumerated at the earlier
-date but not at the later one. According to Lord
-Eversley's careful analysis ("Statistical Society's Journal,"
-1907), the actual decline of male agricultural employment
-(men and boys) in Great Britain was from 1,657,000 in
-1861 to 1,236,000 in 1901, or, in England and Wales
-alone, from 1,449,000 in 1861 to 1,079,000 in 1901.
-This is a serious decline, but not as great as is commonly
-supposed.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing is commoner than the belief that the trend to
-the towns is only to be observed in the United Kingdom.
-As a matter of fact it is confined to no country and is,
-indeed, a world-wide phenomenon. Between 1851 and
-1906 the urban population of France increased from 25.5
-per cent. to 42.1 per cent. of the whole. Between 1871 and
-1905 the urban population of Germany increased from 36.1
-per cent. to 57.4 per cent. of the whole. In both cases the
-population classed as "urban" is that contained in towns
-with at least 2,000 inhabitants.</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">{239}</a></div>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">ENGLAND AND WALES: PERSONS EMPLOYED IN<br />AGRICULTURE,
-1851-1901</p>
-
-<table class="gt2" summary="gt2-19">
-
-<colgroup>
- <col style="width:10%" />
- <col span="9" style="width:10%" />
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
- <td rowspan="2" class="cent ulin rlin">Census of—</td>
- <td colspan="3" class="cent ulin rlin"><span class="smc">Adults</span><br />
- (Aged 20 and over).</td>
- <td colspan="3" class="cent ulin rlin"><span class="smc">Young Persons</span><br />
- (under 20).</td>
- <td colspan="3" class="cent ulin"><span class="smc">Total, all Ages.</span><br /></td>
-
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent ulin rlin">Men.</td>
- <td class="cent ulin rlin">Women.</td>
- <td class="cent ulin rlin">Total.</td>
- <td class="cent ulin rlin">Boys.</td>
- <td class="cent ulin rlin">Girls.</td>
- <td class="cent ulin rlin">Total.</td>
- <td class="cent ulin rlin">Males.</td>
- <td class="cent ulin rlin">Females.</td>
- <td class="cent ulin">Total.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">1851</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,141,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">336,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,477,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">328,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">100,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">428,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,468,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">436,000</td>
- <td class="numb">1,905,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">1861</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,119,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">301,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,420,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">323,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">60,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">383,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,442,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">361,000</td>
- <td class="numb">1,803,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">1871</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">972,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">122,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,094,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">277,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">52,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">329,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,249,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">175,000</td>
- <td class="numb">1,424,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">1881</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">884,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">50,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">934,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">254,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">11,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">265,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,139,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">61,000</td>
- <td class="numb">1,200,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">1891</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">816,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">40,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">856,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">237,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">6,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">243,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,054,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">46,000</td>
- <td class="numb">1,099,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">1901</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">750,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">43,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">793,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">186,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">9,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">195,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">936,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">52,000</td>
- <td class="numb">988,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">{240}</a></span>
-I remind the reader of these facts because it is necessary
-to distinguish between what is true and what is untrue in
-the arguments used in support of the cry "Back to the
-Land." As a general rule the stationariness of the rural
-population is attributed to cheap imports, or to land tenure,
-or to want of housing accommodation, or to the attractions
-of town life, or to the higher wages offered in industrial
-pursuits. All these things are causes of migration to the
-towns, but one of the most potent causes is rarely considered.
-It is the application of machinery and improved
-methods to agriculture. To produce a given quantity of
-food, far less labour is required than of old. Therefore,
-even in a country like France, which is almost independent
-of imported food, it is obvious that there must be a trend
-townwards as the labour displaced from agriculture seeks
-other employment.</p>
-
-<p>Thus, in considering land in its agricultural aspect <i>we
-must not regard it as containing an unlimited field of employment</i>.
-Agricultural methods will continue to improve,
-and the day will undoubtedly come when one man's work
-applied in agriculture will literally feed a multitude.</p>
-
-<p>But, having made that reservation, let us look at the
-French and German figures in another aspect. We see
-that in France, although the urban population has increased,
-it is still much less than one-half of the whole.
-In Germany, again, the town population in 1910 is about
-60 per cent. of the whole. In our own country, if we
-counted as urban population the inhabitants of all towns
-containing 2,000 and upwards, we should find it amount to
-over 80 per cent. of the whole. While, therefore, not
-losing sight of the reservation already made, it is clear that,
-in the United Kingdom, causes other than the application
-of machinery to agriculture have operated to produce
-urban congestion.</p>
-
-<p>There was a time when no European country was so
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">{241}</a></span>
-rich as England in men who cultivated their own land.
-To-day there is no country in the world in which cultivation
-and security of tenure are so widely divorced.
-Whatever the trend to the towns in other countries may
-be, there is no other country in which such a marked
-diminution in agricultural employment has occurred as in
-the United Kingdom. The land which bred the bowmen
-of Agincourt and the Ironsides of Cromwell now sends
-forth the men of whom Sir Ian Hamilton wrote to
-Mr Horsfall "I will not give you, a Manchester man,
-offence, if I say that their physique was hardly equal to
-the fine standard of their determination and courage....
-It is the fault of some one that these brave and stubborn
-lads were not at least an inch or two taller and bigger
-round the chest, and altogether of a more robust and
-powerful build."</p>
-
-<p>Looking at the industry of our people as a whole, the
-main fact which stands out is want of security of employment.
-Nearly the whole of our industrial workers are
-earners of weekly wages, and of our sparse agricultural
-population but a small proportion are owners. Compare
-the position of France. There, fully one-half the population
-are attached to the soil by virtue of ownership and
-secure in the mother-earth which nourishes them. They
-may be poor, many of these peasant proprietors, but at
-least they are not constantly on the verge of hunger; at
-least they have the glorious privilege of independence.</p>
-
-<p>Our empty country-side is universally admitted to be
-a great national danger. It is not alone that we are
-so much dependent upon imported food; it is that the
-imported food is for the consumption of a race degenerating
-in the unwholesome environment of town life. Everywhere
-the cry of "Back to the Land" is raised, but, as though to
-mock that cry, it is only answered by well-to-do weekenders,
-attendance upon whom, in faked-up cottages from
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">{242}</a></span>
-which labourers have been ousted, has become one of our
-many degrading trades of luxury.</p>
-
-<p>We must be under no illusions. We must not believe
-that mature and debilitated town-dwellers can be planted
-out in rows to gain a living by entire devotion to agriculture.
-We can hope for but little from farm colonies
-for the unemployed. Our chief hope, here as elsewhere,
-is in the children. We must seek to attach our
-present rural population to the soil under such conditions
-that their children may see hope where now
-there is none.</p>
-
-<p>How shall we secure allotments and small holdings
-for the agricultural labourer? Parliament in 1906-1909
-has given much attention to rural problems, and the Small
-Holdings Act of 1908, setting up Commissions with
-power to make schemes for small holdings if County
-Councils neglect to do so, extending to eighty years the
-period for which money may be borrowed for the purposes
-of the Act, and giving powers for the compulsory acquisition
-of suitable land, is now in operation. The Report
-for 1908 shows that County Councils in England and
-Wales acquired 11,346 acres for small holdings and
-304 acres for allotments.</p>
-
-<p>We may venture to hope for better results than this,
-but is it asking too much of the nation, at this juncture,
-to broaden its conceptions? Why should we not, having
-regard to the extraordinary facts as to our national wealth
-and income, having regard to the admitted dangers of our
-present position, having regard to the best disposition and
-welfare of our 44,500,000 people upon their island home
-of 77,000,000 acres,—why, having regard to these things,
-should we not determine to secure absolute control of area,
-and, having secured it, to order the first essential of
-healthful life, proper distribution upon area?</p>
-
-<p>As has been already pointed out in these pages, the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">{243}</a></span>
-77,000,000 acres of the United Kingdom, outside the tiny
-spots called towns which occupy an almost negligible
-fraction of the whole, <i>produce a gross rental of only</i>
-£52,000,000. This is the sum at which the whole of the
-land of the United Kingdom, save that small part which
-is attached to houses, was assessed to Income Tax in
-1908-9. It represents the rentals of agricultural lands as
-they stand with all their farm-houses and other buildings,
-roads, ditches, fences, etc. In 1898 the Royal Commission
-on Agriculture valued this land at only eighteen years' purchase.
-Twenty times £52,000,000 is only £1,040,000,000
-or about one-half of one year's income of the country.
-This, it will be remembered, was the valuation of land
-which we adopted in Chapter 5.</p>
-
-<p>The question I submit for consideration is this: Is it
-worth our while to buy up our own birthright at the price
-of one-half of a single year's income?</p>
-
-<p>The question should be answered with due regard to all
-the considerations as to agriculture, housing and the distribution
-of population and industries which have been
-advanced in these pages. The problem of the town is
-before us, and not alone the question of the tilling of the
-soil. It should also be answered with due regard to the
-question of food importation and the probabilities as to the
-continuance of cheap supplies.</p>
-
-<p>In 1875-6 the gross assessments of agricultural lands—an
-area very little larger than at present, for, as has been
-shown, the largest town occupies a relatively insignificant
-area—amounted to £67,000,000 or £15,000,000 more than
-at the present time. If we had bought in 1875, then, and
-rents had remained the same, we should have lost capital, but
-would the value of the land have remained the same? In
-thirty years we could have created a considerable yeomanry,—men
-holding land from the State not in fee simple, but
-nevertheless in absolute security of tenure. They could
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">{244}</a></span>
-have paid us rentals at which small holdings would be
-eagerly competed for, yet rentals larger than are at present
-derived by the little sovereigns of the British country-side
-from their tenants. Further, we should have stemmed the
-current of humanity which for thirty years has flowed to
-the towns, and done something, in the phrase of Ruskin,
-to "get as much territory as the nation has, well filled with
-respectable persons."</p>
-
-<p>My point as to the value that is and the value that
-might be is illustrated by Sir Robert Edgcumbe's experiment
-with Rew Farm, in the parish of Winterbourne St
-Martin, in Dorsetshire. Sir Robert bought this farm of
-343 acres for £5,050, made a road through it, and sold it in
-small holdings at prices ranging from £7 to £20 per acre.
-The land was eagerly taken up and the experiment has
-been a great success. When Sir Robert bought the land
-in 1888 the outgoing tenant was in financial straits—he
-could not make Rew Farm pay. It was rented at £240
-per annum and its net rateable value was £215. It is
-improbable that a new tenant would have paid more than
-£200. Yet, under small cultivation, the rateable value of
-Rew Farm rose from the £215 of 1888 to £346 in 1902, a
-rise of 60 per cent. In the same period, the rateable value
-of the parish of Winterbourne St Martin as a whole fell
-from £2,807 to £2,073.</p>
-
-<p>Apart from the question of small holdings, nothing is
-more probable than a rise in the value of British agricultural
-land to a point far beyond any yet attained.
-Already, within the last few years, a revolution has
-taken place in our wheat supplies—a revolution which has
-gone unnoticed by the British public, so long accustomed
-to its miraculous cheap loaf in the baker's shop that the
-miracle has become, as is the fate of all miracles, a
-commonplace and unregarded thing. The table on p. 245
-shows the nature of the change which has occurred:</p>
-
-<div class="section">
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">{245}</a></div>
-
-<p class="gap-above2 center">UNITED KINGDOM IMPORTS OF WHEAT<br />
- AND FLOUR IN EQUIVALENT WEIGHT OF GRAIN</p>
-
-<p class="center">In Millions of Cwts.</p>
-
-<table class="gt2" summary="gt2-20">
-
-<colgroup>
- <col style="width:25%" />
- <col span="6" style="width:12.5%" />
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="ulin rlin"></td>
- <td class="cent ulin rlin">1895.</td>
- <td class="cent ulin rlin">1896.</td>
- <td class="cent ulin rlin">1897.</td>
- <td class="cent ulin rlin">1898.</td>
- <td class="cent ulin rlin">1899.</td>
- <td class="cent ulin">1900.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">Russia</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">23.0</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">17.2</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">15.1</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">6.4</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">2.5</td>
- <td class="numb">4.5</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">Roumania</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">2.0</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">5.4</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1.2</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">0.2</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">—</td>
- <td class="numb">0.7</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">U.S.A.</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">45.3</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">52.8</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">54.1</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">62.0</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">60.2</td>
- <td class="numb">57.4</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">Argentina</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">11.4</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">5.0</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">0.9</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">4.0</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">11.5</td>
- <td class="numb">18.7</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">Canada</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">5.1</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">6.3</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">6.9</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">7.7</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">8.7</td>
- <td class="numb">8.0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">India</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">8.8</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">2.1</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">0.6</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">9.5</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">8.2</td>
- <td class="numb">—</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin ulin">Australia</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">3.6</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">—</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">—</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">0.2</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">3.0</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">2.9</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj rlin" style="padding-left:1.5em">Total of above and other countries</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">107.2</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">99.6</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">88.7</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">94.4</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">98.5</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">98.6</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<table class="gt2" summary="gt2-21">
-
-<colgroup>
- <col style="width:25%" />
- <col span="6" style="width:12.5%" />
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="ulin rlin"></td>
- <td class="cent ulin rlin">1901.</td>
- <td class="cent ulin rlin">1902.</td>
- <td class="cent ulin rlin">1903.</td>
- <td class="cent ulin rlin">1904.</td>
- <td class="cent ulin rlin">1905.</td>
- <td class="cent ulin">1908.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">Russia</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">2.6</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">6.6</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">17.3</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">23.7</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">24.8</td>
- <td class="numb">4.6</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">Roumania</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">0.5</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">2.4</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">3.1</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1.5</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">2.1</td>
- <td class="numb">1.8</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">U.S.A.</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">66.8</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">65.0</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">46.7</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">18.5</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">14.5</td>
- <td class="numb">40.7</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">Argentina</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">8.3</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">4.5</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">14.2</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">21.8</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">24.1</td>
- <td class="numb">31.8</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">Canada</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">8.6</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">12.2</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">14.5</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">9.0</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">8.4</td>
- <td class="numb">16.8</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">India</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">3.3</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">8.8</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">17.1</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">25.5</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">22.9</td>
- <td class="numb">2.9</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin ulin">Australia</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">6.2</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">4.2</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">—</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">11.4</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">11.5</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">5.8</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="subj rlin" style="padding-left:1.5em">Total of above and other countries</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">101.0</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">107.9</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">116.7</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">118.2</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">114.2</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">109.1</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">{246}</a></span>
-In 1902 America sent us 65,000,000 cwts. of wheat.
-In 1903 this great supply fell sharply and in 1904-5 it
-was reduced to less than 20,000,000 cwts. In 1908
-there was recovery, but this was but temporary. Sooner
-or later the United States supply will wholly cease. By
-1925 the United States will have some 110,000,000 to
-120,000,000 people to feed.</p>
-
-<p>In "Riches and Poverty," 1905 edition, I wrote:—</p>
-
-<p>"The United States failing, we still secured our imported
-wheat supplies in 1904 and 1905, but at an increased price.
-Canada failed, but those uncertain suppliers, India and
-Australia, came to the rescue. Argentina sent us more
-than ever before and Russia also came into the export
-market. But the facts as to America remind us that none
-of these suppliers can be relied upon indefinitely, and some
-of them are notoriously uncertain. Canada has done badly
-in 1904 and there will always be difficulties of climate to
-consider. Moreover, the United States will in future come
-into the market as a buyer and compete with us for the
-exports of North-West Canada and Argentina. The sum
-is that we cannot for the future depend upon dirt cheap
-wheat raised by scratch farming on virgin soil, and that, as
-a consequence, the price of wheat will rise. As with wheat,
-so, sooner or later, with many other foods. When it comes
-to putting more labour and manure, and less luck, into
-farming in new lands, then conditions will be equalized,
-prices of produce will rise, and the price of British land
-will rise also."</p>
-
-<p>It is now (1910) only necessary to add that the price
-of wheat has moved thus:</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">{247}</a></div>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">THE RISE IN WHEAT</p>
-
-<table class="gt1" style="max-width:25em" summary="gt1-66">
-
-<colgroup>
- <col style="width:40%" />
- <col span="3" style="width:20%" />
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="small cent"></td>
- <td class="small cent">British Wheat.<br /><i>s</i>.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>d</i>.</td>
- <td class="small cent">Foreign Wheat.<br /><i>s</i>.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>d</i>.</td>
- <td class="small cent">Indian and Colonial.<br /><i>s</i>.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>d</i>.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>1894 (lowest on record)</td>
- <td class="cent">22&nbsp;&nbsp;10</td>
- <td class="cent">22&nbsp;&nbsp;10</td>
- <td class="cent">23&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;6</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>1904</td>
- <td class="cent">28&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4</td>
- <td class="cent">30&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;5</td>
- <td class="cent">29&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;7</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>1905</td>
- <td class="cent">29&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;8</td>
- <td class="cent">31&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2</td>
- <td class="cent">30&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;8</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>1906</td>
- <td class="cent">28&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3</td>
- <td class="cent">30&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1</td>
- <td class="cent">30&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>1907</td>
- <td class="cent">30&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;7</td>
- <td class="cent">32&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4</td>
- <td class="cent">33&nbsp;&nbsp;10</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>1908</td>
- <td class="cent">32&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;0</td>
- <td class="cent">36&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;0</td>
- <td class="cent">36&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>1909</td>
- <td class="cent">36&nbsp;&nbsp;11</td>
- <td class="cent">39&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2</td>
- <td class="cent">40&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>Merely as a commercial speculation, then, it would
-be well worth our while to invest £1,000,000,000 in
-buying up the United Kingdom. The land is now probably
-at bed-rock price, and we should come in, as the
-slang phrase goes, on the ground floor. The really dear
-land, that of the towns, we could pass by. We want
-to get our industries and our people out of the towns
-and with control of area we could do it. The State,
-as landlord from John o'Groats to Land's End, could
-afford to dispense with the acquisition of the tiny areas
-upon which the majority of our people are now crowded.
-Land nationalization, viewed in this way, presents no insuperable
-financial difficulties. On the contrary, it would
-put us in possession, at an absurdly low price, of the opportunity
-to recreate our social structure and the means to
-dispense with all taxation in the time to come. Under
-wise management the national acreage could soon be
-made to yield a revenue from farms, allotments, market
-gardens, houses, factories, forests, etc., of something over
-three pounds per acre on the average, for it would
-house the greater part of our people and produce a
-larger part of our food by intensive cultivation. If
-we wisely use our resources, our 77,000,000 can be made
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">{248}</a></span>
-to produce, under methods of intensive cultivation and
-co-operation already in practice, if not enough food to
-feed our population, certainly a larger proportion of our
-supplies than at present.</p>
-
-<p>Also worth consideration is the important matter of
-afforestation. There are now but some 3,000,000 acres of
-woods and plantations in this country, and many of these
-are badly managed, for forestry is almost an unknown art
-in the United Kingdom. Landowners do not understand
-it; their agents do not understand it. Yet its possibilities
-are enormous and might be realized within twenty to
-thirty years of the simple financial operation which I
-have suggested. There need be no acre of the 77,000,000
-not useful or not beautiful. Millions of acres of land now
-termed waste may be clothed in verdure to yield a steady
-and certain income and make us largely independent of
-imported timber. There is no greater authority on this
-subject than Dr Schlich, and he gives it as his opinion,
-confirmed by thorough investigation of British and foreign
-conditions,<span class="fnanchor"><a
-name="Ref_53" id="Ref_53" href="#Foot_53">[53]</a></span> that five or six million acres could be brought
-under wood, thus producing the bulk of the timber we
-require. Every acre afforested would require about £2
-worth of labour. After planting, each acre would need
-only about five days' labour a year, but that means
-30,000,000 days of work. The timber grown and cut,
-there would be the transport, lumbering, and allied industries
-calling for labour. Dr Schlich estimates that 500,000
-men, or say 2,500,000 people, would find employment
-through the afforestation of say six million acres, and the
-estimate is based upon solid foundations.</p>
-
-<p>It may be asked, why do the present owners of "waste"
-land miss such an opportunity? The answer has several
-parts. Landowners are for the most part (1) ignorant of
-the subject, (2) unprovided with capital, (3) unwilling to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">{249}</a></span>
-wait. A business which does not begin to yield income
-for some 15 years is not for the average private landowner.
-But the people, who have waited so long for the right to
-tread their own soil, can wait these fifteen years and other
-fifteen if need be.</p>
-
-<p>Given the overlordship of area, the establishment of a
-permanent Land and Housing Commission, the nationalization
-of the means of transport, the establishment of
-well endowed schools of agriculture and forestry, and a
-generation of well-born children, what possibilities open
-out before us!</p>
-
-<p>Is this conception too large for a race which talks of
-Empire? In the United States there is a private trust which
-was organized by a single individual with a capital of
-1,000,000,000 dollars—a trust which owns territory, mines,
-railways, steamships and mills, and supports 1,000,000
-people. Business transactions are growing greater, and
-must greater grow, for the world cannot afford to peddle
-with its resources. The future is with the men who realize
-that it is not more difficult to think in millions than in
-thousands. Within the last few years we have spent on a
-war with a small people £250,000,000 in the name of
-Empire. £250,000,000 is the price of one-fourth of the
-entire area of the Mother Country. It is high time for
-a little Imperial thinking in the home market.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_52" id="Foot_52" href="#Ref_52">[52]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-These facts are summarized from the Census Reports.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_53" id="Foot_53" href="#Ref_53">[53]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-See his excellent "Forestry in the United Kingdom."</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">{250}</a></span>
-
-<h3>CHAPTER XVIII<br />
-<small>ORGANIZATION</small></h3>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">IT has already been remarked in these pages that quite
-inadequate numbers of persons are engaged in the
-production of many useful articles. This would be true
-even if all the individuals enumerated as producers in the
-census returns were fully employed upon existing plant
-and under their existing managers. As a matter of fact,
-they are not fully employed. Unemployment or short
-time always exists in greater or less degree. Between
-inadequate numbers and inadequate employment of those
-numbers the quantity of <i>ponderable commodities</i> produced
-in the United Kingdom is so small, as we have seen, that
-only a small fraction of our people are well housed or
-well clothed. A great multitude craves for satisfaction of
-elementary needs, while a host of shopkeepers wait
-hungrily for customers who cannot buy.</p>
-
-<p>In the nineteenth century enormous strides were made
-in the invention of machinery and labour-saving appliances
-and methods, and now, at the opening of the twentieth
-century, we possess means more than ample for the satisfaction
-of all. If invention now came to a standstill, we
-could, with such science as we now command, produce,
-or obtain by exchange for our production, far more food,
-houses, clothes, furniture and other commodities than we
-actually need, and this while our population enjoyed
-ample leisure in which to develop their higher faculties.</p>
-
-<p>What, then, is at fault? Not only do the majority of
-our men work arduously, but an immense army of women
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">{251}</a></span>
-and young children are also engaged in production and
-distribution. Of the population of England and Wales
-between the ages of 20 and 55 only 179,946 males and
-823,135 unmarried females figured in the Census of 1901
-as "without specific occupations." What is the explanation,
-then, of an insufficient and ill-distributed production?
-The answer can be given in a few words. It is want of
-organization which leads to such poor results from so much
-hard labour. <i>A poor stream of ponderable commodities
-filters through thousands of unnecessary channels, and becomes
-the subject of many strange services, each of which
-claims and gets some sort of reward. By the enumeration
-of each of these services the total income which we examined
-at the beginning of this book is made up. The Error of
-Distribution of the national income connotes a wasteful and
-inadequate production.</i></p>
-
-<p>Waste in actual production is still exceedingly great.
-In only a minority of cases are factories equipped with the
-best plant and appliances. Model factories, in which the
-most economical production is attained, are still exceptional.
-There are tens of thousands of small employers
-who lack the capital properly to equip their establishments,
-and who perforce waste labour.</p>
-
-<p>That is to speak of production as a whole, without
-reference to the nature of the goods produced, but when
-we come to analyse the product, waste is everywhere
-apparent. Labour, to be economically employed, should
-produce only genuine articles, capable of application for a
-considerable period to the purpose which they are designed
-to serve. As we know only too well, a very great part of
-our manufacturing output is of articles which make-believe,
-and it is only a small fraction of production in any branch
-of industry which is the best of its kind. Our competitive
-system is largely an endeavour to make profits out of the
-sale of trashy articles, the production of which wastes alike
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">{252}</a></span>
-the labour engaged in making them and the labour for which
-they are exchanged. It is difficult to say which is more
-pitiable, the waste of labour upon rubbish designed for
-the consumption of the poor, or the waste of labour upon
-luxuries designed for the consumption of the rich.</p>
-
-<p>Upon the waste connected with the trades and services
-of luxury I have already dwelt at some length. Here it
-is only necessary to remind the reader that it is of two
-kinds. There is the multiplication of servants and attendants
-upon rich men and their houses and animals,<span class="fnanchor"><a
-name="Ref_54" id="Ref_54" href="#Foot_54">[54]</a></span> and
-there is the employment of nominally useful workmen in
-the manufacture and repair of the instruments of luxury.</p>
-
-<p>Turning to the marketing and distribution of commodities
-we have many forms of waste of labour to study.
-Each manufacturer in a trade, selling his goods in competition
-with others, sends out his agent or agents to assert,
-not always truly, that his wares are the best and the
-cheapest, and to secure orders for them. Thus a large
-number of able-bodied men are divorced from production
-and made a quite unnecessary factor in distribution. At
-the Census of 1901, 64,322 commercial travellers were
-enumerated in England and Wales, as against 44,055 in
-1891! These men are usually of an exceedingly capable
-type, whose work, better directed, might be of great service
-in useful production.</p>
-
-<p>Each factory, however small, must have its separate
-clerical staff, and to thousands of men wasted as travellers
-we have to add tens of thousands wasted as clerks. In
-the United Kingdom, in 1901, there were 439,972
-commercial or business clerks, as against 300,615
-in 1891.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">{253}</a></span>
-The commodities produced by the wasteful competitive
-factories are often, too often, dealt with by wholesale
-middlemen, agents, brokers, factors, merchants, who, with
-their staffs of clerks and warehousemen account for an
-uncertain but considerable number of the working community.
-Our imports of food, which in an organized
-community could so easily be handled by a single staff at
-each port, are scrambled for by a great host of merchants,
-factors and commission agents.</p>
-
-<p>A most conspicuous waste in distribution is in advertising,
-one of the most unnecessary of all trades. In
-the game of competition, those often win, not who supply
-the best goods, but who say that they supply the best goods.
-As a result there has sprung up an enormous industry with
-many branches which is engaged in pushing the sale of
-a few good and many worthless articles. It "employs"
-thousands of male and female clerks and canvassers, and
-directly and indirectly lays many nominally useful trades
-under contribution. Printers, authors and journalists,
-enamellers, carpenters, bill-stickers, paper-makers and
-others are engaged to furnish the materials of the advertisements.
-Altogether it is probable that some 80,000 people
-find a "living" in connexion with advertising, when they
-should be doing useful work. Some part of the stream of
-useful commodities is directed to them, and in return they
-give nothing. Individually, they may be honest, industrious
-people, doing the work they are employed to do to the
-best of their ability. From a national point of view they
-are wasting their time. It may be added that when they
-are pushing the sale of "patent" medicines, whiskies and
-complexion creams they are doing something worse than
-waste time.</p>
-
-<p>Chiefly arising out of our commercial system of distribution
-and the crimes and misdemeanours which it
-creates, the various branches of the legal profession absorb
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">{254}</a></span>
-a considerable number of able-bodied men who contribute
-nothing to the wealth of the nation but who are rewarded
-by a large share of the national income. At the Census of
-1901 as many as 27,184 barristers and solicitors and 42,339
-law clerks were recorded.<span class="fnanchor"><a
-name="Ref_55" id="Ref_55" href="#Foot_55">[55]</a></span> These 69,523 individuals with
-their dependents, probably numbering nearly 300,000 in all,
-help to attenuate the thin stream of ponderable commodities
-which flow from the places where people labour to useful
-ends.</p>
-
-<p>We pass to the work of the hundreds of thousands of
-retail shopkeepers and their servants, and here again we
-find a vast amount of wasted labour. In each trade in
-each district there are a quite unnecessary number of
-tradesmen hunting for profits. It is not uncommon to find
-half-a-dozen butchers' men calling for orders upon the
-householders of a single street.</p>
-
-<p>It is sometimes represented to shopkeepers that any
-movement towards collectivism threatens their livelihood.
-Shopkeepers will do well to remember that it is unrestrained
-individualism which is their worst enemy. In
-almost every branch of retail distribution the multiple
-shop principle is eliminating the independent shopkeeper
-and substituting badly paid shop "managers." Apologists
-of individualism boast of the economy which is thus
-being achieved. Thus M. Leroy Beaulieu in his "Collectivism"
-(which is an attack on collectivism) writes,
-"The tendency of civilization, where freedom exists,
-appears to be towards a reduction in the number of
-persons who live entirely by commerce, owing to the
-gradual substitution of large for small industries that is
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">{255}</a></span>
-now in progress. Would it be possible for collectivism
-to act more rapidly or efficiently?" M. Leroy Beaulieu
-forgets that the crushing of the small shopkeeper by
-private monopolists accentuates the error of distribution,
-while collectivism economizes labour for the general good.</p>
-
-<p>What I have written does not apply, of course, to all
-fields of labour. It has long been recognized that certain
-services can only be effectually and efficiently performed
-under one management. Railways, tramways, water-service,
-lighting, and so forth have come to be looked upon
-as "natural monopolies." Even Mr Henry George, who
-thought that "Socialism tended towards Atheism" and who
-considered that "limitation of working hours and of the
-labour of women and children" could only be enforced by
-methods which "multiply officials, interfere with personal
-liberty, tend to corruption and are liable to abuse,"<span class="fnanchor"><a
-name="Ref_56" id="Ref_56" href="#Foot_56">[56]</a></span> admitted
-the existence of "necessary monopolies" which might
-be treated as functions of the State. Indeed, it is apparent
-to the most unthinking that between two points A and
-B there can only be one best route for a railway, and
-that, therefore, railway service between points A and B
-should be a monopoly. Similarly it would be an obvious
-absurdity to construct two sewers in one road, competing
-with each other for the removal of refuse, or for two or
-more gas managements to run mains in the same streets.
-In these and many other cases it is clearly recognized that
-economy of labour is consistent with monopoly alone, and
-the only question that remains to decide is whether the
-necessary monopoly should be in public or private hands.
-I do not purpose here to discuss that question, for at this
-date it is scarcely an open one. An overwhelming weight
-of opinion has decided that public ownership must go with
-monopoly, wherever monopoly is shown to be necessary.</p>
-
-<p>It is not so generally recognized that proper economy of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">{256}</a></span>
-labour and a proper distribution of the products of labour
-can only be secured by:</p>
-
-<div class="subpara">
-
-<p>(1) The conversion of all common services into
-monopolies, and</p>
-
-<p>(2) The ownership of those monopolies by the public.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="nodent">Nevertheless, the waste arising from hundreds or thousands
-of unnecessary centres of production and distribution
-is becoming better understood, and in the United
-Kingdom, as in America and Germany, big fish are increasingly
-eager to swallow the little fish. Combination
-in the field of production is no less common than the
-unification of control of stores and shops in the field of
-ultimate distribution. Organization is in the air, and
-organization, commenced by individuals for individual
-gain, can only end in the erection of monopolies, which, for
-its own safety and health, the public, sooner or later, will
-find itself compelled to control.</p>
-
-<p>In the foregoing pages we have considered the proper
-use of area and the healthy housing of the people as questions
-urgently calling for collective action. The colonization
-of British land by the revival of agriculture and the
-redistribution of industries is ultimately bound up with the
-development of Transport and Power Distribution. The
-former is now a problem of private monopoly which we
-have allowed to arise. The latter will become one if we
-do not at once realize the possibilities of power distribution
-and determine that they are of so far-reaching a character
-as to demand public ownership from the beginning.</p>
-
-<p>If we are successfully to take our industries and people
-out of congested centres and spread them out over a considerable
-area we need cheap and rapid transport and cheap
-and easily handled power. The transport and power
-transmission of the future will be electrical. It is upon
-record that in the early days of the steamship a Royal
-Commission "sat upon" the then vexed question of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">{257}</a></span>
-"Steam versus Sails," and unanimously decided that sails
-were the only practical wear for the Royal Navy. One
-is reminded of this fact when one contemplates the slow
-progress made by electric traction in this country, and the
-marked reluctance to experiment on the part of those
-types of private and injurious monopolists—our great
-railway companies. After much thought and with the
-assistance of a pushful American citizen our London
-"Underground" is, as I write, electrified, many years after
-electric traction was known in Darkest Africa, but so far
-as the greater part of our transport system is concerned
-we are at a standstill. The field of experiment is resigned
-to the Americans and the Germans.</p>
-
-<p>The production and distribution of light, heat and
-power simply mean the production and distribution of
-energy in the form we call electricity, and since transport
-is simply motion we see that the future of lighting,
-heating, transport and power is the future of electricity.</p>
-
-<p>In the matter of transport there is perhaps something
-to be said for the statesmen who, without the slightest
-conception of the possibilities of steam power, allowed our
-railways and canals to be made sources of profit for private
-speculators. They erred in ignorance of the magnitude
-and importance of the subject. There will be no such
-excuse if we allow the production and distribution of
-electrical power to become the sport of private monopolists.
-If there is blindness in this matter it will be wilful blindness.
-For each district there can be but one power supply
-consistently with economy, and so much hangs upon the
-wise distribution of power that it is most important the
-public should be made to realize the nature of the interests
-which are at stake.</p>
-
-<p>The adoption of the mysterious word "Electricity" is
-a most unfortunate thing. If the public understood that
-electricity is Energy and that it is transmutable at will
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">{258}</a></span>
-into Power or Light or Heat, they would better realize the
-possibilities of the future in town and country, and all that
-the proper organization and control of Energy means to
-them. They would at once resolve that the power of
-government must not be divorced from the Power which
-will run in the electrical mains of the future, and by
-the aid of which we can transform the face of our
-land.</p>
-
-<p>Let me drop the word Electricity and use the simple
-term Energy. Energy will be produced at a central power
-station and distributed over a considerable area. The
-energy mains will carry the means of lighting, the means
-of motion (transport), the means of heating, the means of
-manufacturing in large, the means of manufacturing in
-small, the means of cooking, the means of cleaning, to
-every person in that area. Energy will be at the disposal
-of every factory, of every workshop,—and of every private
-house. No building will be without its motors, large or
-small. Smoke and all the waste and dirt of smoke will
-disappear.</p>
-
-<p>I am not speaking of a remote future, but of possibilities
-which can forthwith be realized. How important it is,
-then, that this Energy supply, which is already entering
-and will increasingly enter into our everyday lives, should
-be publicly owned from the first. Given private ownership,
-the monopolists of Energy will run their mains where
-most profit is quickly to be garnered instead of seeking, as
-we should seek, first profits in the thinning out of towns
-and the restoration of the health of our people. If we part
-with the control of power, it is Power indeed which we
-part with. We should part, also, it is important to add,
-with a magnificent source of public revenue, which will
-amount, in the time to come, to much more than the
-revenue of our railways. It is only by securing the distribution
-of such profits by public ownership that we can make
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">{259}</a></span>
-any impression upon the melancholy facts treated in the
-first part of this volume.</p>
-
-<p>As I have already said, it is commonly recognized that
-such a function as a tramway or water supply must of
-necessity be a monopoly, public or private, if its working
-is to be economical. It is not difficult to show that the
-control of the production and distribution of all articles
-of common use must be unified if labour is not to be
-wasted. Just as one water main and one alone is needed
-for the service of a row of houses, so, to use a familiar
-illustration, one vehicle and one alone is needed to supply
-the same row of houses with milk. If a number of
-milk-sellers are competing for the custom of one small
-neighbourhood, as is usually the case, a quite considerable
-number of able-bodied men, boys and animals are engaged
-in unnecessarily traversing the same streets, one after the
-other, to do the work which could be performed with much
-more ease, certainty and expedition by a fraction of their
-number. Each of the small tradesmen has to keep a set
-of accounts demanding his own attention or that of his
-wife or clerk. Each milk dealer, again, has his separate
-supply of milk from the railway station, sent by some
-farmer at a distance. Each of these doses of milk is the
-subject of a separate transaction, wasting labour at both
-ends of the journey and in transit. From first to last, the
-process is clumsy and tedious, wasting labour at every
-stage. The waste is precisely of the same nature as would
-occur if several water companies supplied a certain street
-with water and had their mains running side by side.
-There would be just as much absurdity, and no more, in
-serving my road by four water-mains as in serving it by
-the four milk chariots which now pay it such frequent visits.</p>
-
-<p>And to pursue this useful illustration a little further
-there is another analogy between a water supply and a
-milk supply which should not be forgotten. The importance
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">{260}</a></span>
-of pure milk is not less than the importance of
-pure water. The milk supply of towns is derived from a
-thousand tainted sources, the precise nature of which is
-unknown both to the consumers and to the milk dealers.
-I fear we should drink less milk if we could see the handling
-of it—the literal handling of it—from the start. I
-have a lively recollection of the last milking operation I
-witnessed. Suffice it to say that I agreed, afterwards, that
-the butter made on the farm looked to be very fine
-butter, and that I was entirely satisfied with an ocular
-demonstration of its many virtues. As is pointed out by
-Dr G. F. McCleary, the Battersea Medical Officer of
-Health,<span class="fnanchor"><a
-name="Ref_57" id="Ref_57" href="#Foot_57">[57]</a></span> "if large towns want clean milk they must not
-look to outside authorities to get it for them." The
-ordinary milk farmer is a conservative creature who does
-not appreciate the "faddist" with his demands for a clean
-milker and a clean cow. A dirty person draws milk from
-a dirty animal into a dirty receptacle, and tons of manure
-come to London with the morning milk. Dr Leslie
-Mackenzie, Medical Officer of the Local Government
-Board for Scotland,<span class="fnanchor"><a
-name="Ref_58" id="Ref_58" href="#Foot_58">[58]</a></span> thus describes the process:</p>
-
-<p>"To watch the milking of cows is to watch a process of
-unscientific inoculation of a pure (or almost pure) medium
-with unknown quantities of unspecified germs.... Whoever
-knows the meaning of aseptic surgery must feel his
-blood run cold when he watches, even in imagination, the
-thousand chances of germ inoculation. From cow to cow
-the milker goes, taking with her (or him) the stale epithelium
-of the last cow, the particles of dirt caught from the floor,
-the hairs, the dust, and the germs that adhere to them....
-Everywhere, throughout the whole process of milking, the
-perishable, superbly nutrient liquid receives its repeated
-sowings of germinal and non-germinal dirt. In an hour
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">{261}</a></span>
-or two its population of triumphant lives is a thing
-imagination boggles at. And this in good dairies! What
-must it be where cows are never groomed, where hands
-are only accidentally washed, where heads are only
-occasionally cleaned, where spittings (tobacco or other)
-are not infrequent, where the milker may be a chance-comer
-from some filthy slum—where, in a word, the
-various dirts of the civilized human, are at every hand
-reinforced by the inevitable dirts of the domesticated cow?
-Are these exaggerations? They are not. I could name
-many admirable byres where these conditions are, in a
-greater or less degree, normal."</p>
-
-<p>There is but one way to obtain clean and pure milk
-and at the same time to secure economy of labour in
-its production and distribution coupled with adequate
-remuneration of the labour so economized, and that is
-the way of public ownership. The municipality should
-conduct the entire operation of milk supply. By so doing
-it would prolong the lives of its citizens, save the lives of
-many infants, and add to its revenue.</p>
-
-<p>A public milk supply, even in relation to the food of
-adults, is an urgent need. When considered in relation to
-infantile mortality the question is seen to be a vital one.
-All medical officers of health are at one on the point. We
-must have municipal milk depots if the children are to
-be saved, and if we supply milk for children and nursing
-mothers we may as well enlarge our basis of operations
-and make the milk service, like the water service, a
-complete municipal monopoly.</p>
-
-<p>Thus organized, another great service would be lifted
-out of the sphere of bargaining and chicanery and adulteration.
-In another industry the waste of labour would
-cease. In another trade men would work with intent to
-serve, and cease to hunt profits at the cost of their bodies
-and souls.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">{262}</a></span>
-The case for the municipalization of the milk supply is
-a very forcible one, but it is not more so than that for the
-public ownership of other common services. The point as
-to waste of labour in production or distribution largely
-affects them all. The dangers of adulteration and dirt
-touch not milk alone, but the manufacture and distribution
-of every commodity. Commercialism has undermined
-honesty. Sham, shoddy and make-believe—these are
-erected in the form of houses, sewn up in the form of suits,
-packed in tins to mock children as food, made the sole
-occupation of millions of quite honest people. If honesty
-of production is to be regained, the great services must
-pass, one by one, under public control, and as each passes
-another opportunity for the amassing of private fortunes
-will pass away and another factor in the Error of Distribution
-will be cancelled. The best services at low charges
-for the public will be accompanied by ample but not excessive
-remuneration of management, a proper reward and
-short hours for the privates of industry, and the accumulation
-of just so much profit in the public treasury as may be
-deemed necessary to provide for new capital, contingencies,
-or for public non-revenue services. Thus, and thus alone,
-can we raise the status of the mass of the people and
-prevent the congestion of wealth in a few hands. There
-can be no proper diffusion of wealth until we have ended
-the system by which good and bad employers use the lives
-of the multitude for their profit and pleasure, now working
-them arduously in exchange for a payment which is an
-unfair remuneration of the service, and anon refusing them
-even the opportunity to do hard labour.</p>
-
-<p>The remarkable success of municipal trading, so far, may
-be measured by the bitterness of the attacks which have
-been made upon it by private capitalists. The recent complaints
-of the railway companies as to the competition of
-municipal tramways entirely dispose of the theory that
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">{263}</a></span>
-private enterprise alone can ensure economical management
-and an efficient production. It is argued that public
-bodies cannot obtain faithful service from their employees,
-and that businesses managed by them are bound to fail
-because the men in command do not understand the interests
-they seek to control or the methods of industry.
-Capital, it is represented, is bound to be wasted, and the
-tax-payer certain to suffer in pocket as part proprietor of an
-unsuccessful business, even as he suffers also as a consumer
-of his own poor product. In reply it is only necessary to
-point out that there is nothing which can be urged against
-a trading municipality which cannot also be urged against
-a limited liability company. In the latter case, as in the
-former, the shareholders know nothing of the details of the
-business they own. In each there is a governing body
-which in its turn usually knows little of the technicalities
-of the business undertaken. Thus the chairman of a
-well-known steel company is a solicitor. The boards of
-directors of the majority of our leading limited companies
-are composed of men who are strangers to the businesses
-they "direct." In practice management devolves upon
-the Managing Director, who is usually a man well versed
-in his trade or profession. We see, therefore, that a
-limited liability company, after all, is in precisely the same
-position as a municipality. The private monopolists are
-compelled to find a practical man to manage their business
-and make profits for them. That is precisely what the
-municipality does. As a matter of fact, some of the
-cleverest men in the United Kingdom are serving municipalities
-as advising and managing engineers, instead of
-hiring themselves out to some board of directors.</p>
-
-<p>What do railway directors, for example, know of railway
-management? Do they travel on their own line, note its
-deficiencies, and repair them? Do they take a practical
-hand in its affairs? No. The practical management is
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">{264}</a></span>
-in the hands of certain paid servants, goods managers,
-general managers, locomotive superintendents, and so
-forth. Is it seriously argued that an individual engineer,
-as locomotive superintendent of a private railway company,
-is more efficient than he would be in the service of say the
-London County Council? If so, how does it come about
-that the railway companies are losing trade while the L.C.C.
-trams are crowded? If so, how is it that to travel on the
-South Eastern Railway is a martyrdom, while to travel on
-a L.C.C. tram is a pleasure?</p>
-
-<p>It will be seen on reflection that the only difference
-between the company and the municipality is this. In the
-case of the company the qualification of the directors is
-merely the owning of stock or shares in the undertaking,
-and the perfunctory votes of a few shareholders. In the
-case of the municipality the "director" has to secure the
-suffrages of a great body of his fellow-citizens. As for
-nepotism, it is far more common in private trade than in
-public life in this country. In nearly every private business
-some inefficient son or cousin or nephew is "provided
-for," to the loss of the undertaking. Competitive industry
-is full of square men carefully planted in round holes by
-their friends and relatives.<span class="fnanchor"><a
-name="Ref_59" id="Ref_59" href="#Foot_59">[59]</a></span> In the municipal service there
-are fewer wasters than are to be found connected with
-great limited liability companies. As for waste of capital,
-it is common in private business, and its loss is as real to
-the community, from an economic point of view, as the loss
-of capital by a municipality. As for negligence and theft,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">{265}</a></span>
-these are common in all kinds of business undertakings,
-but as a general rule audit and control are stricter in
-municipal trading than in the case of private companies.
-As for cheerful service, the reader has but to compare the
-servants of municipal tramways with those of any private
-omnibus company. My own experience is that it is the
-municipal servant who is the more civil and obliging.
-Perhaps it is because the municipality gives him better
-wages, shorter hours, and a decent coat. As for the
-product of the machine, the London County Council gives
-the public longer rides for the same fares while paying its
-men better. Thus the share of the product which once
-went to swell private fortunes is distributed, and by so
-much the Error of Distribution is reduced.</p>
-
-<p>What we have lost through the private ownership of our
-railways may be gauged by the experience of Belgium.
-The Belgian State Railways sell tickets which enable one
-to travel continuously, if desired, for the time specified
-thereon, within the limits of the country. For instance a
-five-day ticket will cost 16s. 6d. second class, or 9s. 6d.
-third class. During the life of one of these tickets it serves
-as a pass, and it is only necessary to show it upon request.
-The total length of the railways is nearly 3,000 miles. All
-that is required to obtain the circular tickets is to present
-at the office an unmounted photograph of small size, which
-is attached to the ticket as a means of identification. When
-the ticket is purchased an extra 4s. is demanded for the
-safe return of the ticket after its term of usefulness expires.
-On the morning after the expiration of the ticket it can
-be delivered at any ticket office along the line, and the 4s.
-extra will be returned. This system enables one to travel
-at a minimum expense. One would like to know why, if
-private trading produces the best results, that travel is
-cheap in Belgium and dear in England. Why cannot a
-Briton, favoured as he is with all the alleged virtues of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">{266}</a></span>
-private enterprise in railway management, obtain a circular
-ticket to travel in the United Kingdom? The benefits of
-the Belgian railways are conspicuous in the matter of the
-housing question. Cheap workmen's tickets are issued at
-rates so low that men are enabled to live at considerable
-distances from their work. How low the fares are may
-be gathered from the following figures:</p>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">WORKMEN'S TICKETS ON BELGIAN STATE RAILWAYS</p>
-
-<table class="gt1" style="max-width:12.5em" summary="gt1-67">
-
-<colgroup>
- <col style="width:40%" />
- <col style="width:60%" />
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="small cent">Distance.</td>
- <td class="small cent">For one Journey daily to and fro. Six Days' Ticket.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="small cent">Miles.</td>
- <td class="small cent"><i>s</i>.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>d</i>.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">3</td>
- <td class="cent">0&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;9¼</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">6</td>
- <td class="cent">1&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">12</td>
- <td class="cent">1&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2½</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">24</td>
- <td class="cent">1&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;7¼</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">31</td>
- <td class="cent">1&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;9¾</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">62</td>
- <td class="cent">2&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;6¼</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>Thus the daily return fare for 31 miles is less than
-3¾d.!</p>
-
-<p>The special workmen's tariff has existed in Belgium
-since 1870, and was at first simply introduced to give
-Belgian manufacturers the command of plenty of cheap
-labour. But the Minister builded bigger than he knew,
-for the cheap fares have caused a profound revolution in
-the position of Belgian workmen. In 1870, 14,223 tickets
-were issued; in 1890, 1,188,415; in 1901, 4,412,723!
-As a result it is estimated that 100,000 industrial workers,
-out of a total number of 900,000, although employed in
-the towns, continue to live in the country, own a patch of
-ground, and, with the higher wages of the town, enjoy the
-inestimable advantages of country life.</p>
-
-<p>It is only through the nationalization of our railways
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">{267}</a></span>
-that we can secure (1) for the travelling public the speed,
-safety and comfort which science has taught us how to command,
-(2) for the railway servants safety and a just share
-of the product of their labour, and (3) for the goods service
-rapid and economical transport. It is nothing less than
-national shame that our railway men receive an average
-wage of only 25s. per week. It is nothing less than
-national folly that our lives are placed at the mercy of
-underpaid and overworked signalmen.</p>
-
-<p>A striking illustration of national treatment as compared
-with the existing private exploitation of our national
-wealth is to be found in the coal trade. Upon coal is built
-the wealth and commerce of the United Kingdom. To it
-we owe our pre-eminence in manufactures and our world-wide
-shipping and commerce. Without it the United
-Kingdom would quickly sink to the position of a third-rate
-power. It might be assumed <i>a priori</i>, therefore, that the
-production and use of coal would be regarded by the
-British Government as a matter of national concern. As a
-matter of incredible fact, so little do we regard coal production
-that we even allow our rare supplies of naval coal
-to remain in private hands and to be sold freely to
-foreigners. The tradition of "liberty" could surely no
-further go.</p>
-
-<p>From first to last private coal production and private
-coal distribution are wasteful of life, material, and labour.
-Of our output of 260,000,000 tons of coal less than
-10,000,000 tons are mined by machinery! In nine-tenths
-of our coal-mines coal-cutting machines are unknown!
-Thus a vast amount of unnecessary hand labour is used in
-a degrading and dangerous occupation. From a national
-point of view it is undesirable that a single unnecessary
-man should descend the mines. Under private exploitation
-coal-mining employment reads thus (I quote
-from the Census of Production Report, 1907):</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">{268}</a></div>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">UNITED KINGDOM COAL-MINES, 1907</p>
-
-<table class="gt2" summary="gt2-22">
-
-<colgroup>
- <col style="width:16%" />
- <col span="7" style="width:12%" />
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
- <td rowspan="2" class="ulin rlin"></td>
- <td colspan="3" class="small cent smc ulin rlin2">Males.</td>
- <td colspan="3" class="small cent smc ulin rlin2">Females.</td>
- <td rowspan="2" class="small cent ulin">Total both sexes.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="small cent ulin rlin">Under 16 years.</td>
- <td class="small cent ulin rlin">Over 16 years.</td>
- <td class="small cent ulin rlin2">Total</td>
- <td class="small cent ulin rlin">Under 16 years.</td>
- <td class="small cent ulin rlin">Over 16 years.</td>
- <td class="small cent ulin rlin2">Total</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">Below Ground</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">43,862</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">625,773</td>
- <td class="numb rlin2">669,635</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">—</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">—</td>
- <td class="numb rlin2">—</td>
- <td class="numb">669,635</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="ulin rlin">Above Ground</td>
- <td class="ulin numb rlin">15,623</td>
- <td class="ulin numb rlin">135,985</td>
- <td class="ulin numb rlin2">151,608</td>
- <td class="ulin numb rlin">643</td>
- <td class="ulin numb rlin">4,681</td>
- <td class="ulin numb rlin2">5,324</td>
- <td class="ulin numb">156,932</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">Total</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">59,485</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">761,758</td>
- <td class="numb rlin2">821,243</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">643</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">4,681</td>
- <td class="numb rlin2">5,324</td>
- <td class="numb">826,567</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>With coal-mining organized with due regard to national
-welfare, there would be no boys, fewer men, and more
-machines in the depths of our mines, while the employment
-of girls and women even in surface work would be
-unthinkable. It is true that private capital may not now,
-as it did in the 'forties, employ young girls and boys under
-ten in its "dens of darkness." But it deliberately sacrifices
-hundreds of lives every year by using inefficient plant and
-by the use of explosives, and still we permit boys to go
-down the pits. In the holocaust in the Rhondda in
-1905 many children perished. Not infrequently three
-generations of a single family may be found working in
-the same colliery. Few people out of the industry know
-that 44,000 boys work in our coal-pits.</p>
-
-<p>With our collieries in our own hands we should not
-only keep boys out of the mines, but use every possible
-mechanical appliance to reduce the number of men
-required to get the coal. We should seek for new
-appliances to displace labour from such an unhealthy and
-dangerous calling. To the same end we should seek to
-prevent the waste of coal in every direction. Shot-firing
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">{269}</a></span>
-would of course go, and after undercutting the coal by
-electrical or hydraulic machinery we should bring it down
-by hydraulic pressure.</p>
-
-<p>Having secured an economical production, in which we
-should no longer commit the crime of killing a thousand
-miners every year, we should distribute the coal cheaply to
-our local authorities, who would act as distributing agents.
-The army of coal merchants and their clerks and the
-thousand and one artful dodges of the retail coal trade
-would disappear, and the public would secure their coal
-economically.</p>
-
-<p>What is the alternative to public ownership of common
-services? The alternative is the rule of the "combine" or
-"trust," for it cannot be too clearly realized that the organization
-of production and distribution must proceed. But
-organization by private hands,—the combination of industrial
-units into great trusts economizing management,
-production and distribution,—cannot safely be tolerated.
-It means the wielding of the chief power in the State by
-monopolists who will use their power for private ends. The
-era of private competition is closing. On every hand capital
-is combining with capital in restraint of competition. Such
-combinations threaten the public welfare in several directions.
-They can make it practically impossible for new
-capital to enter an industry. They can, while economizing
-labour, keep the profits arising from economy in their own
-hands, and build up gigantic fortunes while increasing unemployment.
-They can offer such opposition to trades
-unionism as to wield untrammelled power over their
-employees. They can accentuate that Error of Distribution
-which it should be our chief purpose to modify
-and remove.</p>
-
-<p>Finally, the organization of services under public control
-is the only remedy for unemployment, for unemployment
-is but a phase of poverty. Underpaid or not paid at
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">{270}</a></span>
-all, wrongfully employed or unemployed, overworked or
-underworked, these conditions are the inevitable accompaniment
-of a state of society in which individuals make
-bargains with individuals with a view not to service but to
-profit. To the individual the unemployed workman is a
-pitiable object—that is all. To the nation the unemployed
-workman is something more than pitiable; he is a
-dead loss. Unless physically or mentally unfit, and therefore
-entitled to gratuitous service, he should be employed
-in the scheme of the nation's work. The community
-needs the service of all its members; there is none superfluous,
-none. While yet one uncomfortable house rears
-its head, while yet one person goes ill-clad, while yet one
-rod of area remains unused, there is work to do, but to
-utilize the work of every man economically and wisely in
-the performance of necessary work is only possible through
-organization. We may delude ourselves how we will with
-palliatives; we shall find no remedy for unemployment
-short of the control by the community of the <i>essential</i> work
-of the community. While we leave the direction of labour
-in the hands of a few rich men there will ever be a surplus
-of labour left for our hapless "government" to deal with
-wastefully. While the community resigns its right to
-decide its own destinies by submitting to the rule of the
-rich, there will remain the problem of poverty of which
-unemployment is not the worst part.</p>
-
-<p>Let it be clearly understood that, as things are, there is
-only one real form of government that matters, and that is
-the rule of the employed by the employer. The real
-arbiters of our destinies are not the King's Ministers, but
-the few men who have power of life and death over their
-fellows through the giving or withholding of employment.
-The majesty of the law decides what a man shall <i>not</i> do.
-The majesty of the employer decides what a man shall do.
-The time has come when we must govern ourselves, not
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">{271}</a></span>
-negatively by way of restraint, but positively by way of
-action. It is time that we determined where our roads
-should run and in what fashion and in what employments
-we should engage ourselves. It is time that we took
-stock of the lives and the homes of our people and resolved
-to abolish their poverty by organizing their labour.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_54" id="Foot_54" href="#Ref_54">[54]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-It it a melancholy fact that those employed in the service of waste are
-often better paid than those engaged in useful production. In a recent action
-brought by a cloak-room attendant at a fashionable restaurant it came to light
-that in two cloak-rooms each of four attendants drew as his share of the
-"tips" over £3 per week.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_55" id="Foot_55" href="#Ref_55">[55]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-I hope that no manual workman who reads these lines will deduce from
-what I have written that, as things are now, his labour is necessarily more
-useful than that of the clerk, the lawyer or the shopkeeper. For every unnecessary
-distributing agent referred to above several producing agents could
-be named whose work is useless or harmful in the national economy. This I
-endeavoured to make clear in Chapter 11.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_56" id="Foot_56" href="#Ref_56">[56]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-"Condition of Labour," page 90.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_57" id="Foot_57" href="#Ref_57">[57]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-"Infantile Mortality," by Dr G. F. McCleary.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_58" id="Foot_58" href="#Ref_58">[58]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-"The Hygienics of Milk," "Edinburgh Medical Journal," 1898.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_59" id="Foot_59" href="#Ref_59">[59]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-In a speech delivered to the students of the Crystal Palace Company's
-School of Practical Engineering in 1905 the following advice was given.
-I quote from the newspaper report: "Students should cultivate the art
-of making friends through life. Wherever they were they should try to
-make good friends, for such friends were always useful when one wanted to
-obtain employment. Half the battle was won in applying for a situation if
-the applicant had a friend on the board."</p>
-
-<p class="nodent">Excellent! "Be artful, sweet youth, and let who will be clever."</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">{272}</a></span>
-
-<h3>CHAPTER XIX<br />
-<small>THE AGED POOR</small></h3>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">IN "Riches and Poverty," edition 1905, I passed at this
-point to the consideration of the cruellest phase of
-Poverty, the poverty of the aged. Since 1905 Mr
-Asquith has given us an Old Age Pension Act, and it is
-happily unnecessary to repeat in full the pleas which were
-advanced in these pages in 1905. It is well, however,
-again to record the known facts with regard to poverty in
-old age.</p>
-
-<p>If we did not know our country, and had never encountered
-its poor in the flesh, in what condition could we
-expect to find the aged labourer in view of the terrible
-extent of the Error of Distribution? It is not alone that
-the majority of our people have the slenderest incomes.
-To narrow wages is in most cases added uncertainty of
-employment, the greatest enemy of thrift, while the period
-during which the average workman draws the full rate of
-wages recognized in his trade has ever been short, and tends
-with the increased strenuousness of modern industry to
-grow shorter.</p>
-
-<p>There are about 2,100,000 persons aged 65 and upwards,
-in the United Kingdom, but these are not divided
-between rich and poor in the proportions shown in the
-frontispiece. We have to remember that the poor are
-slain by their poverty. In the "comfortable" and "rich"
-classes the span of life is much greater than in the case
-of the poor. It is impossible to say precisely how the
-2,100,000 persons are divided in point of income, but
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">{273}</a></span>
-probably, some 1,750,000 of them belong to the classes
-whose incomes are below the income tax exemption limit.
-As to a considerable proportion of them we have the
-clearest evidence of grinding poverty.</p>
-
-<p>In 1890 Mr Thomas Burt, M.P., moved for a parliamentary
-return showing the number of paupers of 60
-years of age and upwards, distinguishing indoor from outdoor
-relief. It appears from this return that the total
-number of paupers over 60 years of age in receipt of relief
-on August 1st, 1890 (excluding lunatics in asylums,
-vagrants and persons who were only in receipt of relief
-constructively by reason of relief being given to wives or
-children), was 286,867.</p>
-
-<p>The number of those persons who were in receipt of
-indoor relief, the number in receipt of outdoor relief, and
-their ages as stated, are given in the table on the following
-page.</p>
-
-<p>The notable fact which emerges is that of 286,867
-paupers over 60, as many as 245,687 were over 65. Old
-age as a cause of pauperism is strikingly illustrated by a
-comparison of the two numbers. It is clear that death
-at 64 would mercifully have saved over two hundred
-thousand poor old men and women from the stigma of
-pauperism.</p>
-
-<p>According to the census returns, in 1891, the following
-year, there were 1,372,974 persons (606,960 males and
-766,014 females) at and over the age of 65. On August
-1st, 1890, the date of Mr Burt's return, therefore, there
-were 245,687 persons out of about 1,372,000 persons 65
-years old and upwards or say 1 in 5½ in receipt of poor
-relief.</p>
-
-<p>But Mr Burt's return related to the paupers relieved on
-one day only. What ratio does the number of aged
-paupers relieved in one day bear to the total number
-relieved in the course of the year?</p>
-
-<div class="section">
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">{274}</a></div>
-
-<p class="gap-above2 center">PAUPERS OVER 60 YEARS OF AGE (ENGLAND AND WALES ONLY)<br />
-ON AUGUST 1ST, 1890</p>
-
-<table class="gt2" summary="gt2-23">
-
-<colgroup>
- <col style="width:19%" />
- <col span="9" style="width:9%" />
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
- <td rowspan="2" class="small center ulin rlin">Ages.</td>
- <td colspan="3" class="small center ulin rlin">Indoor.</td>
- <td colspan="3" class="small center ulin rlin">Outdoor.</td>
- <td colspan="3" class="small center ulin">Total Paupers.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="small center ulin rlin">Males.</td>
- <td class="small center ulin rlin">Females.</td>
- <td class="small center ulin rlin">Total.</td>
- <td class="small center ulin rlin">Males.</td>
- <td class="small center ulin rlin">Females.</td>
- <td class="small center ulin rlin">Total.</td>
- <td class="small center ulin rlin">Males.</td>
- <td class="small center ulin rlin">Females.</td>
- <td class="small center ulin">Total.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">65 to 70</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">9,468</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">6,339</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">15,807</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">10,567</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">35,866</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">46,433</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">20,035</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">42,205</td>
- <td class="numb">62,240</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">70 to 75</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">9,953</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">6,856</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">16,809</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">17,633</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">43,266</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">60,899</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">27,586</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">50,122</td>
- <td class="numb">77,708</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">75 to 80</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">7,086</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">5,298</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">12,384</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">16,474</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">32,021</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">48,495</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">23,560</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">37,319</td>
- <td class="numb">60,879</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">80 and over</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">4,949</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">4,803</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">9,752</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">12,456</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">22,652</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">35,108</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">17,405</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">27,455</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">44,860</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Total over 65</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">31,456</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">23,296</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">54,752</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">57,130</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">133,805</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">190,935</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">88,588</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">157,101</td>
- <td class="numb">245,687</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">60 to 65</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">8,018</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">5,354</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">13,372</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">5,959</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">21,849</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">27,808</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">13,977</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">27,203</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">41,180</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Total over 60</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">39,474</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">28,650</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">68,124</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">63,089</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">155,654</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">218,743</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">102,563</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">184,304</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">286,867</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">{275}</a></span>
-This question is answered by a further parliamentary
-return, asked for in 1892 by Mr (afterwards Lord) Ritchie.
-This return shows for England and Wales the number of
-persons of each sex aged 65 years and upwards, and the
-number between 16 and 65, also the number of children
-under 16 years of age, in receipt of relief (<i>a</i>) on January
-1st, 1892, and (<i>b</i>) during the twelve months ended Lady
-Day 1892. As in Mr Burt's return, vagrants and lunatics
-are not included. The return differs from Mr Burt's,
-however, in distinguishing those persons in receipt of
-medical relief only.</p>
-
-<p>This return of Mr Ritchie's showed that while 700,746
-paupers of all ages were in receipt of relief on January 1st,
-1892, the number relieved during the year ended Lady
-Day 1892 was more than twice as great, viz. 1,573,074.<span class="fnanchor"><a
-name="Ref_60" id="Ref_60" href="#Foot_60">[60]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Mr Ritchie's return relates to all paupers, whereas that
-of Mr Burt related to the aged only. It is difficult to say
-which fact in Mr Ritchie's return is the more saddening,
-the relief of 401,904 aged paupers in a single year, or
-that in the same period 553,587 <i>children under sixteen
-were pauperized</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The following table (p. 276) summarizes the facts elicited
-by the return as to the paupers relieved during twelve
-months. (It should be observed that, of the 1,573,074
-persons enumerated, 211,082 were in receipt of medical
-relief only. Of the 401,904 paupers over 65, however, but
-25,447 were in receipt of medical relief only.)</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">{276}</a></div>
-
-<p class="gap-above2 center">PAUPERS RELIEVED IN ENGLAND AND WALES<br />DURING THE
-TWELVE MONTHS ENDING LADY DAY 1892</p>
-
-<table class="gt2" summary="gt2-24">
-
-<colgroup>
- <col style="width:19%" />
- <col span="9" style="width:9%" />
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
- <td rowspan="2" class="small center ulin rlin">Ages.</td>
- <td colspan="3" class="small center ulin rlin">Indoor.</td>
- <td colspan="3" class="small center ulin rlin">Outdoor.</td>
- <td colspan="3" class="small center ulin">Total Paupers.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="small center ulin rlin">Males.</td>
- <td class="small center ulin rlin">Females.</td>
- <td class="small center ulin rlin">Total.</td>
- <td class="small center ulin rlin">Males.</td>
- <td class="small center ulin rlin">Females.</td>
- <td class="small center ulin rlin">Total.</td>
- <td class="small center ulin rlin">Males.</td>
- <td class="small center ulin rlin">Females.</td>
- <td class="small center ulin">Total.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">65 and over</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">68,490</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">45,654</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">114,144</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">95,140</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">192,620</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">287,760</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">163,630</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">238,274</td>
- <td class="numb">401,904</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">16 to 65</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">134,561</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">97,723</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">232,284</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">141,826</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">243,473</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">385,299</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">276,387</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">341,196</td>
- <td class="numb">617,583</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="ulin rlin">Under 16</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">—</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">—</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">111,782</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">—</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">—</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">441,805</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">—</td>
- <td class="numb ulin rlin">—</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">553,587</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Totals</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">—</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">—</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">458,210</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">—</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">—</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,114,864</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">—</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">—</td>
- <td class="numb">1,573,074</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">{277}</a></span>
-Comparing the number of paupers in England and
-Wales, as shown by the figures on p. 276 with the census
-population of 1891, we get:</p>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">TOTAL PAUPERS IN 1891<br />
-COMPARED WITH TOTAL POPULATION<br />(ENGLAND AND WALES ONLY)</p>
-
-<table class="gt1" style="max-width:20em" summary="gt1-68">
-
-<colgroup>
- <col style="width:70%" />
- <col style="width:30%" />
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Total Paupers relieved</td>
- <td class="numb">1,573,074</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Total Population, Census 1891</td>
- <td class="numb">29,000,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Paupers per 1,000</td>
- <td class="numb">54</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>Thus the paupers of all ages relieved in 1891 amounted
-to one in every eighteen of the population of England
-and Wales.</p>
-
-<p>What of those over 65? The facts are:</p>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">PAUPERS AGED 65 AND UPWARDS IN 1891<br />
- COMPARED WITH TOTAL POPULATION OF THAT AGE<br />
- (IN ENGLAND AND WALES ONLY)</p>
-
-<table class="gt1" style="max-width:20em" summary="gt1-69">
-
-<colgroup>
- <col style="width:70%" />
- <col style="width:30%" />
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Total Paupers aged 65 and over</td>
- <td class="numb">401,904</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Total Population aged 65 and over</td>
- <td class="numb">1,372,900</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Paupers per 1,000</td>
- <td class="numb">292</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p><i>Thus of the population of England and Wales aged 65
-and over in 1891, one in every three was in receipt of poor
-relief!</i></p>
-
-<p>In 1899, and again in 1900, the Local Government
-Board published returns relating to aged pauperism in
-those years, and Mr Burt, in 1903, obtained a second
-return in continuation of that of 1891. We are thus
-enabled to compare <i>one-day</i> returns for five different
-periods and this is done in the following table:</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">{278}</a></div>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">PAUPERS, INDOOR AND OUTDOOR, RELIEVED ON CERTAIN DAYS<br />
- DURING A PERIOD OF THIRTEEN YEARS (ENGLAND AND WALES ONLY)</p>
-
-<table class="gt1" style="max-width:25em" summary="gt1-70">
-
-<colgroup>
- <col style="width:27.5%" />
- <col span="2" style="width:22.5%" />
- <col style="width:27.5%" />
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="small">Paupers aged 16 and over.</td>
- <td class="small">Paupers aged 65 and over.</td>
- <td class="small">Ratio of Paupers 65 and over to total population of that age. (Per Cent.)</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>1890 (1 Aug.)</td>
- <td class="cent">Not known</td>
- <td class="cent">245,687</td>
- <td class="cent">18.0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>1892 (1 Jan.)</td>
- <td class="cent">471,568</td>
- <td class="cent">268,397</td>
- <td class="cent">19.4</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>1899 (1 July)</td>
- <td class="cent">469,939</td>
- <td class="cent">278,718</td>
- <td class="cent">18.7</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>1900 (1 Jan.)</td>
- <td class="cent">494,600</td>
- <td class="cent">286,929</td>
- <td class="cent">19.2</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>1903 (1 Sept.)</td>
- <td class="cent">490,513</td>
- <td class="cent">284,265</td>
- <td class="cent">18.3</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p class="small">[<i>Note.</i>—In the Returns for 1892, 1899 and 1900 the numbers include persons
-in receipt of relief constructively by reason of relief being given to wives or
-children. In the Returns for 1890 and 1903 (Mr Burt's returns) such persons
-are excluded.]</p>
-
-<p>Apart from seasonal changes—the number of paupers is,
-of course, always higher in the winter than in the summer—it
-will be seen that the proportion of paupers over 65
-years of age to the total population of that age has not
-varied much. On August 1st, 1890, there were 245,687
-paupers of 65 years and upwards, or 18 per cent. of the
-total population of that age. On September 1st, 1903,
-there were 284,265 paupers of 65 and upwards, or 18.3
-per cent. of the population of that age.</p>
-
-<p>We have only the figures of the 1892 return to throw light
-upon the number of aged paupers relieved during one year.
-If we assume that still the same proportion of aged
-pauperism exists, viz.: 292 in each 1,000, then, in the
-present year, out of a total population in the United
-Kingdom aged 65 and upwards of about 2,100,000, as
-many as 613,200 persons are pauperized.</p>
-
-<p>This number includes both indoor and outdoor paupers,
-and the ratio of indoor and outdoor paupers varies greatly
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">{279}</a></span>
-in different places because of the varying policies of
-Boards of Guardians. But this point need not detain us.
-Outdoor relief may in some cases be injudiciously given
-and in other places most cruelly refused. The fact remains
-that, taking the country as a whole, we have the clearest
-evidence of the existence of 613,000 exceedingly poor aged
-persons.</p>
-
-<p>More important it is to remember that, for one poor
-person who obtains either indoor or outdoor relief, several
-who justly might claim it refuse to avail themselves of the
-tender mercies of the Poor Law. The poor, as a rule,
-will exhaust every penny of their savings and pawn every
-stick of their furniture before they seek the workhouse
-door. Moreover, the amount of genuine charity bestowed
-by the poor upon the poor is wonderful. If, then, there
-are 600,000 aged paupers either inside workhouses or
-receiving outdoor relief in the course of the year, we may
-be quite sure that at least as many more are as urgently
-in need of succour, and obtain it by increasing the poverty
-of their poor friends rather than by seeking from the
-Guardians the loaf, the 2s. 6d., and the insults which too
-often constitute outdoor relief.</p>
-
-<p>The reader will see how probable it is that, of the
-2,100,000 persons aged 65 and upwards now living in the
-United Kingdom, fully 1,750,000 are in a condition of
-poverty which at the worst is pauperism and at the best is
-sore need. Some 613,000 of them are certainly in receipt
-of poor relief during the year. Probably another 600,000
-are only deterred by horror of the workhouse from recourse
-to the Guardians. For the remaining third, as for the
-other two-thirds, the life which has for three-score years
-been a constant struggle with poverty meets its hardest
-and cruellest phase at the close.</p>
-
-<p>A certain number of extraordinary men exist who
-contrive to rear a family upon 30s. a week, and to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">{280}</a></span>
-save enough to provide for their old age. These are
-the few who are not merely themselves of a most frugal
-disposition, but who have chanced to bestow their affections
-upon a girl as abstemious and as thrifty as themselves. A
-pair of such character, blessed with perfect health and not
-more than two or three healthy children, may contrive to
-meet first the fall of earnings after 45 or 50, and finally old
-age itself, with a light heart. That such cases are rare will
-only surprise those who have never had occasion to practise
-thrift. Only a little less rare than the comfortable aged
-workmen are those who contrive to provide for themselves
-a tiny pension for their declining years, through the continuous
-sick pay of friendly society or trade union, or
-through the superannuation benefit of the latter. There
-are only 38 trade unions which provide a superannuation
-benefit, and these have a membership of about 600,000.
-They pay between them about £200,000 a year in old
-age pensions to about 25,000 members. How small this
-number appears when we compare it with the total number
-of persons over 65 in the United Kingdom, which is about
-2,100,000 at the present time!</p>
-
-<p>The value of the practice and experience of Trade
-Unions is very great. Summing them up, I showed in
-"Riches and Poverty," edition 1905, that workmen who
-earn their living, not by the mere exercise of physical
-strength, but by skill, are usually used up by the age of
-60, and not infrequently by the age of 55. The latter age
-may be regarded as the limit of full-earning capacity for
-the average skilled workman. After 55 he is in the
-greatest danger of dismissal when trade becomes slack.
-From a considerable number of inquiries, I arrived at the
-conclusion that the full wage-earning capacity of the
-average skilled workman begins at 25-30 and ends at
-50-55. Before 25-30 a man is inexperienced and not
-valued so highly as after that age. After 50-55 the age
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">{281}</a></span>
-factor again begins to tell, and the workman trembles at
-thought of the future. Each grey hair is a deadly enemy
-to his livelihood.</p>
-
-<p>If the skilled workman can hope to earn the full wages
-of his trade (full wages, it should be remembered, means
-about 40 to 46 weeks' pay per annum in most trades) for
-but 20 to 30 years, what of the men who are hewers of
-wood and drawers of water? The answer is that after 45
-good wages are difficult to obtain, and that for the rest of
-their lives, if not mercifully ended by death, the earnings
-are poor in the summer, and often at zero in the winter.
-If we look at the "occupations" (with what irony the term
-is used in this connexion) of the inmates of workhouses at
-the census of 1901 we find:</p>
-
-<div class="section">
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">{282}</a></div>
-
-<p class="gap-above2 center">WORKHOUSE INMATES (OVER 10 YEARS OF
-AGE)<br />AT CENSUS OF 1901</p>
-
-<table class="gt1" style="max-width:25em" summary="gt1-71">
-
-<colgroup>
- <col style="width:80%" />
- <col style="width:20%" />
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="cent smc">Males</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr><td>Clerks</td><td class="numb">1,079</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Coachmen and grooms</td><td class="numb">1,848</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Carmen, carriers</td><td class="numb">1,546</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Seamen</td><td class="numb">2,052</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Dock labourers</td><td class="numb">2,355</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Agricultural labourers</td><td class="numb">9,469</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Gardeners</td><td class="numb">1,232</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Coal-miners</td><td class="numb">1,570</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Blacksmiths</td><td class="numb">1,381</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Carpenters, joiners</td><td class="numb">2,274</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Bricklayers</td><td class="numb">1,212</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Bricklayers' labourers</td><td class="numb">1,397</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Painters, glaziers</td><td class="numb">2,487</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Cotton operatives</td><td class="numb">1,218</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Tailors</td><td class="numb">1,594</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Shoemakers</td><td class="numb">3,061</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Costermongers</td><td class="numb">1,521</td></tr>
-<tr><td>General labourers</td><td class="numb">22,129</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Other occupations</td><td class="numb">31,287</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Without specified occupations or unoccupied</td><td class="numb ulin">16,151</td></tr>
-<tr><td></td><td class="numb">106,863</td></tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="cent smc">Females</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr><td>Domestic servants</td><td class="numb">15,630</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Charwomen</td><td class="numb">8,176</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Laundry and washing service</td><td class="numb">4,554</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Cotton operatives</td><td class="numb">2,128</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Tailoresses</td><td class="numb">1,245</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Milliners and dressmakers</td><td class="numb">1,642</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Shirtmakers, seamstresses</td><td class="numb">2,814</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Costermongers, hawkers</td><td class="numb">1,159</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Other occupations</td><td class="numb">7,681</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Without specified occupations or unoccupied</td><td class="numb ulin">32,220</td></tr>
-<tr><td></td><td class="numb ulin">77,249</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Total male and female</td><td class="numb ulinb">184,112</td></tr>
-
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The large proportion of "general labourers" is very
-striking, while those describing themselves as dock, bricklayers'
-and general labourers together form one-fourth of
-the whole. It will also be noticed that 9,469 agricultural
-labourers "followed the plough to the workhouse door."
-In passing, I may remark that in the list of female "occupations"
-the presence of 15,000 domestic indoor servants
-should not go unnoticed.</p>
-
-<p>The almost universal approval which the proposal to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">{283}</a></span>
-grant Old Age Pensions elicited would probably have
-carried it to fruition long before the date of the Old Age
-Pension Act, 1908, but for one thing and one thing only—the
-question of cost. It is amusing to note that the
-"Small Committee of Persons Interested in the Controversy
-respecting Old Age Pensions,"<span class="fnanchor"><a
-name="Ref_61" id="Ref_61" href="#Foot_61">[61]</a></span> practically a Committee
-of the Charity Organization Society, who actively opposed
-Old Age Pensions in 1899-1902, placed in the forefront
-of their "objections" the following:</p>
-
-<p>"That the cost would be an insuperable difficulty, for to
-grant 5s. a week at age 65 in respect of the population of
-England and Wales only, would involve about £20,000,000
-per annum for the present recipients, and by 1941 the
-figure would have risen to £36,000,000."</p>
-
-<p>In "Riches and Poverty," edition 1905, I said:</p>
-
-<p>"Our examination of the National Income and the
-manner of its distribution disposes of this objection. The
-question resolves itself into this—Ought the 5,000,000
-persons who have an aggregate income approaching
-£900,000,000 to be taxed to the extent of £15,000,000 to
-provide pensions for the aged poor? If the facts illustrated
-in the frontispiece of this volume could be brought
-home to every elector there would be no doubt whatever
-as to the decision of the country on the subject. With the
-gross assessment to Income Tax at £900,000,000 the
-expenditure of £15,000,000 on a small provision for the
-aged strikes one, not as extravagant, but as an exceedingly
-modest proposal to mitigate the evils of the Error of
-Distribution.</p>
-
-<p>"I have named £15,000,000, and that is all that the
-scheme would cost. It is not a universal superannuation
-scheme that is wanted; I find it difficult to regard very
-seriously the proposal that, for fear of "pauperization"
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">{284}</a></span>
-we should pay every person, rich and poor, aged 65 and
-upwards, the sum of 5s. per week. The idea appears to
-be that if the scheme is not made universal some stigma
-will attach to those who are pensioned. Surely this is an
-exaggerated view. The majority of those aged 65 are
-poor, just as the majority of the whole population are poor.
-If there is a stigma in such a case it attaches to those who
-go to form the top part of my diagram—to those whose
-absorption of an undue share of the national income connotes
-poverty for millions at the other end of the scale.</p>
-
-<p>"My own feeling is that we should make the pension, like
-the superannuation benefit of Trades Unions, <i>claimable</i> by
-those aged 65 and upwards who have not an income of
-more than £1 a week or property valued at more than
-£250. We should then probably have to provide for about
-1,400,000 to 1,500,000 pensioners, at a cost of £18,000,000
-to £20,000,000. Administration would cost about £500,000
-and we should save about £4,000,000 in poor rates. Thus
-the net addition to taxation would be about £15,000,000."</p>
-
-<p>Mr Asquith's Old Age Pensions Act of 1908 made
-the receipt of an Old Age Pension a citizen right, claimable
-by every person filling certain statutory conditions. These
-conditions are:—</p>
-
-<div class="subpara">
-
-<p>(1) That the person must have attained the age
-of 70.</p>
-
-<p>(2) That he is a British subject.</p>
-
-<p>(3) That his yearly income does not exceed £31, 10s.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The receipt of poor relief (medical relief excepted),
-habitual idleness, lunacy or conviction for crime, are
-statutory disqualifications.</p>
-
-<p>The amount of the pension varies from 1s. to 5s. per
-week according to the following sliding scale:</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">{285}</a></div>
-
-<table class="gt1" style="max-width:27.5em" summary="gt1-72">
-
-<colgroup>
- <col style="width:15%" />
- <col style="width:17.5%" />
- <col style="width:32.5%" />
- <col style="width:17.5%" />
- <col style="width:17.5%" />
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="4" class="small cent">Income of Pensioner.</td>
- <td class="small cent">Rate of Pension per Week.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="cent"><i>£&nbsp;&nbsp;s.&nbsp;&nbsp;d.</i></td>
- <td class="cent"><i>s.&nbsp;&nbsp;d.</i></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="2">Not exceeding</td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="cent">21&nbsp;&nbsp;0&nbsp;&nbsp;0</td>
- <td class="cent">5&nbsp;&nbsp;0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="cent"><i>£&nbsp;&nbsp;s.&nbsp;&nbsp;d.</i></td>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Exceeds</td>
- <td class="cent">21&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;0&nbsp;&nbsp;0</td>
- <td class="cent">but does not exceed</td>
- <td class="cent">23&nbsp;&nbsp;12&nbsp;&nbsp;6</td>
- <td class="cent">4&nbsp;&nbsp;0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td class="cent">23&nbsp;&nbsp;12&nbsp;&nbsp;6</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td class="cent">26&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;5&nbsp;&nbsp;0</td>
- <td class="cent">3&nbsp;&nbsp;0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td class="cent">26&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;5&nbsp;&nbsp;0</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td class="cent">28&nbsp;&nbsp;17&nbsp;&nbsp;6</td>
- <td class="cent">2&nbsp;&nbsp;0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td class="cent">28&nbsp;&nbsp;17&nbsp;&nbsp;6</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td class="cent">31&nbsp;&nbsp;10&nbsp;&nbsp;0</td>
- <td class="cent">1&nbsp;&nbsp;0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td class="cent">31&nbsp;&nbsp;10&nbsp;&nbsp;0</td>
- <td class="cent"></td>
- <td class="cent"></td>
- <td class="cent small">No pension.</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>It was expressly stated in the Act that the disqualification
-of those who had been in receipt of poor relief was
-to cease on December 31st, 1910, and the Budget of
-1910-11 accordingly made provision for the payment of
-the pensions to such paupers after that date.</p>
-
-<p>The following statistics show the payments under the
-Act at December 31st, 1909 (the Act having come into
-force on January 1st, 1909):</p>
-
-<p class="gap-above2 center">THE FIRST YEAR'S WORKING OF<br />
-MR ASQUITH'S OLD AGE PENSION ACT</p>
-
-<table class="gt1" style="max-width:20em" summary="gt1-73">
-
-<colgroup>
- <col span="3" style="width:33.3%" />
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td colspan="2" class="small cent">Position at December 31st, 1909.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="small cent">Number of Pensioners.</td>
- <td class="small cent">Amount Payable per Annum.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>England</td>
- <td class="numb">405,755</td>
- <td class="numb">£5,043,332</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Scotland</td>
- <td class="numb">76,037</td>
- <td class="numb">966,370</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Wales</td>
- <td class="numb">26,972</td>
- <td class="numb">337,254</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Ireland</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">183,976</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">2,335,764</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="numb ulinb">692,740</td>
- <td class="numb ulinb">£8,682,720</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>It was a defect in the Act that the possession of a
-certain amount of property, as well as the possession of a
-certain income, was not made the disqualification that I
-suggested it ought to be. A man with £500 of property,
-yielding an income of £20 a year, ought <i>not</i> to be
-qualified for an Old Age Pension.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">{286}</a></span>
-It is notable that, in introducing his Budget of 1908,
-Mr Asquith, in expounding his scheme of pensions, estimated
-that it would cost not more than £6,000,000 a
-year. As we have seen, the cost has proved to be very
-much greater. It is fortunate that the under-estimation
-was made. If Parliament had known that the cost would
-be £9,000,000 instead of £6,000,000 Old Age Pensions
-might not now be law, so slowly is the lesson learned that,
-to a nation of 44,000,000 people, with an aggregate income
-of nearly £2,000,000,000, an expenditure of £9,000,000
-is a small matter, relatively as small as though the reader
-expended a few shillings.</p>
-
-<p>But it is, of course, a misnomer to speak of "expenditure"
-in this connexion. The National Dividend is not
-diminished by the transfer of £9,000,000 from the well-to-do
-to the poor. No more is <i>spent</i> through the transfer;
-all that takes place is a transfer of the power of call for
-commodities, and a consequent change of the <i>form</i> of a
-certain part of the National Dividend, not a change of its
-<i>size</i>. The production of luxuries is slightly—very slightly—stemmed;
-the production of necessaries is slightly—very
-slightly—increased.</p>
-
-<p>Mr Asquith's valuable Act needs to be amended by the
-reduction of the pensionable age to 65 and to be supplemented
-by a State scheme for sickness and invalidity
-insurance. (A minor defect which has revealed itself is
-the continued disqualification of a man whose wife is in
-receipt of relief.) The case for the amendment has been
-already discussed in these pages; the case for invalidity
-insurance is that old age is not the only determinant of
-dire poverty for the wage earner. The facts adduced in
-Chapter 10 are eloquent of the need for succour which
-exists in tens of thousands of cases.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_60" id="Foot_60" href="#Ref_60">[60]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-The Royal Commission on the Poor Laws called for a similar "year
-count" of paupers for 1907. It revealed that in that year of good trade
-1,709,436 persons were relieved by the Guardians in England and Wales.
-This is 47.7 per 1,000 of the population. The later count fully confirms that
-of 1892.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_61" id="Foot_61" href="#Ref_61">[61]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-This description is their own. See "Old Age Pensions" (Macmillan &amp;
-Co.) Introduction.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">{287}</a></span>
-
-<h3>CHAPTER XX<br />
-<small>ADAM SMITH'S FIRST MAXIM OF TAXATION</small></h3>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">OUR next task shall be to examine the question of
-taxation in relation to the Error of Distribution.</p>
-
-<p>It is over one hundred and thirty years since Adam
-Smith penned his famous maxims of taxation, the first and
-most important of which ran as follows:</p>
-
-<p>"The subjects of every state ought to contribute towards
-the support of the government as nearly as possible in
-proportion to their respective abilities; that is, in proportion
-to the revenue which they respectively enjoy under
-the protection of the state."</p>
-
-<p>The first part of the proposition, which lays it down that
-contribution towards the support of government should be
-in proportion to ability, is interpreted by the second part
-to mean that contribution should be in proportion to income.
-The second half of the maxim is therefore subversive
-of the first.</p>
-
-<p>Let us compare the ability to bear taxation of three
-persons whose respective incomes are: A £50; B £500;
-and C £10,000. If we accept Adam Smith's explanation of
-his own maxim, we should apply taxation in proportion to
-income. Note the effect of a tax of 10 per cent. upon the
-three incomes:</p>
-
-<table class="gt1" style="max-width:20em" summary="gt1-74">
-
-<colgroup>
- <col style="width:9%" />
- <col style="width:22%" />
- <col style="width:38%" />
- <col style="width:9%" />
- <col style="width:22%" />
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
- <td>A</td>
- <td class="numb">£50</td>
- <td class="cent">less 10 per cent.</td>
- <td class="cent">=</td>
- <td class="numb">£45</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>B</td>
- <td class="numb">500</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td class="cent">=</td>
- <td class="numb">450</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>C</td>
- <td class="numb">10,000</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td class="cent">=</td>
- <td class="numb">9,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">{288}</a></span>
-Most clearly we see that to A, with £1 a week, the loss
-of 10 per cent., or five week's income, is a most serious
-matter—a crushing burden. With £500 per annum, however,
-B, after the loss of 10 per cent. of his income, is still
-left with a revenue ten times as great as that of A. The
-taxation in B's case is serious but not overwhelming. C,
-after the loss by taxation of one-tenth of his income, is
-left with the handsome income of £9,000 a year, a sum
-which is more than sufficient to sustain him in luxury.
-The loss in the third case is clearly a shadowy one; a
-rich man has been rendered not quite so rich.</p>
-
-<p>Thus, by taxing in proportion to income, we impose
-upon the poor man a crushing burden; upon the small
-income a serious burden; upon the large income a burden
-scarcely to be felt.</p>
-
-<p>Obviously, then, the second part of Adam Smith's maxim
-is not a true illustration of the doctrine of equality of sacrifice
-which is involved in the use of the term "ability."</p>
-
-<p>This has been partially recognized in our present system
-of taxation. Those with incomes exceeding £160 per
-annum are made to pay a tax which is not imposed upon
-those with less than that income. Further, the income
-tax is roughly graduated. A graduated death duty is
-also imposed in order to obtain a larger contribution from
-the rich than from the poor.</p>
-
-<p>I now urge that the doctrine of equality of sacrifice,
-which has already been partially recognized, should be
-considered in relation to all the facts treated in Book I.</p>
-
-<p>We have seen that the great mass of the people, who do
-the greater part of the work of the nation, who produce
-the material commodities without which life could not be
-supported, receive so small a share of the total product that
-while 39,000,000 persons enjoy an income of £911,000,000,
-about 5,500,000 persons receive an income of £930,000,000.
-If then, we had to raise £200,000,000 per annum by taxation
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">{289}</a></span>
-and were to raise the whole from the second class, the
-result would be:</p>
-
-<table class="gt1" style="max-width:25em" summary="gt1-75">
-
-<colgroup>
- <col style="width:65%" />
- <col style="width:35%" />
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
- <td>5,500,000 would have £930,000,000,</td>
- <td class="numb">£730,000,000 or</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;less £200,000,000</td>
- <td class="numb">£133 per head.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td><br /></td>
- <td class="numb"></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>39,000,000 would have</td>
- <td class="numb">£911,000,000 or</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="numb">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;23 per head.</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>The Error of Distribution is so great that, were the
-whole taxation levied upon those above the line of £160
-per annum, the comfortable and rich classes would still be
-left about six times as rich as those below that line.</p>
-
-<p>An unanswerable case is thus made out for the repeal
-of the whole of the customs duties on tea, coffee, cocoa,
-dried fruits and sugar, which bear almost entirely upon the
-poorer classes. A heavy tax on tea or sugar is a matter
-of indifference to the rich; to the poor it means a considerable
-privation. Our indirect food taxes are a denial
-of the doctrine of ability.</p>
-
-<p>The customs and excise duties on alcoholic liquors must
-of course remain on moral grounds, and the tobacco duty
-might well remain for the present. We should thus tax
-the working classes through their luxuries alone, while the
-workman who dispensed with drink and smoked in moderation
-would be practically untaxed. The general recognition
-of this fact, combined with the cheapening of tea, coffee and
-cocoa, would not be without its effect upon the nation's
-drink bill, and in so far as its recognition reduced our
-revenue we could count it gain.</p>
-
-<p>Reverting to the facts illustrated in the frontispiece, the
-effect of the abolition of the food duties would be slight in
-relation to the extraordinary inequalities of income, but
-a just and certain step, nevertheless, in the direction of
-amelioration. Just as a small burden is great to a narrow
-income, so a small relief is a great boon, and fully 10,000,000
-of our people would feel in an appreciable degree the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">{290}</a></span>
-removal of the food duties. The step has been urged by
-reformers for many years; considered in relation to the
-Error of Distribution it is seen to be an exceedingly small
-measure of justice, which needs little rhetoric to enforce its
-claims.</p>
-
-<p>To proceed with the application of the doctrine of ability
-to taxation in view of the facts as to the National Income,
-we come to the consideration of the Income Tax and
-Death Duties.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">{291}</a></span>
-
-<h3>CHAPTER XXI<br />
-<small>THE MAIN INSTRUMENT OF TAXATION</small></h3>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">THROUGH the income tax we go directly to the
-person upon whom we desire to levy taxation, and
-take from him such portion of his earnings or other profits
-as we consider to be his just contribution to the revenue.
-Through the income tax we can, if we care to do so,
-cause each subject of the State to contribute towards the
-expenses of government according to his ability.</p>
-
-<p>It is the purpose of this chapter to show that the income
-tax could be so amended that, so far from being counted
-an obnoxious impost, it would be regarded as a just and
-proper instrument of taxation.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p>It is generally believed that the British Income Tax was
-originated by Pitt in 1798. As a matter of fact, however,
-the direct taxation of incomes in the United Kingdom
-dates back many hundreds of years. For the purposes of
-this work, I do not propose to trace the history of the
-subject to an earlier date than 1692.</p>
-
-<p>The Property and Income Tax imposed in that year
-is commonly known as the "Land-Tax," and this name
-has given rise to a great deal of misunderstanding.</p>
-
-<p>In their twenty-eighth report (1885) the Commissioners
-of Inland Revenue, in giving a detailed description of the
-Land-Tax of 1692, point out that the impost "was in fact
-a Property and Income Tax, and moreover that personal
-estate was quite as much the object of the charge as land."
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">{292}</a></span>
-So few people are aware of these facts that it may be
-well to set out the actual provisions of the Act, as described
-by the Commissioners:</p>
-
-<div class="small">
-
-<p>It (the Act of 1692) is entitled "An Act for granting to
-their Majesties an aid of four shillings in the pound for one year
-for carrying on a vigorous war against France"; and the second
-section enacts, "That every person, body politic and corporate,
-etc., having any estate in ready monies or in any debts owing
-to them or having any estate in goods, wares, merchandise, or
-other chattels, or personal estate whatsoever within this realm
-or without shall pay yield and pay unto their Majesties four
-shillings in the pound according to the true yearly value
-thereof; that is to say, for every hundred pounds of such
-ready money and debts, and for every hundred pounds' worth
-of such goods, wares, etc., or other personal estate the sum of
-four and twenty shillings."</p>
-
-<p>The third section imposes a duty of four shillings in the pound
-upon the profits and salaries of all persons having any office or
-employment of profit (except naval and military officers).</p>
-
-<p>And then the fourth section proceeds thus, "And to the end a
-further aid and supply for their Majesties' occasions may be raised
-by a charge upon all lands, tenements, and hereditaments with as
-much equality and indifferency as is possible by an equal
-pound rate of four shillings for every twenty shillings of the
-true yearly value, be it enacted that all manors, messuages,
-lands and tenements, and all quarries, mines, etc., tithes, tolls,
-etc., and all hereditaments, of what nature soever they be, shall
-be charged with the sum of four shillings for every twenty
-shillings of the full yearly value."</p>
-
-<p>The rules for assessments follow the same order, and show
-that the charge on personal estate was as much to be attended
-to as that on land. Thus the assessors are directed in the first
-place to bring in certificates of the names of every person
-dwelling within their districts, "and of the substance and
-values of them in ready money, goods, chattels, and other
-personal estate." Every person is to be rated for personal
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">{293}</a></span>
-estate at the place where he shall reside, and, if not a
-householder, at the place where he resides at the execution of
-the Act, or if out of the realm, where he was last resident;
-"and for the better discovery of personal estates," every householder
-is to give an account of his lodgers.</p>
-
-<p>But although the Act of 1692 was the first of those so-called
-Land-Tax Acts, it was not until 1697 that the tax was imposed
-precisely in the form which has been preserved to the present
-day, that is to say, as a fixed sum for the whole kingdom, and
-to be raised in quotas specified in the Act for each county,
-city or borough therein named. That Act was renewed every
-year, with scarcely any difference in its provisions as to the
-mode of assessment, and although the amounts charged upon
-the counties, etc., varied according to the total sum required
-from the kingdom, they were always fixed in due proportions to
-the original quotas. The last annual Act, so far as land was
-concerned, was passed in 1797.</p>
-
-<p>Now it is a remarkable circumstance that these Acts of 1697
-and 1797 appear to mark, more strongly than before, the taxation
-of personal estate as the primary object of the law.</p>
-
-<p>After the clauses imposing upon goods, wares, merchandise,
-etc., and upon pensions and offices, the fixed charge of four
-shillings in the pound towards raising the quotas, that relating
-to land appears to treat it as a subsidiary contributor, as it
-were, and for the purpose of making up the sum due to the
-Exchequer after exhausting the other resources. The words
-are: "And to the end the full and entire sums by this Act
-charged upon the several counties, etc., may be fully and completely
-raised and paid; be it enacted, that all lands, etc.,
-shall be charged by a pound rate towards the said several sums
-by this Act imposed."</p>
-
-<p>How the duty on personal estate was levied, or what was its
-proportion in the quotas, we have no means of knowing. All
-that we do know is that in Mr Pitt's time it had dwindled nearly
-to nothing; and that the tax annually voted under the name
-of land tax had become a land tax in reality. Thus we find
-in an assessment for the Tower Division in 1799 that the sum
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">{294}</a></span>
-charged for personal estate was only £227, while the charge
-for lands, etc., is £29,964; and in one of the few accounts of
-later transactions which remain to us, that for the year 1823,
-we are presented with a return of £5,416, 10s. 0d. as the
-ludicrous result of a tax at one per cent. on the capital value
-of the personalty of Great Britain.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The Commissioners go on to remark that it seems
-almost incredible that year after year an Act should have
-been passed containing the most minute directions for the
-assessment of personal estate, and yet that nothing which
-could be called an assessment should have been made.
-They suggest that "Perhaps the explanation may be
-found in another peculiarity in the administration of this
-tax, the tendency to regard it as a <i>fixed charge</i> upon the
-subjects on which it was originally levied. That this has
-been the case with land, both before and since 1797, is
-well known, and if the same rule was applied to personalty
-it is easy to conceive that, as the persons originally
-charged moved out of the parish, or became destitute, or
-otherwise unassessable, their proportion of the tax was
-shifted to the land as the readiest means of collecting it."</p>
-
-<p>A certain amount of personalty was still assessed in the
-time of Pitt, however, as may be gathered from the
-following figures from the roll of the Tower Division.</p>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">"LAND-TAX." ABSTRACT OF DUPLICATES<br />
-FOR THE TOWER DIVISION</p>
-
-<table class="gt2" summary="gt2-25">
-
-<colgroup>
- <col span="6" style="width:16.66%" />
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
- <td rowspan="2" class="cent ulin rlin">Charge for the year 1693.<br />4s. Aid.</td>
- <td rowspan="2" class="cent ulin rlin">Quotas for the respective years 1698 and 1699,
- under 9 &amp; 10 and 10 &amp; 11 William III.<br />
- 3s. Aid.</td>
- <td rowspan="2" class="cent ulin rlin">Quota for 1702.</td>
- <td colspan="3" class="cent ulin">Quota for 1799.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent ulin rlin">Lands, etc.</td>
- <td class="cent ulin rlin">Personal Estate.</td>
- <td class="cent ulin">Pensions and Offices.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin"><i>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;£&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;s.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;d.</i></td>
- <td class="cent rlin"><i>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;£&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;s.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;d.</i></td>
- <td class="cent rlin"><i>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;£&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;s.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;d.</i></td>
- <td class="cent rlin"><i>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;£&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;s.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;d.</i></td>
- <td class="cent rlin"><i>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;£&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;s.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;d.</i></td>
- <td class="cent "><i>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;£&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;s.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;d.</i></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">34,057&nbsp;&nbsp;5&nbsp;&nbsp;5</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">25,542&nbsp;&nbsp;19&nbsp;&nbsp;0¾</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">34,041&nbsp;&nbsp;12&nbsp;&nbsp;10</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">29,964&nbsp;&nbsp;15&nbsp;&nbsp;0½</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">227&nbsp;&nbsp;15&nbsp;&nbsp;5</td>
- <td class="cent ">2,320&nbsp;&nbsp;2&nbsp;&nbsp;4½</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">{295}</a></span>
-This specimen also shows how the original assessments
-of 1692 were preserved until the time when, in 1798, over
-one hundred years after, Pitt made provisions for the
-redemption of the old tax, and simultaneously introduced
-a new Property and Income Tax based upon better
-assessments.</p>
-
-<p>Unaware of the real nature of the so-called "Land-Tax"
-and as it would also appear, of the present
-"Property and Income Tax," it is often suggested by
-fiscal reformers that the old Land-Tax of 1692 should be
-reimposed upon present land revenues. Those who make
-the suggestion do not realize that what they desire has
-already been done and is actually in practice at this
-moment.</p>
-
-<p>The old "Land-Tax" and the present "Income" Tax
-thus compare:—</p>
-
-<div class="section">
-
-<table class="multi" summary="multi-1">
-
- <colgroup>
- <col span="2" style="width:48%" />
- </colgroup>
-
-<tr>
- <th>The "Land-Tax" of 1692.</th>
- <th>The Present "Property and Income" Tax.</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Section 2: Every Person ... having
- any estate in ready monies or in any
- debts owing to them or having any
- estate in goods, wares, merchandise
- or other chattels, or personal estate
- whatsoever ... shall yield and pay
- four shillings in the pound according
- to the true yearly value thereof.</td>
- <td>Schedule D taxes the profits
- of trades and professions
- and from various forms of
- personal property.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Section 3: All persons holding any
- public office or employment of profit
- (except military and naval officers)
- and their clerks, etc., shall pay four
- shillings in the pound.</td>
- <td>Schedule E taxes the salaries
- of all who hold public
- offices or employments,
- whether they be officials
- or clerks.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Section 4: And to the End, a further
- aid and supply for their Majesties'
- occasions may be raised by a
- charge upon all lands, tenements
- and hereditaments ... by an equal
- pound rate of four shillings ... be
- it enacted that all manors, messuages,
- lands and tenements, and
- all quarries, mines, etc., tithes, tolls,
- etc. ... shall be charged with the
- sum of four shillings for every
- twenty shillings of the full yearly
- value.</td>
- <td>Schedule A taxes the income
- from "all manors, messuages,
- lands and tenements, and all quarries,
- mines, etc., tithes, tolls,
- etc."</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">{296}</a></span>
-It is also remarkable that whereas Land and Houses are
-placed in Schedule A, the first branch of our Income Tax,
-the so-called Land-Tax of 1692 placed lands and houses
-in its third category. The Act of 1692, moreover, as we
-have seen, made the taxation of personalty its first aim,
-and brought in a charge on land, houses and other fixed
-property to make up any deficiency.</p>
-
-<p>With our modern Income Tax, fortunately, personalty
-does not escape as it seems to have done in the seventeenth
-and eighteenth centuries, but it is still true that a great
-deal of personal income evades taxation, while it is
-impossible for fixed property to elude the assessors.</p>
-
-<p>I have taken the trouble to set out the foregoing details
-at some length because the fact that Schedule A of the
-Income Tax, like Section 4 of the Act of 1692, is a Land-Tax,
-appears to have escaped the attention of many of
-those who desire to tax the unearned increment which so
-often accrues to the owners of land. At the present
-moment, the owners of land contribute 14 pence in the
-pound of its annual revenue to Imperial Taxation under
-Schedule A. In the case of a small landowner with an
-income of £750 a year that may be enough. In the
-case of a great landowner with a rent roll of £20,000 a
-year it is certainly too little. If, then, we would justly
-tax the income of those who derive unearned revenue
-from land, we must graduate our income tax. In doing
-so, fortunately, we shall not tax merely one form of unearned
-increment. The conclusive proof of unearned
-income is the possession of a great income. Whether it
-arises from rent, or from interest, or from the direct
-taxation of labour is a secondary consideration. Whether
-its owner has bought broad acres with profits drawn from
-the exertions of others, or whether he has bought railway
-stock or foreign investments with the proceeds of the sale
-of broad acres, we need not inquire. The great income,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">{297}</a></span>
-the fact that the individual who receives it is one of the
-small number of people who enjoy one-third of the entire
-income of the country, is sufficient proof of "ability" to
-contribute generously to the revenues of what should be
-the rich government of a rich State. And it is difficult to
-imagine a rich man so wanting in that social instinct
-which we call patriotism that, when once his extraordinary
-position in relation to his fellows is made clear to him,
-he will not consent freely to make such contribution.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p>The Income Tax, as it now exists, is an instrument of
-extraordinary clumsiness and complexity. An intelligent
-foreigner, coming freshly to the examination of its curious
-provisions, would be driven to the conclusion that a junta
-of bureaucrats, intent upon hiding the mysteries of statecraft
-from the knowledge of the vulgar, had of set purpose
-wrapped its machinery and intention in every device of
-obscurement which perverted ingenuity could suggest.</p>
-
-<p>In "Riches and Poverty," edition 1905, I gave an
-account of the Income Tax as it then stood. I reproduce
-the account in order to make the subsequent alterations
-clearer.</p>
-
-<p>Incomes, from whatever source arising, which do not
-exceed £160 per annum, are entirely exempt from the tax.</p>
-
-<p>Incomes between £160 and £700 are allowed certain
-abatements which are equivalent to a rough graduation of
-the tax. The following table shows the nature of the
-abatements:—</p>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">INCOME TAX ABATEMENTS</p>
-
-<table class="gt1" style="max-width:20em" summary="gt1-76">
-
-<colgroup>
- <col style="width:30%" />
- <col style="width:15%" />
- <col style="width:15%" />
- <col style="width:15%" />
- <col style="width:25%" />
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="4" class="small cent">Amount of Annual income.</td>
- <td class="small cent">Abatement.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">Between</td>
- <td class="numb">£160</td>
- <td class="cent">and</td>
- <td class="numb">£400</td>
- <td class="numb">£160</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td class="numb">400</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td class="numb">500</td>
- <td class="numb">150</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td class="numb">500</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td class="numb">600</td>
- <td class="numb">120</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td class="numb">600</td>
- <td class="cent">"</td>
- <td class="numb">700</td>
- <td class="numb">70</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">{298}</a></span>
-The following table shows how the abatements graduate
-the Income Tax when the nominal rate of tax is 1s. in
-the £.</p>
-
-<div class="section">
-
-<p class="gap-above2 center">INCOME TAX. EFFECT OF THE ABATEMENTS<br />
-ON INCOME TAX AT 1s.</p>
-
-<table class="gt1" style="max-width:25em" summary="gt1-77">
-
-<colgroup>
- <col span="4" style="width:25%" />
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent small">Income.</td>
- <td class="cent small">Abatement Allowed.</td>
- <td class="cent small">Income after Abatement.</td>
- <td class="cent small">Actual Rate of Taxation when the Tax is 1s. in the £.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent small">£</td>
- <td class="cent small">£</td>
- <td class="cent small">£</td>
- <td class="cent small">Pence in the £</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">180</td>
- <td class="cent">160</td>
- <td class="cent">20</td>
- <td class="cent">1.33</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">240</td>
- <td class="cent">160</td>
- <td class="cent">80</td>
- <td class="cent">4.00</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">300</td>
- <td class="cent">160</td>
- <td class="cent">140</td>
- <td class="cent">5.60</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">400</td>
- <td class="cent">160</td>
- <td class="cent">240</td>
- <td class="cent">7.20</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">440</td>
- <td class="cent">150</td>
- <td class="cent">290</td>
- <td class="cent">7.90</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">500</td>
- <td class="cent">150</td>
- <td class="cent">350</td>
- <td class="cent">8.40</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">540</td>
- <td class="cent">120</td>
- <td class="cent">420</td>
- <td class="cent">9.33</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">600</td>
- <td class="cent">120</td>
- <td class="cent">480</td>
- <td class="cent">9.60</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">640</td>
- <td class="cent">70</td>
- <td class="cent">570</td>
- <td class="cent">10.68</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">700</td>
- <td class="cent">70</td>
- <td class="cent">630</td>
- <td class="cent">10.80</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">740</td>
- <td class="cent">nil</td>
- <td class="cent">740</td>
- <td class="cent">12.00</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Thus, when the Income Tax is at 1s., an income of £180
-pays less than 1½d. in the £, an income of £300 pays less
-than 6d. an income of £500 pays less than 8½d., and an
-income of £700 pays less than 11d.</p>
-
-<p>I now give an explanation of the various Schedules
-under which the tax is collected. The abatements, it
-should be understood, refer to all the Schedules.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p>Schedule A, sometimes called Property Tax or Landlords'
-Tax, is assessed upon the rents received by the
-owners of lands, houses, etc. It is directly assessed upon
-occupiers, who, if they are tenants, deduct the tax from
-their next payment of rent. Thus it is a Land and House
-Tax which the landowner or houseowner cannot possibly
-escape.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">{299}</a></span>
-It should also be explained that the term "Lands," as
-used in connexion with Schedule A, refers to Agricultural
-lands, and the farm-houses and farm buildings, etc., thereon.
-The term "Houses" refers to houses, business premises,
-etc., together with the gardens, pleasure grounds or yards
-upon which they stand.</p>
-
-<p>Owners of agricultural lands are allowed to deduct for
-repairs one-eighth of the rent. Owners of houses and
-other buildings are allowed to deduct for repairs one-sixth
-of the rent.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p>Schedule B covers profits from the <i>occupation</i> of lands,
-and taxes the incomes of farmers, nurserymen, and market
-gardeners.</p>
-
-<p>Farmers' profits (unless farmers elect to be dealt with
-under Schedule D) are assumed to be one-third of the
-annual rent of their farms. Thus a farmer paying a rent
-of £480 or less is not subject to income tax, as one-third
-of £480 is £160, and incomes of £160 or less are not
-taxable. Nurserymen and market gardeners, however, are
-taxed on their profits in the same way as in the case of
-other business men.</p>
-
-<p>The chief point to which I direct attention is that very
-few farmers pay income tax at all.</p>
-
-<p>The arbitrary assessment of farmers at one-third the
-rent of their farms is an absurdity. A farmer paying a
-rental of £480 is usually a well-to-do man, but he escapes
-income tax because his income is assessed as £160. A
-farmer who pays a rental of £600 and who in an average
-year probably makes at least £400 a year, is, on the one-third
-basis, assessed at £200. The income tax of farmers
-is for the most part paid for them by the industrial classes,
-who are taxed <i>pro tanto</i> to relieve agriculture.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">{300}</a></span>
-Schedule C deals with profits from British, Indian,
-Colonial and Foreign Government Securities. So far as
-possible these profits are taxed "at the source." Thus the
-Bank of England, in paying Consols dividend, deducts
-income tax, and leaves the fundholder to claim repayment
-afterwards if his income should be less than £160 per
-annum.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p>We now come to that important branch of the tax
-known as Schedule D.</p>
-
-<p>The profits included in this Schedule consist of those
-from trade and industry, from professions, from all employments
-or vocations except public offices, from oversea
-investments which are not Government securities, and
-from interest on loans secured on the Public Rates, etc.</p>
-
-<p>In the case of income from trade, assessments are made
-upon the average profits of the past three years. Let us
-suppose that a merchant in the period, 1893-1902, made
-the following profits: 1893, £1,100; 1894, £900;
-1895, £1,200; 1896, £1,300; 1897, £1,400; 1898,
-£1,400; 1899, £1,500; 1900, £1,600; 1901, £1,200;
-1902, £1,200; 1903, £1,500; 1904, £1,600. The
-table on page 301 shows how the profits are assessed
-under Schedule D.</p>
-
-<p>Thus, while between 1893 and 1904, the income was in
-two years above £1,500, the assessment never rose above
-£1,500. The result, it will be seen, is to deprive the
-State of the advantage of the maximum income.</p>
-
-<p>It follows that the assessments under Schedule D, from
-this cause alone, are always something less than the actual
-income of the persons assessed.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div class="section">
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">{301}</a></div>
-
-<p class="gap-above2 center">ILLUSTRATION OF THE PRINCIPLE OF<br />
-AVERAGING UNDER SCHEDULE D</p>
-
-<table class="gt2" style="max-width:30em" summary="gt2-26">
-
-<colgroup>
- <col span="2" style="width:10%" />
- <col span="2" style="width:20%" />
- <col style="width:40%" />
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="cent ulin rlin">Profits.</td>
- <td colspan="3" class="cent ulin">Assessment.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent ulin rlin">Year.</td>
- <td class="cent ulin rlin">Amount.</td>
- <td class="cent ulin rlin">Year of Assessment.</td>
- <td class="cent ulin rlin">Amount of Assessment.</td>
- <td class="cent ulin">Remarks.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin"></td>
- <td class="cent rlin">£</td>
- <td class="cent rlin"></td>
- <td class="cent rlin">£</td>
- <td class="cent"></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">1893</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">1,100</td>
- <td class="cent rlin"></td>
- <td class="cent rlin"></td>
- <td class="cent"></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">1894</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">900</td>
- <td class="cent rlin"></td>
- <td class="cent rlin"></td>
- <td class="cent"></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">1895</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">1,200</td>
- <td class="cent rlin"></td>
- <td class="cent rlin"></td>
- <td class="cent"></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">1896</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">1,300</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">1896</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">1,066</td>
- <td class="cent">Average of £1,100,<br />£900 and £1,200.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">1897</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">1,400</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">1897</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">1,133</td>
- <td class="cent">Average of £900,<br />£1,200 and £1,300.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">1898</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">1,400</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">1898</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">1,300</td>
- <td class="cent">Average of £1,200,<br />£1,300 and £1,400.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">1899</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">1,500</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">1899</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">1,366</td>
- <td class="cent">Average of £1,300,<br />£1,400 and £1,500.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">1900</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">1,600</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">1900</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">1,433</td>
- <td class="cent">Average of £1,400,<br />£1,400 and £1,500.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">1901</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">1,200</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">1901</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">1,500</td>
- <td class="cent">Average of £1,400,<br />£1,500 and £1,600.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">1902</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">1,200</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">1902</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">1,433</td>
- <td class="cent">Average of £1,500,<br />£1,600 and £1,200.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">1903</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">1,500</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">1903</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">1,333</td>
- <td class="cent">Average of £1,600,<br />£1,200 and £1,200.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">1904</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">1,600</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">1904</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">1,300</td>
- <td class="cent">Average of £1,200,<br />£1,200 and £1,500.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin"></td>
- <td class="cent rlin"></td>
- <td class="cent rlin">1905</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">1,433</td>
- <td class="cent">Average of £1,200,<br />£1,500 and £1,600.</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">{302}</a></span>
-We next come to Schedule E, which covers the salaries
-of all Government officials, and of the employees of Limited
-Liability Companies, County Councils, etc. For obvious
-reasons this branch of the tax is very easily assessed.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p>It is necessary also to remind the reader that a second
-form of income-tax is at present levied. I refer to the
-Inhabited House Duty, which is payable by all householders
-(in Great Britain only—not in Ireland) who live in
-houses of an annual value of £20 and upwards. The rates
-are graduated as follows:—</p>
-
-<table class="gt1" style="max-width:35em" summary="gt1-78">
-
-<colgroup>
- <col style="width:40%" />
- <col span="3" style="width:20%" />
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="small cent">Above £20.<br />Rate in the £.</td>
- <td class="small cent">Above £40.<br />Rate in the £.</td>
- <td class="small cent">Above £60.<br />Rate in the £.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Private dwelling-houses</td>
- <td class="cent">3d.</td>
- <td class="cent">6d.</td>
- <td class="cent">9d.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Business premises used<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;residentially</td>
- <td class="cent">2d.</td>
- <td class="cent">4d.</td>
- <td class="cent">6d.</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>Houses used solely for purposes of trade, and in which
-no occupier resides, are not subject to the tax.</p>
-
-<p>In the last financial year of which we have record
-(1907-8) the duty yielded £1,900,000.</p>
-
-<p>The present Inhabited House Duty dates from 1851
-when it was levied, to replace the stupid window-duty, by
-Sir Charles Wood. It can only be described as a clumsy
-income tax, and it bears very harshly upon poor Londoners,
-compelled by their circumstances to pay heavy rents to be
-near their work. To the heavy rent the State adds a
-second most unjust Income Tax.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p>In the above words the Income Taxes of 1905 were
-faithfully described in their essential details. In the years
-that have elapsed various reforms have been made.</p>
-
-<p>In the Finance Act of 1907 the principle of <i>differentiation
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">{303}</a></span>
-as between earned and unearned incomes</i> was introduced.
-Mr Asquith embodied the principle in the following
-words (Finance Act, 1907, clause 19, section 1):</p>
-
-<p class="small">"Any individual who claims and proves, in manner provided
-by this section, that his total income from all sources does not
-exceed two thousand pounds, and that any part of that income is
-earned income, shall be entitled, subject to the provisions of this
-section, to such relief from income tax as will reduce the amount
-payable on the earned income to the amount which would be
-payable if the tax were charged on that income at the rate of
-ninepence."</p>
-
-<p>As the nominal rate of tax was 1s., earned incomes
-thus enjoyed a substantial reduction. The abatement
-system, described on page 297, continued to apply to both
-earned and unearned incomes, so that two very roughly
-graduated scales of taxation came into existence, which
-are illustrated on page 304.</p>
-
-<p>The number of tax-payers who understood what had
-been done for them may be described as negligible.
-Without working out such a table as that on p. 304, the
-income tax payer remained in ignorance of what treatment
-had been meted out to him. The moral effect of
-a considerable reform was almost completely lost.</p>
-
-<p>In the famous Finance Act of 1909, which did not
-pass into law, owing to the action of the House of
-Lords, until the present year (1910), Mr Lloyd George,
-succeeding Mr Asquith as Chancellor of the Exchequer,
-made alterations in the Income Tax as excellent in
-principle and as obscure in operation as that just described.</p>
-
-<p>He raised the nominal rate of taxation to fourteen pence
-in the £, and left the rate for earned incomes at ninepence,
-thus increasing the differentiation between earned and
-unearned incomes. He also introduced a new step in
-differentiation by enacting that earned incomes exceeding
-£2,000 a year but not exceeding £3,000 a year should
-pay twelve pence instead of fourteen pence in the £.</p>
-
-<div class="section">
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">{304}</a></div>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">THE EFFECT OF MR ASQUITH'S DIFFERENTIATION<br />
-OF THE INCOME TAX, 1907</p>
-
-<table class="gt2" style="max-width:25em" summary="gt2-27">
-
-<colgroup>
- <col span="2" style="width:20%" />
- <col style="width:10%" />
- <col style="width:10%" />
- <col style="width:10%" />
- <col span="2" style="width:15%" />
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
- <td rowspan="2" class="cent ulin rlin">Income.</td>
- <td rowspan="2" class="cent ulin rlin">Abatement allowed.</td>
- <td colspan="5" class="cent ulin">Income Tax on Earned Income.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="cent ulin rlin">Tax payable.</td>
- <td class="cent ulin rlin">Nominal Tax.</td>
- <td class="cent ulin">Virtual Tax.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">£</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">£</td>
- <td class="cent">£</td>
- <td class="cent">s.</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">d.</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">Pence in £</td>
- <td class="cent">Pence in £</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">160</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">160</td>
- <td class="cent"></td>
- <td class="cent">—</td>
- <td class="cent rlin"></td>
- <td class="cent rlin">Exempt</td>
- <td class="cent">—</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">200</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">160</td>
- <td class="numb">1</td>
- <td class="numb">10</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">0</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">9</td>
- <td class="cent">1.8</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">300</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">160</td>
- <td class="numb">5</td>
- <td class="numb">5</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">0</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">9</td>
- <td class="cent">4.2</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">400</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">160</td>
- <td class="numb">9</td>
- <td class="numb">0</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">0</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">9</td>
- <td class="cent">5.4</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">500</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">150</td>
- <td class="numb">13</td>
- <td class="numb">2</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">6</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">9</td>
- <td class="cent">6.3</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">700</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">70</td>
- <td class="numb">23</td>
- <td class="numb">12</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">6</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">9</td>
- <td class="cent">8.1</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">800</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">Nil</td>
- <td class="numb">30</td>
- <td class="numb">0</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">0</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">9</td>
- <td class="cent">9.0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">1,000</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">"</td>
- <td class="numb">37</td>
- <td class="numb">10</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">0</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">9</td>
- <td class="cent">9.0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">2,000</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">"</td>
- <td class="numb">75</td>
- <td class="numb">0</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">0</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">9</td>
- <td class="cent">9.0</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<table class="gt2" style="max-width:25em" summary="gt2-28">
-
-<colgroup>
- <col span="2" style="width:20%" />
- <col style="width:10%" />
- <col style="width:10%" />
- <col style="width:10%" />
- <col span="2" style="width:15%" />
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
- <td rowspan="2" class="cent ulin rlin">Income.</td>
- <td rowspan="2" class="cent ulin rlin">Abatement allowed.</td>
- <td colspan="5" class="cent ulin">Income Tax on Unearned Income.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="cent ulin rlin">Tax payable.</td>
- <td class="cent ulin rlin">Nominal Tax.</td>
- <td class="cent ulin">Virtual Tax.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">£</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">£</td>
- <td class="cent">£</td>
- <td class="cent">s.</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">d.</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">Pence in £</td>
- <td class="cent">Pence in £</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">160</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">160</td>
- <td class="cent"></td>
- <td class="cent">—</td>
- <td class="cent rlin"></td>
- <td class="cent rlin">Exempt</td>
- <td class="cent">—</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">200</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">160</td>
- <td class="numb">2</td>
- <td class="numb">0</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">0</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">12</td>
- <td class="cent">2.4</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">300</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">160</td>
- <td class="numb">7</td>
- <td class="numb">0</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">0</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">12</td>
- <td class="cent">5.6</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">400</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">160</td>
- <td class="numb">12</td>
- <td class="numb">0</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">0</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">12</td>
- <td class="cent">7.2</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">500</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">150</td>
- <td class="numb">17</td>
- <td class="numb">10</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">0</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">12</td>
- <td class="cent">8.4</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">700</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">70</td>
- <td class="numb">31</td>
- <td class="numb">10</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">0</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">12</td>
- <td class="cent">10.8</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">800</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">Nil</td>
- <td class="numb">40</td>
- <td class="numb">0</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">0</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">12</td>
- <td class="cent">12.0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">1,000</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">"</td>
- <td class="numb">50</td>
- <td class="numb">0</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">0</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">12</td>
- <td class="cent">12.0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">2,000</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">"</td>
- <td class="numb">100</td>
- <td class="numb">0</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">0</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">12</td>
- <td class="cent">12.0</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">{305}</a></span>
-In order to give further effect to the principle of
-graduating the Income Tax, Mr Lloyd George at the
-same time imposed a Supplementary Income Tax, or
-Super-Tax, upon persons whose incomes exceeded £5,000
-a year.</p>
-
-<p>The Super-Tax is nominally 6d. in the £, but in
-practice it is always less. For the Super-Tax of 6d.
-is payable only upon that part of the income which
-exceeds £3,000 a year. That, reflection will show, creates
-a <i>graduated</i> Super-Tax, thus:</p>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">THE LLOYD GEORGE SUPER-TAX<br />AS IT
-REALLY IS</p>
-
-<table class="gt2" style="max-width:40em" summary="gt2-29">
-
-<colgroup>
- <col span="3" style="width:14%" />
- <col span="3" style="width:10%" />
- <col span="2" style="width:14%" />
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent ulin rlin">Income.</td>
- <td class="cent ulin rlin">Abatement on Income.</td>
- <td class="cent ulin rlin">Income really Taxed.</td>
- <td colspan="3" class="cent ulin rlin">Tax Payable.</td>
- <td class="cent ulin rlin">Nominal Rate of Supertax.</td>
- <td class="cent ulin">Virtual Rate of Supertax.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">£</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">£</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">£</td>
- <td class="cent">£</td>
- <td class="cent">s.</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">d.</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">Pence in £</td>
- <td class="cent">Pence in £</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="numb rlin">5,000</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">Exempt</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">—</td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="cent">—</td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td class="cent rlin">—</td>
- <td class="cent">—</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="numb rlin">5,001</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">3,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">2,001</td>
- <td class="numb">50</td>
- <td class="numb">0</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">6</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">6</td>
- <td class="cent">2.4</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="numb rlin">10,000</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">3,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">7,000</td>
- <td class="numb">175</td>
- <td class="numb">0</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">0</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">6</td>
- <td class="cent">4.2</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="numb rlin">50,000</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">3,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">47,000</td>
- <td class="numb">1,175</td>
- <td class="numb">0</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">0</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">6</td>
- <td class="cent">5.6</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="numb rlin">100,000</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">3,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">97,000</td>
- <td class="numb">2,425</td>
- <td class="numb">0</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">0</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">6</td>
- <td class="cent">5.8</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>It will be seen that it is a great gain under this system
-to have £5,000 a year rather than £5,001. The extra
-£1 of income costs the tax-payer £50, 0s. 6d. Thus a
-premium is placed by the State upon false declarations,
-for if a Government is so unfair as to tax £1 of income
-£50, 0s. 6d, who can blame a tax-payer who retorts in
-kind?</p>
-
-<p>It will be seen that it is impossible for the alleged 6d.
-Super-Tax to reach 6d. It can at the highest reach
-5.9 pence.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">{306}</a></span>
-But while the Super-Tax is so unfortunate in
-method it is excellent in principle, and largely
-carries into effect the suggestions made in "Riches
-and Poverty," edition 1905. It effects a rough graduation
-in the taxation of incomes over £5,000 a year,
-and extends the gamut of the Income Tax scale from
-zero at £160 a year to 19.8 pence in the £ at £100,000
-a year.</p>
-
-<p>I am now able to show the total effect of all the
-obscure provisions which it has been my misfortune to
-attempt to describe in plain language. The table on
-page 307 gives a faithful picture of the Income Tax, as
-graduated and differentiated by all the reforms made
-down to 1910. The table is the expression of the
-following provisions, existing in 1910, which I recapitulate
-for its better elucidation.</p>
-
-<p><i>Incomes not exceeding £160 a year pay no tax. Small
-and moderate incomes are relieved from taxation by being
-only taxed in part, i.e. "abatements" are allowed according
-to the size of the income. Over £700 a year there are no
-abatements. Unearned incomes are taxed at the nominal
-rate of fourteen pence in the pound. Earned incomes not
-exceeding £2,000 a year are taxed ninepence in the pound.
-Earned incomes over £2,000 a year, but not over £3,000
-a year, are taxed one shilling in the pound. Finally comes
-what is called the "Super-Tax." Incomes, whether earned
-or unearned, over £5,000 a year are taxed an extra sixpence
-in the pound on such part of the income as exceeds
-£3,000.</i></p>
-
-<p>The table on p. 307 shows, as the mere relation
-of the complicated provisions does not show, both
-the virtues and the faults of Mr Lloyd George's
-Income Tax. There is graduation, but it is effected so
-clumsily that it positively bristles with anomalies.
-Consider, for example, the gross anomaly of making a
-man with £3,000 a year pay only £150, while a man
-with £3,100 a year must pay £180. Or, again, of
-asking from the £5,000 man a £291 tax, and demanding
-£350 from the £5,100 man. Perhaps the worst feature
-in the scale, however, is the fact that unearned incomes
-from £701 to £5,000 pay the same rate.</p>
-
-<div class="section">
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">{307}</a></div>
-
-<p class="gap-above2 center">EFFECT OF THE INCOME TAX IN 1910</p>
-
-<table class="gt2" style="max-width:25em" summary="gt2-30">
-
-<colgroup>
- <col span="2" style="width:20%" />
- <col style="width:10%" />
- <col style="width:10%" />
- <col style="width:10%" />
- <col span="2" style="width:15%" />
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
- <td rowspan="2" class="cent ulin rlin">Income.</td>
- <td rowspan="2" class="cent ulin rlin">Abatement allowed.</td>
- <td colspan="5" class="cent ulin">Earned Incomes.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="cent ulin rlin">Tax payable.</td>
- <td class="cent ulin rlin">Nominal Rate.</td>
- <td class="cent ulin">Virtual Rate.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">£</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">£</td>
- <td class="cent">£</td>
- <td class="cent">s.</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">d.</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">Pence in £</td>
- <td class="cent">Pence in £</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">160</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">160</td>
- <td class="cent"></td>
- <td class="cent">—</td>
- <td class="cent rlin"></td>
- <td class="cent rlin">Exempt</td>
- <td class="cent">—</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">200</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">160</td>
- <td class="numb">1</td>
- <td class="numb">10</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">0</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">9</td>
- <td class="cent">1.8</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">300</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">160</td>
- <td class="numb">5</td>
- <td class="numb">5</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">0</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">9</td>
- <td class="cent">4.2</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">400</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">160</td>
- <td class="numb">9</td>
- <td class="numb">0</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">0</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">9</td>
- <td class="cent">5.4</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">500</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">150</td>
- <td class="numb">13</td>
- <td class="numb">2</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">6</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">9</td>
- <td class="cent">6.3</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">700</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">70</td>
- <td class="numb">23</td>
- <td class="numb">12</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">6</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">9</td>
- <td class="cent">8.1</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">800</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">Nil</td>
- <td class="numb">30</td>
- <td class="numb">0</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">0</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">9</td>
- <td class="cent">9.0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">1,000</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">"</td>
- <td class="numb">37</td>
- <td class="numb">10</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">0</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">9</td>
- <td class="cent">9.0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">2,000</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">"</td>
- <td class="numb">75</td>
- <td class="numb">0</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">0</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">9</td>
- <td class="cent">9.0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">2,100</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">"</td>
- <td class="numb">105</td>
- <td class="numb">0</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">0</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">12</td>
- <td class="cent">12.0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">3,000</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">"</td>
- <td class="numb">150</td>
- <td class="numb">0</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">0</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">12</td>
- <td class="cent">12.0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">3,100</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">"</td>
- <td class="numb">180</td>
- <td class="numb">16</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">8</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">14</td>
- <td class="cent">14.0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">5,000</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">"</td>
- <td class="numb">291</td>
- <td class="numb">13</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">4</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">14</td>
- <td class="cent">14.0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">5,100</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">"</td>
- <td class="numb">350</td>
- <td class="numb">0</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">0</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">14 + 6</td>
- <td class="cent">16.5</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">10,000</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">"</td>
- <td class="numb">758</td>
- <td class="numb">6</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">8</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">14 + 6</td>
- <td class="cent">18.2</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">50,000</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">"</td>
- <td class="numb">4,091</td>
- <td class="numb">13</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">4</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">14 + 6</td>
- <td class="cent">19.6</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">100,000</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">"</td>
- <td class="numb">8,258</td>
- <td class="numb">6</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">8</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">14 + 6</td>
- <td class="cent">19.8</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="section">
-
-<table class="gt2" style="max-width:25em" summary="gt2-31">
-
-<colgroup>
- <col span="2" style="width:20%" />
- <col style="width:10%" />
- <col style="width:10%" />
- <col style="width:10%" />
- <col span="2" style="width:15%" />
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
- <td rowspan="2" class="cent ulin rlin">Income.</td>
- <td rowspan="2" class="cent ulin rlin">Abatement allowed.</td>
- <td colspan="5" class="cent ulin">Unearned Incomes.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="cent ulin rlin">Tax payable.</td>
- <td class="cent ulin rlin">Nominal Rate.</td>
- <td class="cent ulin">Virtual Rate.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">£</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">£</td>
- <td class="cent">£</td>
- <td class="cent">s.</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">d.</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">Pence in £</td>
- <td class="cent">Pence in £</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">160</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">160</td>
- <td class="cent"></td>
- <td class="cent">—</td>
- <td class="cent rlin"></td>
- <td class="cent rlin">Exempt</td>
- <td class="cent">—</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">200</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">160</td>
- <td class="numb">2</td>
- <td class="numb">6</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">8</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">14</td>
- <td class="cent">2.8</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">300</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">160</td>
- <td class="numb">8</td>
- <td class="numb">3</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">4</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">14</td>
- <td class="cent">6.5</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">400</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">160</td>
- <td class="numb">14</td>
- <td class="numb">0</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">0</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">14</td>
- <td class="cent">8.4</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">500</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">150</td>
- <td class="numb">19</td>
- <td class="numb">8</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">4</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">14</td>
- <td class="cent">9.8</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">700</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">70</td>
- <td class="numb">36</td>
- <td class="numb">15</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">0</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">14</td>
- <td class="cent">12.6</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">800</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">Nil</td>
- <td class="numb">46</td>
- <td class="numb">13</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">4</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">14</td>
- <td class="cent">14.0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">1,000</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">"</td>
- <td class="numb">58</td>
- <td class="numb">6</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">8</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">14</td>
- <td class="cent">14.0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">2,000</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">"</td>
- <td class="numb">116</td>
- <td class="numb">13</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">4</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">14</td>
- <td class="cent">14.0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">2,100</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">"</td>
- <td class="numb">122</td>
- <td class="numb">10</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">0</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">14</td>
- <td class="cent">14.0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">3,000</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">"</td>
- <td class="numb">175</td>
- <td class="numb">0</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">0</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">14</td>
- <td class="cent">14.0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">3,100</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">"</td>
- <td class="numb">180</td>
- <td class="numb">16</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">8</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">14</td>
- <td class="cent">14.0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">5,000</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">"</td>
- <td class="numb">291</td>
- <td class="numb">13</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">4</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">14</td>
- <td class="cent">14.0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">5,100</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">"</td>
- <td class="numb">350</td>
- <td class="numb">0</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">0</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">14 + 6</td>
- <td class="cent">16.5</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">10,000</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">"</td>
- <td class="numb">758</td>
- <td class="numb">6</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">8</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">14 + 6</td>
- <td class="cent">18.2</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">50,000</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">"</td>
- <td class="numb">4,091</td>
- <td class="numb">13</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">4</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">14 + 6</td>
- <td class="cent">19.6</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent rlin">100,000</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">"</td>
- <td class="numb">8,258</td>
- <td class="numb">6</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">8</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">14 + 6</td>
- <td class="cent">19.8</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">{308}</a></div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p>Now let us consider the reform of the Income Tax.</p>
-
-<p>In the first place it is suggested that the Inhabited
-House Duty should be entirely abolished. As has been
-already pointed out, it is a clumsy second Income Tax and
-its incidence is most unequal. It is not paid in Ireland,
-and too much of it falls upon poor clerks and tradesmen
-in London and other big towns. It is urged here that if
-we properly reform the Income Tax it should not be
-necessary to levy a second one under another name.</p>
-
-<p>It must be frankly recognized that, in principle, the
-Income Tax reforms urged in "Riches and Poverty,"
-edition 1905, have been largely conceded. Method is so
-important in this connexion, however, that it is necessary
-to insist that the Income Tax still needs serious revision.</p>
-
-<p>Why is it that so much misplaced ingenuity has been
-applied to our Income Tax law by successive Chancellors
-of the Exchequer? Why these alleged rates of Income
-Tax, which on inquiry prove to be nominal, and the
-enactment of a clumsy Super-Tax to amend a sufficiently
-clumsy Income Tax? Why should it be necessary to
-arrive at a "sort of" graduation by a series of provisions,
-which few men, inside or outside the legislature, pretend
-to understand?</p>
-
-<p>The explanation is that we have not a complete Census
-of Incomes. The point is of the first importance. The
-establishment, within the limits of a very small possible
-margin of error, of the number of British Income Tax
-payers in 1903, which I effected by a careful examination
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">{309}</a></span>
-of so far uncorrelated facts in "Riches and Poverty,"
-edition 1905, brought to light the then unsuspected fact
-that about 750,000 out of about 1,000,000 Income Tax
-payers actually declared their individual aggregate incomes
-from all sources for the purposes of Income Tax.</p>
-
-<p>These declarations, as already explained, were made by
-the smaller Income Tax payers in order to avail themselves
-of the abatement system, the abatements being granted
-only to those persons with incomes not exceeding £700
-a year <i>who made declarations</i>. <i>In effect, those of this
-class who do not declare are heavily fined.</i></p>
-
-<p>The number of the declarants was further increased in
-1907 by Mr Asquith's differentiation of the Income Tax.</p>
-
-<p>Mr Asquith enacted, as we have seen, that persons
-who earned their incomes, and whose incomes did not
-exceed £2,000 a year, should enjoy a lower rate of
-taxation <i>if they declared their incomes</i>.</p>
-
-<p>This led to declarations by a fresh batch of Income Tax
-payers, and it became possible for Somerset House to collect
-and publish a new set of most valuable statistics. Unfortunately,
-the precise facts of the case have neither been
-collected nor published, important as the knowledge of
-them is if we are to tax wisely and justly. Nevertheless,
-there is little doubt that the new batch of declarations
-between £700 and £2,000 a year raised, or will soon
-raise, the proportion of Income Tax payers making personal
-declarations to over nine out of eleven of the whole
-body.</p>
-
-<p>The question immediately suggests itself: Why
-should not the balance of two out of eleven, or thereabouts,
-be compelled to fall into line with the majority?
-This balance consists, of course, of the well-to-do and
-rich, chiefly those who derive their incomes from property.
-These persons are not taxed directly at all. The State
-relies upon what is called "taxing at the source." That
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310">{310}</a></span>
-is, dividends are taxed at the company's offices before
-they are distributed, and rents are taxed through the
-occupier, the occupiers being left to recover the Schedule A
-tax from the landlords and houselords.</p>
-
-<p>This reliance upon an indirect form of "direct" taxation
-leads, of course, to much income escaping tax, for rich
-people, it will be seen, have not to make a return of their
-incomes, but are in the happy position of letting the State
-catch them when it can. No other country levying an
-Income Tax does this thing; yet we perversely maintain
-that there is no system so effective as ours. Happily,
-the Finance Act of 1909 (passed in 1910) still further
-increases the number of those who are to declare.</p>
-
-<p>First, as to earned incomes, as noted above, Mr Lloyd
-George enacted that earned incomes over £2,000 but not
-over £3,000 are to continue to pay one shilling in the £,
-and that those over £3,000 are to pay fourteen pence.
-It follows that a new batch of declarations will be forthcoming
-from those, or most of those, between £2,000 and
-£3,000, in order to get the shilling rate.</p>
-
-<p>Again, a Super-Tax is to be levied upon all those
-whose incomes exceed £5,000 a year, of whom there are
-not less than 14,000 or 15,000. This Super-Tax is to
-be collected by Special Commissioners. How will these
-Special Commissioners know to whom to apply?
-Obviously they have not a list of the fortunate 15,000.
-They will doubtless go to work by sending a form asking
-for a return of total income to all people who <i>appear</i> to be
-very rich.</p>
-
-<p>All the inhabitants of big houses, and, indeed, all the
-obviously rich, will receive a declaration form to fill up.
-And, of course, in order to catch the 15,000 the Commissioners
-will have to send notices to many times that
-number of people, for it is really exceedingly difficult to
-decide by appearance or reputation whether a man has
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">{311}</a></span>
-£2,500 or £5,000 a year. The Budget provides that
-every person sent a form must fill it up, whether or not
-he has £5,000 a year. Consequently, at the very top of
-the scale, the Income Tax Commissioners will come into
-possession of personal declarations relating to 50,000 or
-more of our moneyed citizens.</p>
-
-<p>And yet we shall not arrive at complete declarations
-from all Income Tax payers. Nearly all persons who earn
-their incomes will declare, but as to unearned incomes
-there is a big hiatus.</p>
-
-<p>Small unearned incomes up to £700 a year will be
-mostly declared in order to get the abatements.</p>
-
-<p>Very big unearned incomes must be declared, as we
-have seen, through the demands for Super-Tax.</p>
-
-<p><i>But, between £700 a year and £5,000 a year, the unearned
-scale is ungraduated, and, save for the people with less than
-£5,000 a year, asked in error to declare by the Super-Tax
-Commissioners, there will be no personal declarations.</i></p>
-
-<p>Surely this ought not to be. If the poor are to declare
-and the very rich are to declare, why should not the middle
-incomes be declared? Why should the State continue to
-rely, in respect of the considerable amount of income concerned,
-upon taxation at the source? The question
-becomes the more urgent when we reflect that the fresh
-batch of declarations brought in by Mr Asquith's differentiation
-scheme of 1907, noted above, brought to light many
-millions of "new" income (see p. 14). Every new revelation
-of existing income, of course, lowers taxation <i>pro tanto</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps the final argument for universal personal
-declaration of income is furnished by the following enactment
-of the Budget of 1907:</p>
-
-<p>Finance Act (1907), Section 21.</p>
-
-<p>"Every employer, when required to do so by notice
-from an assessor, shall, within the time limited by the
-notice, prepare and deliver to the assessor a return of the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">{312}</a></span>
-names and places of residence of any persons employed by
-him."</p>
-
-<p>We thus go behind the backs of small tax-payers to
-their employers, and compel the divulgence of incomes
-which are usually the <i>total</i> incomes of the employed.
-Yet the employer who, by our direction, hands his employee
-over to the tax-collector, is not compelled by us
-to declare his own total income, unless (1) he has no
-other income than his Schedule D income, or (2) he is a
-payer of Super-Tax.</p>
-
-<p>Given a Census of Incomes it would become possible
-to arrive at a practical and just Income Tax.</p>
-
-<p>We could set up a plain graduated scale of taxation,
-differentiated up to a certain point as between earned
-and unearned incomes, making it quite clear to the tax-payer
-what is demanded from him and revealing to him
-the justice or injustice of our methods by enabling
-him to compare his rate of taxation with that of those
-richer or poorer than himself.</p>
-
-<p>We need not abandon taxation "at the source." We
-could levy on property incomes at the source a certain
-rate of tax, say 1s. in the £. Then when the total income
-was declared, the tax-payer would point out upon what
-items, if any, 1s. in the £ had been deducted at the source
-and pay the balance of the tax.</p>
-
-<p>Let us take a hypothetical case—that of a barrister
-earning £2,000 a year, and deriving a further £1,000 from
-rents and a further £300 from Consols. The total income,
-£3,300, let us suppose taxed under the graduation
-scheme at 14d. in the £. The Income Tax on the £1,000
-of rents would be paid by his tenants and deducted from
-the rents paid him, while the Bank of England would
-deduct 1s. in the £ from the interest on the Consols.
-Declaring his total income at £3,300 he would pay the
-balance due, thus:—</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313">{313}</a></div>
-
-<table class="gt1" style="max-width:20em" summary="gt1-79">
-
-<colgroup>
- <col style="width:5%" />
- <col style="width:50%" />
- <col style="width:10%" />
- <col style="width:15%" />
- <col style="width:10%" />
- <col style="width:10%" />
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="2">Total Declared Income.</td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="cent">£</td>
- <td class="cent"><i>s.</i></td>
- <td class="cent"><i>d.</i></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td>£3,300 at 14d.</td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="numb">192</td>
- <td class="numb">10</td>
- <td class="numb">0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="2"><br />Taxed at the source:—</td>
- <td colspan="4"></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td>(1) Schedule A.<br />1s. in the £ on £1,000 of rent, deducted by tenants</td>
- <td class="numb">£50</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td>(2) Schedule C.<br />1s. in the £ on £300 of interest deducted by Bank of England</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">£15</td>
- <td colspan="3"></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="3"></td>
- <td class="numb ulin">65</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">0</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="3"><br />Balance of Tax Payable—</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">£127</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">10</td>
- <td class="numb ulin">0</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>If, upon the introduction of such a system, local assessors
-were empowered to ask every householder assessed for local
-rates at £20 a year and upwards <i>to declare his income in the
-place where he resides</i>, there would undoubtedly be a great
-increase in the Income Tax assessments. A great part of
-the evasion of Income Tax results from persons being taxed
-at their places of business, where there is often little
-evidence of means. In a man's own neighbourhood it is
-difficult grossly to understate income.</p>
-
-<p>For several years I put down in the House of Commons
-the following suggested amendment to the Finance Bill:</p>
-
-<p class="small">Every person upon whom notice is served in manner prescribed
-by section forty-eight of The Income Tax Act, 1842 (which
-section relates to the delivery of notices by assessors), requiring
-him to make a return of his income chargeable to duty under any
-and every schedule of the Income Tax, shall make a return, in
-the form required by the notice, which shall show the amount of
-his aggregate income from all sources, whether he is or is not
-chargeable with duty, and upon what part or parts of such
-aggregate income, if any, Income Tax has already been paid
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314">{314}</a></span>
-under the Income Tax Acts by deduction at the source, and in
-default shall be liable to a penalty under section fifty-five of The
-Income Tax Act, 1842.</p>
-
-<p>On one occasion some twenty Members of Parliament
-consented to put down this amendment with me, but
-every attempt to obtain its enactment has failed. Until
-it is obtained there can be no just graduation of the
-Income Tax, and tax-payers who declare their incomes
-under the existing law will continue to pay too much
-because others pay too little.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p>Some smaller matters claim our attention.</p>
-
-<p>A minor but not unimportant reform, for which we have
-to thank Mr Lloyd George, is the concession made to
-small Income Tax payers who have young children, a
-concession which the present writer believes he was the
-first to urge in the House of Commons. The Finance
-Bill of 1909 (Sect. 68) provided that Income Tax payers
-with incomes not exceeding £500 should be entitled to
-exemption from taxation to the amount of £10 for each
-child under the age of 16 years. The effect of this
-provision is far-reaching. A clerk with £200 a year and
-three young children gets the £160 abatement and £30
-abatement in respect of his children. His <i>taxable</i> income
-is thus reduced to £10 and his payment of Income Tax
-to 7s. 6d.</p>
-
-<p>On the same ground, respect for the principle of ability
-to pay, the Income Tax law should provide for special
-abatements in case of the illness of salary earners, special
-misfortunes, the support of poor relatives, etc. It is found
-possible to work such provisions in Prussia; it ought to
-be found possible to do so here.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">{315}</a></span>
-The importance of a thorough revision of the Income
-Tax law is growing. The view urged here is that the
-citizen's subscription to the National Club should not
-only be justly proportioned to his means, but presented
-to him intelligibly, and collected without waste or undue
-interference with business.</p>
-
-<p>The phenomenon of an annual Budget debate has
-come to be regarded as a necessary Parliamentary evil,
-but is there any justification for it?</p>
-
-<p>When the nation has decided, through its representatives,
-for good reasons or for bad reasons, that a certain sum of
-money must be raised for public purposes, it is not the
-function of the Chancellor of the Exchequer <i>qua</i> Chancellor
-of the Exchequer to decide whether the purposes are good
-or bad, or whether the sum is too large or too small. As
-a member of the Government, the Finance Minister has,
-of course, a voice in deciding what sums should be spent
-and upon what purposes, but, as Chancellor of the Exchequer,
-his duty is not to reason why but to find the
-money. In the finding of the money, ought there to
-be, year by year, a long and painful discussion as to how
-it should be done?</p>
-
-<p>We have also become accustomed to regarding the
-Budget as a great and glorious secret, to be carefully
-guarded until the Chancellor of the Exchequer makes his
-annual speech. Does the tradition of secrecy rest upon
-necessity? For my part, I call the necessity in question.
-I affirm that our annual Budget need present no difficulties;
-that it is not inherently a difficult thing to
-accomplish; and that the conception of a Budget as a
-great secret, to be carefully hidden until Budget Day, is an
-altogether childish conception. There is some excuse for
-reserving a child's Christmas presents until he wakes up
-and finds the gifts of Santa Claus in his stocking on the
-morning of December 25th, but there is no excuse whatever
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_316" id="Page_316">{316}</a></span>
-for the ridiculous secrecy with which tradition shrouds the
-annual Budget statement.</p>
-
-<p>I do not deny that secrecy has been necessary in
-connexion with such Budgets as have been put on
-record in the past. Of what have these Budgets consisted?
-Year by year, a number of clumsy, inefficient
-and indefensible taxes have been tinkered by successive
-guardians of the national purse. Tea taxes, coffee taxes,
-beer taxes, sugar taxes, alleged income taxes, double
-inheritance duties, have had bits carved off them, or bits
-attached to them, without rhyme or reason. Year after
-year, Mincing Lane has been in throes of excitement as to
-whether there was to be a penny on tea, or a penny off
-tea. Cunning gentlemen have rushed in tea to evade a
-suspected inclination to tax that article further, or sugar
-brokers have been excited at the prospect of making
-something, or losing something, over a little less or a
-little more on sugar. We are a grave and respectful
-people, or assuredly we should laugh at this annual
-exhibition of mingled greed and incompetency. If as
-much intelligence were put into the making of boots,
-none of us would be able to walk.</p>
-
-<p>The subject is made additionally interesting by the
-fact that all along men have known perfectly well how
-taxes ought to be levied. It is 130 years since Adam
-Smith wrote his first maxim of taxation, which I have
-already quoted:</p>
-
-<div class="subpara">
-
-<p style="text-indent:0">"The subjects of every State ought to contribute
-towards the support of the government as nearly as
-possible in proportion to their respective abilities;
-that is, in proportion to the revenue which they
-respectively enjoy under the protection of the
-State."</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>As long ago as 1848 John Stuart Mill wrote ("Principles
-of Political Economy," Book V. Chapter 2):</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317">{317}</a></span>
-"As, in a case of voluntary subscription for a purpose
-in which all are interested, all are thought to have done
-their part fairly when each has contributed according to
-his means, that is, has made an equal sacrifice for the
-common object; in like manner should this be the principle
-of compulsory contributions: and it is superfluous to
-look for a more ingenious or recondite ground to rest
-the principle upon.... To take a thousand a year
-from the possessor of ten thousand would not deprive
-him of anything really conducive either to the support
-or to the comfort of existence: and if such <i>would</i> be the
-effect of taking five pounds from one whose income is
-fifty, the sacrifice required from the last is not only
-greater than, but entirely incommensurable with, that
-imposed upon the first. The mode of adjusting these
-inequalities of pressure, which seems to be the most
-equitable, is that recommended by Bentham, of leaving
-a certain minimum of income, sufficient to provide the
-necessaries of life, untaxed.... The exemption in favour
-of the smaller incomes should not, I think, be stretched
-further than to the amount of income needful for life,
-health, and immunity from bodily pain."</p>
-
-<p>In passing, this quotation may be commended to those
-who regard the exemption of very small incomes from
-taxation as a tenet of modern Socialism. Here we have
-it propounded in 1848 by John Stuart Mill, who got it
-from Jeremy Bentham.</p>
-
-<p>It is in spite of such admired utterances as these that
-we have still, in the year 1910, such outrages upon
-common sense as taxes upon sugar, taxes upon petrol,
-taxes upon cocoa, taxes upon business contracts, taxes
-upon marriage certificates, and a great party in the State is
-at this hour ardently desirous of adding to the number of
-such stupidities by thousands or even tens of thousands.</p>
-
-<p>When we inquire for the reason for the existence of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318">{318}</a></span>
-such unbusinesslike and costly stupidities, we find a
-simple explanation. It has been held in the past universally,
-and is held in the present by many, that the
-Government has no business to inquire into the incomes
-of the people it governs. Lacking knowledge of incomes,
-it has been obviously impossible for Governments to
-tax people according to their ability to bear taxation.
-Consequently, Chancellors of the Exchequer have had to
-devise all sorts of trumpery and costly expedients to get
-by indirect means what should have been got honestly
-and directly.</p>
-
-<p>In short, the first condition of fair budgeting is a
-Census of Incomes. Given that, we are able to throw
-away all the lumber of indirect taxation and of inefficient
-taxation. And it should be observed that fair budgeting
-means simple budgeting—budgeting admitting of no
-annual argument. The annual budget wrangle is the
-effect of our devious methods of taxation.</p>
-
-<p>Given universal declarations of income, and an end
-could speedily be made of our present array of taxes.
-We could decide upon some minimum of income which
-should be totally exempt from taxation on the ground
-that it represented the smallest sum upon which a family
-can be sustained in health and decency. Above that
-margin, we could arrange a graduated scale of taxation
-which should present to each citizen a fair bill for public
-expenses. That bill could be made payable in two or
-even four instalments, to make the payment an easy
-matter for the tax-payer. This arrangement once made,
-any increase of taxation would simply call for a proportionate
-increase from each tax-payer. Argument
-would not lie in the province of the Chancellor of the
-Exchequer, for the matter would be finally settled.
-Argument would begin and end with the decision of
-Parliament to spend certain moneys; <i>that would not be a</i>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319">{319}</a></span>
-<i>Budget argument, but an argument upon public policy in
-expenditure</i>. And the plainer the bill for taxes, the more
-closely expenditure would be scanned.</p>
-
-<p>My remarks, of course, must not be taken to condemn
-taxes upon alcohol or taxes upon inheritances. And
-beyond lies the question of the acquisition of monopolies
-by the State, and the consequent reduction of taxation
-by reason of the State carrying on revenue-producing
-undertakings.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_320" id="Page_320">{320}</a></span>
-
-<h3>CHAPTER XXII<br />
-<small>THE DEATH DUTIES</small></h3>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">IN "Riches and Poverty," edition 1905, it was urged
-that the then existing Estate Duties, ranging from 1
-per cent. to 8 per cent., might be sensibly increased. The
-revisions which have been made since 1905 are clearly
-shown in the comparative table given on the next
-page, which reviews in part the Estate Duties of the
-Budgets of 1894, 1907 and 1909.</p>
-
-<p>The rates of Death Duty have been thus raised to
-about the level suggested in "Riches and Poverty,"
-edition 1905.</p>
-
-<p>The scale does not represent the whole of the
-Death Duties. Not only is the corpus of the property
-taxed under the scale, but the remainder, after such taxation,
-is taxed again under separate scales of Legacy and
-Succession Duties. I do not enter into the details here,
-but, generally, such complications are to be deprecated.
-Let the State take its equitable toll, but let it do so on a
-single progressive scale, and not tax, and tax again, first
-taking a percentage from the estate, and next taking a
-further percentage from the bit of the estate taken by a
-brother or cousin or aunt of the deceased.</p>
-
-<p>As will have been gathered from Chapter 4 the
-increase of the duties on estates over £10,000 was more
-than justified. The great bulk of the national wealth is
-held in estates of over £10,000 each. The following
-facts (see Chapter 4) relating to the estates which pass
-in an average year should never be lost sight of:</p>
-
-<div class="section">
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321">{321}</a></div>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">THE HARCOURT (1894), ASQUITH (1907), AND LLOYD GEORGE (1909)
-DEATH DUTIES</p>
-
-<table class="gt2" style="max-width:25em" summary="gt2-32">
-
-<colgroup>
- <col span="2" style="width:30%" />
- <col style="width:15%" />
- <col style="width:12.5%" />
- <col style="width:12.5%" />
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="cent ulin rlin">Value of Estate.</td>
- <td class="cent ulin rlin">Harcourt, 1894</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="cent ulin">Asquith, 1907</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">Exceeds<br />£</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">But not over<br />£</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">Per cent.</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="cent">Per cent.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="numb">100</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">500</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">1</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="cent">1</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="numb">500</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,000</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">2</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="cent">2</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="numb">1,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">10,000</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">3</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="cent">3</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="numb">10,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">25,000</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">4</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="cent">4</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="numb">25,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">50,000</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">4½</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="cent">4½</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="numb">50,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">75,000</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">5</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="cent">5</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="numb">75,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">100,000</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">5½</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="cent">5½</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="numb">100,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">150,000</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">6</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="cent">6</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="numb">150,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">250,000</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">6½</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="cent">7</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="numb">250,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">500,000</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">7</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="cent">8</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="numb">500,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">750,000</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">7½</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="cent">9</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="numb">750,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,000,000</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">7½</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="cent">10</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="numb"></td>
- <td class="numb rlin"></td>
- <td class="cent rlin"></td>
- <td class="cent">On First Million.</td>
- <td class="cent">On Remainder.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="numb">1,000,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,500,000</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">8</td>
- <td class="cent">10</td>
- <td class="cent">11</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="numb">1,500,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">2,000,000</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">8</td>
- <td class="cent">10</td>
- <td class="cent">12</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="numb">2,000,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">2,500,000</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">8</td>
- <td class="cent">10</td>
- <td class="cent">13</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="numb">2,500,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">3,000,000</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">8</td>
- <td class="cent">10</td>
- <td class="cent">14</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="numb">3,000,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin"></td>
- <td class="cent rlin">8</td>
- <td class="cent">10</td>
- <td class="cent">15</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="section">
-
-<table class="gt2" style="max-width:25em" summary="gt2-33">
-
-<colgroup>
- <col span="2" style="width:30%" />
- <col style="width:15%" />
- <col style="width:12.5%" />
- <col style="width:12.5%" />
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="cent ulin rlin">Value of Estate.</td>
- <td class="cent ulin rlin">Lloyd George, 1909</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="cent ulin">Rates suggested in "Riches and Poverty," 1905</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent">Exceeds<br />£</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">But not over<br />£</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">Per cent.</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="cent">Per cent.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="numb">100</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">500</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">1</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="cent">1</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="numb">500</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,000</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">2</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="cent">2</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="numb">1,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">5,000</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">3</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="cent">3-4</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="numb">5,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">10,000</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">4</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="cent">5-6</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="numb">10,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">20,000</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">5</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="cent">7</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="numb">20,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">40,000</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">6</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="cent">8</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="numb">40,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">70,000</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">7</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="cent">9</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="numb">70,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">100,000</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">8</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="cent">10</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="numb">100,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">150,000</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">9</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="cent">11</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="numb">150,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">200,000</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">10</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="cent">12</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="numb">200,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">400,000</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">11</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="cent">13</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="numb">400,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">600,000</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">12</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="cent">13</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="numb">600,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">800,000</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">13</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="cent">14</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="numb">800,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin">1,000,000</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">14</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="cent">15</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="numb">1,000,000</td>
- <td class="numb rlin"></td>
- <td class="cent rlin">15</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="cent">16</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_322" id="Page_322">{322}</a></div>
-
-<p class="gap-above2 center">DEATHS AND ESTATES IN THE UNITED
-KINGDOM</p>
-
-<div class="subpara">
-
-<p>About 700,000 persons, including children, die every year.</p>
-
-<p>Of these, about 620,000 die almost or quite penniless.</p>
-
-<p>The balance of 80,000 persons leave £300,000,000.</p>
-
-<p>Of these, 4,000 persons leave £200,000,000.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>It is only necessary to state these extraordinary facts
-to show the justice of Mr Lloyd George's reform of the
-Death Duties.</p>
-
-<p>It is of interest and importance to show what a small
-proportion of the capital passing at death is actually taken
-by the State. The following figures show, for the years
-1894-5 to 1908-9, the total amount of all the Death
-Duties (i.e. not only the principal "Estate Duty," the
-rates of which are given on p. 321, but of the Legacy and
-Succession Duties, Settlement Estate Duty, etc.), received
-during the year, the total estates upon which the duties
-were paid and the average aggregate rate per cent. of the
-whole of the duties:</p>
-
-<div class="section">
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_323" id="Page_323">{323}</a></div>
-
-<p class="center gap-above2">DEATH DUTIES PAID: 1894-5 TO 1908-9</p>
-
-<table class="gt1" style="max-width:25em" summary="gt1-80">
-
-<colgroup>
- <col style="width:20%" />
- <col span="2" style="width:30%" />
- <col style="width:20%" />
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent small">Fiscal Year.</td>
- <td class="cent small">Total Death Duties.</td>
- <td class="cent small">Total Estates.</td>
- <td class="cent small">Average Aggregate Rate of Duty<br />per cent.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="cent"></td>
- <td class="cent">£</td>
- <td class="cent">£</td>
- <td class="cent"></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr><td>1894-5</td><td class="numb">10,894,385</td><td class="numb">194,465,000</td><td class="numb">5.61</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1895-6</td><td class="numb">14,088,608</td><td class="numb">249,942,000</td><td class="numb">5.63</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1896-7</td><td class="numb">13,878,274</td><td class="numb">245,883,000</td><td class="numb">5.64</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1897-8</td><td class="numb">15,449,190</td><td class="numb">270,326,000</td><td class="numb">5.71</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1898-9</td><td class="numb">15,732,578</td><td class="numb">271,901,000</td><td class="numb">5.78</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1899-1900</td><td class="numb">18,409,293</td><td class="numb">312,819,000</td><td class="numb">5.88</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1900-1</td><td class="numb">16,721,129</td><td class="numb">284,884,000</td><td class="numb">5.87</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1901-2</td><td class="numb">18,513,714</td><td class="numb">295,829,000</td><td class="numb">6.26</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1902-3</td><td class="numb">17,913,177</td><td class="numb">296,382,000</td><td class="numb">6.04</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1903-4</td><td class="numb">17,326,137</td><td class="numb">291,161,000</td><td class="numb">5.95</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1904-5</td><td class="numb">17,258,431</td><td class="numb">284,309,000</td><td class="numb">6.07</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1905-6</td><td class="numb">17,344,925</td><td class="numb">296,233,000</td><td class="numb">5.85</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1906-7</td><td class="numb">18,958,763</td><td class="numb">319,579,000</td><td class="numb">5.93</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1907-8</td><td class="numb">19,108,256</td><td class="numb">304,093,000</td><td class="numb">6.28</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1908-9</td><td class="numb">18,310,280</td><td class="numb">294,662,000</td><td class="numb">6.21</td></tr>
-
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>These figures were prepared by Somerset House and
-given to the House of Commons in September 1909 in
-answer to a question of Mr Thomas Gibson Bowles.</p>
-
-<p>In 1908-9, in spite of the increase of rates in 1907, the
-Death Duties took but £18,300,000 or a little over 6 per
-cent. of property worth £294,600,000.</p>
-
-<p>But this is a partial statement of the facts. There is
-little doubt that the estates passing yearly are worth
-nearer £400,000,000 than the £300,000,000 which is
-officially reviewed and taxed. So that the total burden
-of the Death Duties in 1908-9 was really about 4½ per
-cent.</p>
-
-<p>There has been some talk in this connexion of
-diminishing and wasting the national capital. The
-national capital was conservatively estimated in Chapter
-5 as about £13,000,000,000. The Death Duties are
-now taking about £20,000,000 a year. £20,000,000 is
-contained just 650 times in £13,000,000,000, so that,
-even if the £20,000,000 a year were wasted, the national
-capital would waste away in six and a half centuries.
-But the £20,000,000 a year is not lost: it is transferred
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_324" id="Page_324">{324}</a></span>
-from private pockets to the State and used a hundredfold
-for the better advantage of the nation than if it were not
-so transferred. One may go further and say that if it
-were not taken and used for the furtherance of reform, the
-national capital would cease to make increase. Expenditure
-upon Education alone needs to be doubled if British
-work is to fructify in the near future.</p>
-
-<p>Some attention was given on page 76 to the question
-of the avoidance of Death Duties by gifts <i>inter vivos</i>. The
-Finance Act of 1909 increased to three years the period
-before death during which gifts passing <i>inter vivos</i> should
-be liable to Death Duties. It will be of interest to see
-whether this checks the avoidance of Death Duties which
-has given us such remarkable statistics as those recorded
-on page 76-77.</p>
-
-<p>It is not necessary to dwell at length in this chapter
-upon considerations connected with the dangers to Society
-involved in the monopolization of wealth by a few people,
-for they were treated at some length in earlier pages. I
-may usefully direct attention, however, to a speech made
-by the President of the United States of America, Mr
-Taft, in September 1909, in which he said:</p>
-
-<p class="small">"Let the State pass inheritance laws which shall require the
-division of great fortunes among the children of descendants, and
-shall not permit the multi-millionaire to leave his fortune in a
-mass. Make more drastic the rule against perpetuities which
-obtain at common law, and then impose a heavy graduated inheritance
-tax enabling the State to share largely in the proceeds of
-such large accumulations of wealth which would hardly have been
-brought about save under its protection and aid. Thus gradually
-and effectively the concentration of wealth in one or few hands
-will be neutralized, and the danger to the Republic obviated."</p>
-
-<p>These are the words, not of a Socialist, but of the elected
-of the Conservatives of the United States. They may
-fittingly end our consideration of the revised Death Duties.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_325" id="Page_325">{325}</a></span>
-The reformed Income Tax and Death Duties of 1909
-will furnish, with all their faults, a handsome revenue,
-and it may already be claimed that what was urged in
-"Riches and Poverty," edition 1905, as to the means of
-national regeneration, has been amply verified by
-accomplished facts.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_326" id="Page_326">{326}</a></span>
-
-<h3>CHAPTER XXIII<br />
-<small>OF REVENUE WITHOUT TAXATION</small></h3>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">AFTER dealing at some length with the details of
-British taxation it is well to point out why it is
-necessary for the British Government to raise so much
-revenue by taxes.</p>
-
-<p>It appears to be commonly taken for granted that in
-the matter of national ways and means a source of
-revenue is the same thing as a source of taxation.
-Perhaps it is not surprising that this idea is prevalent in
-Britain, for of a truth we have scarcely any national
-revenue save what is derived from the more or less just
-taxation of British citizens.</p>
-
-<p>Save in its power to levy taxes, the United Kingdom,
-as a State, is one of the poorest in the world.</p>
-
-<p>The British Government, as compared with many other
-governments, is singularly lacking in property. It follows
-that it is singularly lacking in natural State revenue.
-As a matter of fact, the only items of British State
-property worth mentioning are (1) the Post Office, which
-brings in about £5,000,000 a year; (2) a few Crown
-lands, which bring in about £500,000 a year; and (3) The
-Suez Canal shares, bought by Lord Beaconsfield, which
-bring in about £1,000,000 a year.</p>
-
-<p>The total British State revenue from property is thus
-about £6,500,000, and that is all. If the Government
-wants any more money it has to tax the governed, a fact
-which arouses various emotions.</p>
-
-<p>The consequence is that, as public expenses increase,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_327" id="Page_327">{327}</a></span>
-our taxes constantly swell. The items of natural State
-revenue are too small, even if elastic, to meet the growing
-bills. This is found out by all parties. A politician
-out of office may, and usually does, denounce new taxes,
-but we never find the same politician, after taking office,
-taking off the taxes he has denounced; he simply cannot
-do it. The Conservatives, it will be remembered, were
-unfriendly to Sir William Harcourt's Death Duties, but
-when they came into power they not only did not repeal
-them, but it is a fact that they seriously considered
-increasing them.</p>
-
-<p>I do not think it can be reasonably alleged that
-taxation has yet reached an intolerable level, indeed the
-facts on that head are sufficiently made plain in these
-pages. At the same time, I suppose that none of us
-desires to increase the burden of taxation more than is
-necessary.</p>
-
-<p>Is it not well, then, to ask ourselves whether taxation
-need be the only hope of State revenue? Here comes
-in a rather curious fact. We have passed through
-troubled days in which additional taxation has been
-denounced as "Socialistic," and the "Observer" newspaper
-tells its readers constantly that modern Socialism simply
-means taxation.</p>
-
-<p><i>As a matter of fact, it is because the British Government
-has been one of the least Socialistic in the world that it finds
-itself in 1910 raising so much of its revenue from taxation.</i></p>
-
-<p>The Germans are heavily taxed, but they are so much
-poorer than the British people that the sum they raise
-in taxes is much smaller than the sum raised here. It
-should not be forgotten that, in considering German taxes,
-we have to add the taxes raised by the governments of
-its various kingdoms and States to the taxes raised by the
-German Imperial Government. When that is done it will
-be found that the total amount so raised, although considerable,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_328" id="Page_328">{328}</a></span>
-is not nearly enough to meet the Imperial and
-national expenditure. What is the explanation? I
-commend it most earnestly to the politicians and publicists
-who fill the air with clamour about Socialism.</p>
-
-<p>Consider the following extract from the official description
-of German Taxation in Blue Book, Cd. 4,750:</p>
-
-<div class="subpara">
-
-<p style="text-indent:0em">To make any profitable comparison of direct
-taxation in England and Germany, it is necessary
-to take into consideration in the case of the latter
-not merely the Imperial taxes, but also the taxes
-levied by the Federal States. It is also important
-to remember that a <i>large portion of the States' expenditure,
-in Prussia as much as 47 per cent., is covered by
-the profits of railways and other industrial undertakings,
-the State being thus enabled</i>, pro tanto, <i>to
-dispense with taxation</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Varying, but usually considerable, proportions of the
-State revenues of the kingdom of Bavaria, the kingdom
-of Saxony, the kingdom of Wurtemberg, the six Grand
-Duchies, the five Duchies, and the seven Principalities,
-not to mention the free cities, are derived similarly from
-State undertakings, ranging from railways to forests, and
-from mines to china factories.</p>
-
-<p>I beg the reader to realize that but for these enormous
-State natural revenues the Germany of to-day would not be
-able to build Dreadnoughts or to sustain the greatest army
-in the world. Successful State Socialism has been the
-backbone of German finance, and the secret of a big
-expenditure and the maintenance of the greatest army
-in the world and the second largest navy in the world by
-a poorer country than ours, in which (basing ourselves on
-the official Income Tax Statistics of Prussia) we are able to
-affirm that one-half of the people are under the income
-line of £45 a year (17s. 3d. per week).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_329" id="Page_329">{329}</a></span>
-Germany derives from her Customs Duties, believed
-by ill-informed people here to be the chief feeder of her
-revenues, about £30,000,000 a year. This may be contrasted
-with a single item of German State Socialist
-revenue:</p>
-
-<p class="gap-above2 center">NET PROFITS OF THE PRUSSIAN STATE
-RAILWAYS</p>
-
-<table class="gt1" style="max-width:15em" summary="gt1-81">
-
-<colgroup>
- <col style="width:60%" />
- <col style="width:40%" />
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="cent">£</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>1906</td>
- <td class="numb">33,480,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>1907</td>
- <td class="numb">34,323,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>1908</td>
- <td class="numb">31,180,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>Surely it is worth the gravest consideration here that
-one-half the State revenue of Prussia, the chief State of
-the German Empire, is derived from the ownership of
-railways, forests, mines, and other national undertakings.
-And there can be little doubt that Germany will soon
-own and control her Power supply. <i>In 1910 the State
-railways of the entire German Empire will yield a net
-profit of about £50,000,000, meeting, in effect, the bill for
-German armaments.</i></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_330" id="Page_330">{330}</a></span>
-
-<h3>CHAPTER XXIV<br />
-<small>CONCLUSION</small></h3>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">LEST there be any lack of perspective in our view of the
-distribution of wealth and of the material progress of
-the working classes, I preface this concluding chapter with
-a note upon former investigations of the national income.</p>
-
-<p>In 1868, Dudley Baxter, in his classical paper on the
-National Income read to the Royal Statistical Society,
-estimated that in 1867, the population being 30,000,000,
-the manual workers, then estimated to number 10,960,000,
-took £325,000,000 out of a total national income of
-£814,000,000. Thus the average wage of the manual
-workers (men, women and children) was estimated at nearly
-£30 per head per annum.</p>
-
-<p>Professor Leone Levi estimated the amount of wages
-taken by the manual labourers in 1866 at £418,000,000, but
-he allowed for "play" only four weeks in the year, whereas
-Baxter, for very excellent reasons which he stated in his
-paper, allowed for 20 per cent. of lost time. Thus a great
-part of the difference in the two estimates is accounted for.</p>
-
-<p>In the "Economic Journal" for Sept. 1904, Professor A.
-L. Bowley, basing his calculations of the total amount
-paid in wages largely upon the figures of the Board of
-Trade Wages Census of 1886, making allowance for
-enforced leisure, and also for the army of casuals and
-incompetents, arrived at £350,000,000 as the sum paid in
-wages in 1867. This is a striking confirmation of Dudley
-Baxter's estimate, for it is arrived at by an entirely different
-route.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_331" id="Page_331">{331}</a></span>
-If, then, we adopt the estimate of Baxter we shall
-probably be as near the truth as is now possible. Accepting
-it, we find that the manual workers in 1867 took about
-40 per cent. of the national income.</p>
-
-<p>The manual workers in our present population of
-44,000,000 maybe estimated at 15,000,000 and they
-take, as we have seen, about £700,000,000 out of a total
-estimated income of £1,840,000,000, or less than 40 per
-cent. of the whole.</p>
-
-<p>Thus the position of the manual workers, in relation to
-the general wealth of the country, has not improved. They
-formed, with those dependent upon them, the greater part
-of the nation of 1867,—forty-three years ago,—and they
-enjoyed but about 40 per cent. of the national income
-according to the careful estimate of Dudley Baxter. To-day,
-with their army of dependents, they still form the
-greater part of the nation, although not quite so great a
-part, and, according to the best information available, they
-take less than 40 per cent. of the entire income of the nation.</p>
-
-<p>But, as will be seen from the figures given, the actual
-income of the manual workers has increased. In 1867 it
-amounted to about £30 per head. At the present time it
-amounts to about £46, 15s. per head.</p>
-
-<p>And not only have money wages thus risen, but the
-purchasing power of money has considerably increased in
-the last generation. The retail cost of food, clothing,
-and furniture has fallen; but, on the other hand, coal
-and rents have risen.</p>
-
-<p>Between the increase in money wages and the increase
-in the purchasing power of money there can be no question
-that the actual position of the wage-earner has considerably
-improved in the last forty years. Amongst other
-results, the death-rate has fallen, paupers have decreased,
-and criminals have decreased. These and other important
-facts are shown in the table on page 332.</p>
-
-<div class="section">
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_332" id="Page_332">{332}</a></div>
-
-<p class="gap-above2 center">SOME ITEMS IN MATERIAL PROGRESS
-1867-1908</p>
-
-<table class="gt2" style="max-width:35em" summary="gt2-34">
-
-<colgroup>
- <col style="width:50%" />
- <col span="2" style="width:25%" />
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="ulin rlin"></td>
- <td class="cent ulin rlin">1867</td>
- <td class="cent ulin">1908</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">Population</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">30,500,000</td>
- <td class="cent">44,500,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">Average earnings of manual workers<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(men, women and children)</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">£30</td>
- <td class="cent">£46, 15s.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">Consumption of imported food per head:</td>
- <td class="rlin"></td>
- <td></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(<i>a</i>) Wheat per head, lbs.</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">140</td>
- <td class="cent">272</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(<i>b</i>) Sugar per head, lbs.</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">44</td>
- <td class="cent">76</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(<i>c</i>) Rice per head, lbs.</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">6</td>
- <td class="cent">18</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(<i>d</i>) Tea per head, lbs.</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">3¾</td>
- <td class="cent">6</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">Consumption of Beer<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Gallons per head)</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">27.78 <span class="x-small">(1881)</span></td>
- <td class="cent">26.62</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">Deaths</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">634,008</td>
- <td class="cent">676,634</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">Death-rate (per 1,000)</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">20.8</td>
- <td class="cent">15.2</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">Criminals convicted</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">19,450</td>
- <td class="cent">15,500</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">Paupers (England and Wales)<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Jan. 1st</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">958,824</td>
- <td class="cent">911,588</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">Deposits in Post Office and<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Trustee Savings Banks</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">£46,283,132</td>
- <td class="cent">£245,600,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">Price of bread per 4 lb. loaf</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">8d.</td>
- <td class="cent">5.8d.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="rlin">Board of Trade consumption Index number (prices of 45 commodities expressed as percentages of those of 1900)</td>
- <td class="cent rlin">136.0 <span class="x-small">(1871)</span></td>
- <td class="cent">102.8</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_333" id="Page_333">{333}</a></span>
-With our knowledge of the conditions of the present,
-these facts are only relatively satisfactory, and serve but
-to fill us with horror of the past. We see that more bread
-is consumed to-day than in 1867, but remember that 40
-persons perish from exposure and starvation in the streets
-of London year by year.<span class="fnanchor"><a
-name="Ref_62" id="Ref_62" href="#Foot_62">[62]</a></span> We see that the death-rate
-has declined from 20.8 per 1,000 to 15.2 per 1,000 between
-1867 and 1908, but remember that in the latter year as
-many as 113,000 children perished in England and Wales
-under the age of twelve months. We see that the average
-wage has risen, but also that it now amounts to but
-£46, 15s. per annum on a liberal estimate. We see that
-prices have fallen, but remember that, in 1908, one-third
-of our population, in spite of lower prices, have not
-sufficient means to command a proper supply of the
-common necessaries of existence, no matter how severe
-their thrift.</p>
-
-<p>Writing in 1868, in the paper already referred to, Baxter
-wrote, in dealing with the question of real earnings as distinguished
-from nominal rates of wages, a passage which
-strikingly illustrates the conditions of labour in his day:<span class="fnanchor"><a
-name="Ref_63" id="Ref_63" href="#Foot_63">[63]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="small">
-
-<p>"Another point is the age at which a manual labourer ceases
-to be an effective. I am afraid that 60 years is about the average;
-six or seven years earlier than the Middle Classes. After that
-age a man becomes unfit for hard work; and if he loses his old
-master, cannot find a new one. In some trades, a man is disabled
-at 55 or 50. A coal-backer is considered past work at 40. I
-have endeavoured to be on the safe side by taking 65 as the
-termination of their working life, and have excluded all above
-that age from my calculation of wages.</p>
-
-<p>"But the most important point of all is the allowance which
-must be made for what workmen call 'playing'; that is to say,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_334" id="Page_334">{334}</a></span>
-being 'out of work,' from whatever cause, whether forced or
-voluntary. It is here that I am at issue with Professor Levi. He
-estimates the lost time at no higher average than 4 weeks out of
-the 52, and thinks it sufficiently covered by omitting from the
-wage-computation all workmen above 60 years old, i.e. the
-non-effectives. If this were the real state of things, England
-would be a perfect Paradise for working men! If every man,
-woman, and child returned as a worker in the census had full
-employment, at full wages, for 48 weeks out of the 52, there would
-be no poverty at all. We should be in the Millennium! Far
-other is the real state of affairs; and a very different tale would
-be told by scores and even hundreds of thousands, congregated
-in our large cities, and seeking in vain for sufficient work.</p>
-
-<p>"I will take a good average instance (and a very large one) of
-the way in which wages are earned in the building trades. These
-trades form a whole, and include carpenters, bricklayers, masons,
-plasterers, painters, and plumbers, and number in England and
-Wales, about 387,000 men above 20 years of age. In London
-their full time wages average 36s. a week. In the country they
-are lower, 30s. to 28s. or 26s.; growing less the farther we go
-northward. The full-work average may be taken at 30s. But it
-is only the best men, working for the best masters, that are
-always sure of full time. These trades work on the hour system,
-introduced at the instance of the men themselves, but a system
-of great precariousness of employment. The large masters give
-regular wages to their good workmen, but the smaller masters,
-especially at the East End of London, engage a large proportion
-of their hands only for the job, and then at once pay them off.
-All masters, when work grows slack, immediately discharge the
-inferior hands, and the unsteady men, of whom there are but too
-many even among clever workmen, and do not take them on
-again till work revives. In bad times there are always a large
-number out of employment. In prosperity much time is lost by
-keeping Saint Monday, and by occasional strikes. There are
-also 40,000 men between 55 and 65 years of age, who, in the
-building trade, are considered as past hard work, and who suffer
-severely by want of employment....
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_335" id="Page_335">{335}</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"Let us turn to another great branch of industry, the Agricultural
-Labourers: whose numbers are, men, 650,000; boys, 190,000;
-women, 126,000; and girls, 36,000. Continuous employment
-has largely increased since the New Poor Law of 1834, and good
-farmers now employ their men regularly. But in many places
-such is not the custom. Near Broadstairs, in Kent, I was told
-that, on an average, labourers are only employed 40 weeks in the
-year.... Turn next to the cotton manufacture, including
-143,000 men, 82,000 boys, 150,000 women, and 121,000 girls;
-altogether, 496,000. We all know their periodical distresses.
-It may be said that these were accidents. They are not mere
-accidents, but incidents, natural incidents, of our manufacturing
-economy. They are sure to recur under different forms; either
-from gluts, or strikes, or war; and they must be allowed for in
-computations of earnings.</p>
-
-<p>"I come lastly to instances from trades at the East End of
-London, where I have lately had a great deal of experience. It
-is there that the struggle for existence is most intense, from
-London being the resort and refuge of the surplus population of
-other parts of the country. The London Dock Labourers earn,
-when on full time, 15s. a week; but so great is the competition
-that even in ordinary years they are employed little more than
-half their time. During the past year 5s. a week has been considered
-tolerably lucky....</p>
-
-<p>"Cabinet-makers stand well in the lists of trades, their nominal
-wages for the Kingdom being set down at 30s. a week. But the
-cabinet-makers at the East End, a very numerous body, are in
-what is called the 'slop trade,' and are ground down by the
-dealers, who own what are called 'slaughter-houses,' in which
-they take advantage of the necessities of the small manufacturers
-(expressively called 'garret masters') and compel them to sell
-their upholstery at little above the cost of materials. Between
-dealers and want of work, I am told that numbers of the 'slop'
-cabinet-makers are not earning 7s. 6d. a week.</p>
-
-<p>"None but those who have examined the facts can have any
-idea of the precariousness of employment in our large cities, and
-the large proportion of time out of work, and also, I am bound
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_336" id="Page_336">{336}</a></span>
-to add, the loss of time in many well paid trades from drinking
-habits. Taking all these facts into account, I come to the conclusion,
-that for loss of work from every cause, and for the non-effectives
-up to 65 years of age, who are included in the census,
-<i>we ought to deduct fully 20 per cent. from the nominal full time
-wages</i>.</p>
-
-<p>"I will cite one more fact in confirmation. The average
-number of paupers at one time in receipt of relief in 1866 was
-916,000, being less than for any of the four preceding years.
-The total number relieved during 1866 may, on the authority
-of a Return of 1857, be calculated at 3½ times that number, or
-3,000,000.<span class="fnanchor"><a
-name="Ref_64" id="Ref_64" href="#Foot_64">[64]</a></span> All these may be considered as belonging to the
-16,000,000 of the Manual Labour Classes, being as nearly as
-possible 20 per cent. on their numbers. But the actual cases of
-relief give a very imperfect idea of the loss of work and wages.
-A large proportion of the poor submit to great hardships, and
-are many weeks, and even months, out of work before they will
-apply to the Guardians. They exhaust their savings, they try to
-the utmost their trade unions or benefit societies; they pawn
-little by little all their furniture; and at last are driven to ask for
-relief. I am not astonished at their reluctance, for what do they
-get? After waiting in a crowd and in the most humiliating
-publicity, they get an order for the stoneyard, with 6d. a day,
-and a loaf per week of bread for each of their family. Sometimes,
-rather than accept the relief, they die of starvation."</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="gap-above2">These words were written over forty years ago, but it
-would need little emendation to give them application
-to-day. The growing strenuousness of modern industry
-makes it more and not less difficult for the ageing to
-earn a living. The increased use of machinery and the
-greater division of labour have made experience of less
-value than of yore. The ageing man resorts to hair
-dye to conceal the honourable age which is to rob him of
-his livelihood. Baxter's remarks about the building trades
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_337" id="Page_337">{337}</a></span>
-are absolutely true of to-day, but they now apply not to
-400,000 men, but to 1,000,000. "All masters, when work
-grows slack, immediately discharge the inferior hands....
-In bad times there are always a large number out of
-employment." The position of agricultural labourers has
-improved, but chiefly because their rapidly decreasing
-numbers have placed a premium upon their services.
-Even so, in parts of the country removed from coal-mines,
-the most pitiable conditions prevail. Kettle broth
-is still part of the menu of the Wiltshire labourer.</p>
-
-<p>In the East End of London the economic position of the
-dock and riverside labourers is much the same as Baxter
-described it, while in the furniture trade the "garret
-masters" are still with us. True—most honourably true—it
-is also that still the workers endure great hardships
-before they will apply to the Guardians. "They
-exhaust their savings, they try to the utmost their trade
-unions or benefit societies; they pawn little by little all
-their furniture; and at last they are driven to ask for
-relief."</p>
-
-<p>The Board of Trade, after a careful examination of the
-question of unemployment in 1904, arrived at the general
-conclusion that "The average level of employment during
-the past four years has been almost exactly the same as
-the average of the preceding forty years" (Cd. 2,337). The
-conditions of employment, the want of security of tenure,
-are very much what they were in 1867.</p>
-
-<p>As for pauperism, it is difficult to congratulate ourselves
-upon improvement since 1867 when we remember that in
-England and Wales alone 1,500,000 to 2,000,000 persons
-are in receipt of relief in the course of a single year. This
-statement rests upon ascertained facts, as will be found
-by reference to the statistics given in our examination
-of the question of Old Age Pensions. The population
-of England and Wales being about 36,000,000 (1910)
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_338" id="Page_338">{338}</a></span>
-this means that <i>one person in every twenty</i> has recourse
-to the Poor Law Guardians during a single year.</p>
-
-<p>If our national income had but increased at the same
-rate as our population since 1867 it would, in 1908, have
-amounted to but about £1,200,000,000. As we have seen,
-it is now about £1,840,000,000. Yet the Error of Distribution
-remains so great that while the total population
-in 1867 amounted to 30,000,000, we have to-day a nation
-of 30,000,000 poor people in our rich country, and many
-millions of these are living under conditions of degrading
-poverty. Of those above the line of primary poverty,
-millions are tied down by the conditions of their labour to
-live in surroundings which preclude the proper enjoyment
-of life or the rearing of healthy children. The comparatively
-high wages of London are accompanied by rents
-high in proportion and frequently by waste of income and
-time upon travelling expenses. In so far as the manual
-labourers have been reduced in proportion to population
-it has been to swell the ranks of black-coated working men,
-clerks, agents, travellers, canvassers, and others, whose
-tenure of employment is precarious, whose earnings are
-very low, and whose labour as we have already noted
-is largely waste.</p>
-
-<p>We have won through the horrors of the birth and
-establishment of the factory system at the cost of physical
-deterioration. We have purchased a great commerce at
-the price of crowding our population into the cities and of
-robbing millions of strength and beauty. We have given
-our people what we grimly call elementary education and
-robbed them of the elements of a natural life. All this has
-been done that a few of us may enjoy a superfluity of goods
-and services. Out of the travail of millions we have added
-to a landed gentry an aristocracy of wealth. These, striding
-over the bodies of the fallen, proclaim in accents of conviction
-the prosperity of their country.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_339" id="Page_339">{339}</a></span></p>
-
-<p>There leaps to the mind the mordant lines in which
-Ruskin, thirty years ago, wrote a "modern version" of
-the Beatitudes<span class="fnanchor"><a
-name="Ref_65" id="Ref_65" href="#Foot_65">[65]</a></span>:—</p>
-
-<div class="subpara">
-
-<p>Blessed are the Rich in Flesh, for theirs is the
-Kingdom of Earth.</p>
-
-<p>Blessed are the Proud, in that they <i>have</i> inherited
-the Earth.</p>
-
-<p>Blessed are the Merciless, for they shall obtain
-Money.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>There is no whit of exaggeration in these lines. The
-passage of thirty years has but added to their sting.
-Thirty years of accumulation of the results of toil in
-hands other than those of the toilers have had for consummation
-the accusing series of facts which are examined in
-the early chapters of this book. Deprivation for the many
-and luxury for the few have degraded our national life at
-both ends of the scale. At the one end, "thirteen
-millions on the verge of hunger," physically and morally
-deteriorated through poverty and unloveliness. At the
-other, the inheritors of the earth, "senseless conduits
-through which the strength and riches of their native
-land are poured into the cup of the fornication of its
-capital."</p>
-
-<p>Blessed indeed are the Rich, for theirs is the governance
-of the realm, theirs is the Kingdom. Theirs is a power
-above the throne, for it has been a maxim of British politics
-that our government should be a poor government, and a
-poor government cannot contend in the direction of affairs
-with the imperium of wealth. This may be illustrated
-by our attempts to "educate" the mass of the people.
-For a few brief years the government, with small funds
-raised with timorous hands, does a little to form the mind
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_340" id="Page_340">{340}</a></span>
-and character of the child. Even in these early years it
-consents that the future proud citizen of Empire shall be
-improperly fed and badly housed. These early moments
-passed, the mockery of "education" ceases, and the child,
-taught by the State to read, to write, and to cipher, becomes
-a unit of industry. At this point begins the serious training
-of the citizen. Forthwith he is inducted into some more
-or less worthy employment, that employment, as we have
-seen, resulting from the great expenditure of the few and
-the poor expenditure of the many. Careers are thus chiefly
-shaped by the wealthy, for theirs is the greatest call. The
-demand for luxuries is too great; the demand for necessaries
-is too small; the unit of industry is fortunate, therefore, if
-he is inducted into useful service. The State washes its
-hands of his development. The educational sham over,
-the real education of life begins. So far as the State calls
-for privates of industry it is chiefly to make them soldiers,
-sailors, makers of guns, builders of battleships. The
-development of all things useful, of railways, of canals, of
-roads, of cities, of houses, is resigned to the blind call for
-commodities and the intelligence of individuals who, in
-search of private gain, seek, without regard to the national
-well-being, to profit by that blind call.</p>
-
-<p>Yet the manner in which its people are employed matters
-everything to a nation. It is not sufficient to give the
-child a smattering of knowledge. We need to take a
-collective interest in the general education of our citizens,
-and that education is the result of expenditure. The consumer
-gives the order. Given a fairly equable distribution
-of income, the call will be as to the greater part for
-worthy things, as to the smaller part for luxuries. Given
-a grossly unequal distribution, and the call for luxuries
-will be so great as to divert a considerable part of the
-national labour into channels of waste and degradation.</p>
-
-<p>To keep a government poor is to keep it weak. The
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_341" id="Page_341">{341}</a></span>
-poor government may resolve to educate, but it will have
-no means to carry out its resolve; its teachers will be
-underpaid; its schools inefficient. The poor government
-may pass Housing Acts; it will but call for better houses
-that will not come when it does call for them. The poor
-government may piously resolve to create small holdings;
-there will be no means to carry out the pious resolve. The
-poor government may, at periodic intervals, look the
-question of Unemployment in the face; its legislation will
-but reflect its poverty, and be in its provisions an acknowledgment
-that the power to employ, the power to govern,
-is in other hands.</p>
-
-<p>Even those who have striven to hold fast the curious
-faith that civilization comes, not through collective service,
-but through individual strife, are constrained to admit
-that much waste is going on. It is noteworthy that Sir
-Robert Giffen, in one of his last essays on Taxation,
-said:<span class="fnanchor"><a
-name="Ref_66" id="Ref_66" href="#Foot_66">[66]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"When the proportion (of income appropriated by the
-state) becomes one-tenth or less it is doubtful whether the
-state can do best for its subjects by making the proportion
-still lower, that is, by abandoning one tax after another,
-or whether equal or greater advantage would not be gained
-by using the revenue for wise purposes under the direction
-of the state, such as great works of sanitation, or water
-supply or public defence. In other words, when taxes are
-very moderate and the revenue appropriated by the state
-is a small part only of the aggregate of individual incomes,
-it seems possible that individuals in a rich country may
-waste individually resources which the state could apply
-to very profitable purposes. The state, for instance, could
-perhaps more usefully engage in some great works, such
-as establishing reservoirs of water for the use of town
-populations on a systematic plan, or making a tunnel
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_342" id="Page_342">{342}</a></span>
-under one of the channels between Ireland and Great
-Britain, or a sea-canal across Scotland between the Clyde
-and the Forth, or purchasing land from Irish landlords
-and transferring it to tenants, than allow money to fructify
-or not fructify, as the case may be, in the pockets of individuals.
-Probably there are no works more beneficial to
-a community in the long run than those like a tunnel
-between Ireland and Great Britain, which open an entirely
-new means of communication of strategical as well as commercial
-value, but are not likely to pay the individual
-<i>entrepreneur</i> within a short period of time."</p>
-
-<p>Here we have a reflection of the uneasy feeling that all
-is not well in the disposition of the income of the community.
-Very true it is that "individuals in a rich country
-may waste individually resources which the State could
-apply to very profitable purposes." Even were the means
-by which "Captain Roland fills his purse" moral, we
-should need to look to Captain Roland's expenditure.
-The effects of the robbery do not end with the impoverishment
-of the despoiled. The despoiler proceeds to spend
-the contents of his fat purse, and in spending he buys
-bodies and souls, and builds up vested interests in
-degrading occupations.</p>
-
-<p>In the foregoing pages I have pointed both to mere
-palliatives of existing evils and to real remedies which
-go to the root of things. Our attempts to reform, our
-strivings towards organization, must in practice have regard
-both to palliatives and to remedies. We have to keep
-in mind both the impoverished and sometimes degraded
-creatures which are effects of past and existing causes,
-while dealing drastically and radically with the causes
-themselves. At present the greater part of the labours of
-social reformers are directed to dealing with a succession
-of distressful effects. Here are slums; how shall we rehouse
-their inmates? Here are paupers; what shall we
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_343" id="Page_343">{343}</a></span>
-do with them? Here are unemployed; how shall we
-keep them going until they find employers? Here are
-aged poor; can we, should we, give them pensions? We
-owe a present duty in all these and many other matters.
-The effects must be dealt with and ameliorated. It is
-beyond question that there is a clear call to succour the
-aged, to care for the weak, to aid poor women in their
-time of trouble. The sufferer, the affected individual, the
-disease, must be dealt with. But ever we must keep
-before us the causes which bring into being the raw
-material of our social problems; ever we must have clear
-vision of the crime of poverty in a wealthy country;
-ever we must seek to come to grips with the original
-sin.</p>
-
-<p>To deal with causes we must strike at the Error of
-Distribution by gradually substituting public ownership
-for private ownership of the means of production. In no
-other way can we secure for each worker in the hive the
-full reward of his labour. So long as between the worker
-and his just wage stands the private landlord and the
-private capitalist, so long will poverty remain, and not
-poverty alone, but the moral degradations which inevitably
-arise from the devotion of labour to the service of waste.
-So long as the masses of the people are denied the fruit of
-their own labour, so long will our civilization be a false
-veneer, and our every noble thoroughfare be flanked by
-purlieus of shame.</p>
-
-<p>There is already a beginning made. A few hundred
-millions have been applied as public capital in the ownership
-by many municipalities of such services as tramways,
-gasworks, and waterworks. As we saw in our examination
-of the national wealth, such capital is yet but a tiny fraction
-of the whole, and it still bears a great mortgage and
-pays interest to private hands. That interest, in process
-of time, will disappear through the operation of sinking
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_344" id="Page_344">{344}</a></span>
-funds, and then, as to certain services, the community will
-enter into its own with no tribute to pay to private usurers.
-From the small beginnings made we must seek to advance,
-nor need we be deterred by those who implore us to
-hasten slowly. If Rome was not built in a day, Washington
-was built in not many days, and the factory system
-itself is little more than a century old. The lapse of a
-single generation might see well advanced the building of
-our new city.</p>
-
-<p>It would be a great pity if anyone were to imagine that
-the changes necessary to secure the just reward of all
-forms of labour are either difficult to effect or likely to
-cause dislocation in the making. As has been pointed out,
-the greater number of our industrial concerns are already
-shaped in the form of limited liability companies, the
-shareholders in which are dumb, while the management
-is in the hands of paid officials. In 1902-3, while private
-firms were assessed to Income Tax on £193,000,000,
-public companies were assessed on £239,000,000. In
-1907-8 the respective figures were £183,000,000 and
-£259,000,000. The re-shaping proceeds apace. The
-reform which needs to be effected is to substitute the
-community at large for the dumb shareholders. Management,
-ability, invention, would be properly rewarded, as
-they are now rewarded in some cases, and as they are not
-now rewarded in many cases. The only change would be
-the gradual substitution of the community for the shareholders,
-and the consequent disappearance of unearned
-incomes. Such portions of the product as were necessary
-for application as new capital would be so applied by the
-community. For the rest, the whole of the product would
-go to labour. Saving, the necessary saving, without which
-labour would go without tools, would be simply and automatically
-effected, and capital would take its true and
-rightful place as the handmaiden of labour.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_345" id="Page_345">{345}</a></span>
-Let us not go further without a vision and a hope. That
-vision, that hope, is not of a regimented society, but of a
-community relieved from nine-tenths of its present irksome
-routine and carking care. If the individual is to be set
-free it can only be in a society so organized as to reduce
-the labour employed in the production of common necessaries
-to a minimum. That minimum cannot be secured
-without the organization of each of the great branches of
-production and distribution. Common needs can be satisfied
-with little labour if labour be properly applied. The
-work of a few will feed a hundred or supply exquisite
-cloth for the clothing of fifty. The work for a few hours
-per day of every adult member of the community will be
-ample to supply every comfort in each season to all.
-Thus set free, the lives of men will turn to the uplifting,
-individual work which is the pride of the craftsman. The
-dwellings of men will contain not only the socialized
-products within common reach, but the proud individual
-achievements of their inmates. The simple and
-beautiful clothing of the community will chiefly be made
-of fabrics woven in the socialized factories, but it will often
-be worked by the loving hands of women. A happy
-union of labour economized in routine work and labour
-lavished upon individual work will uplift the crafts of the
-future and the character of those who follow them. The
-abominations of machine-made ornament will disappear,
-and art be wedded to everyday life. Each new invention
-to save labour in mining, or tilling, or building, or spinning,
-will be hailed with joy as a release from toil and a gift of
-more time in which to do individual work. The inventor,
-the originator, now unhappily compelled to hunt for a
-capitalist and bow low his genius before some individual
-distinguished only for that gift of acquisitiveness, that
-business ability, which is the lowest attribute of mankind,
-will see his idea put to the test and reap not unholy gains,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_346" id="Page_346">{346}</a></span>
-but the honour of his fellows if it is not found wanting.
-The painter, no longer compelled to paint the portraits of
-the rich and not necessarily beautiful, will ally his gifts
-with the common life of men and be carried in triumph
-before the enduring monuments of his genius. The
-organizer, the man of arrangement, will be invited to
-exercise his talent, not in over-reaching and despoiling his
-fellows, but in planning their welfare in a thousand new
-schemes of development. No host of wasteful workers
-will be found in the industrial camp. Accounts will be
-simple and clerks few. No travellers, agents or touts will
-be needed to push doubtful commodities. The sham and
-the substitute will be found only in museums. It will be
-obviously ridiculous to employ any but good materials,
-for labour can only be economized by producing the things
-which are the best of their kind. Policies of insurance,
-those typical documents of a community of prey, will be
-read in the public archives with much the same feelings as
-we now read a warrant for the burning of a Bruno. The
-young men who now waste their time in ruling up books
-in banks and insurance offices or in serving writs will find
-manly and useful work. The production of commodities
-will be commensurate with the labour put forth, unemployment
-will be one of the few crimes known to the
-statute-book, and last, but not least, the economic dependence
-of woman will cease.</p>
-
-<p>The attainment of such ends will only be difficult as
-long as we refuse to apply scientific methods to the ordering
-of common affairs. It is in the domain of politics
-alone that men refuse to apply first principles to the
-solution of problems. The mental daring which has
-accomplished so much in engineering, in astronomy, in
-surgery, in every department of science, is replaced in the
-sphere of politics by a timorous tinkering with admitted
-evils. With things the scientist has worked marvels in a
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_347" id="Page_347">{347}</a></span>
-single century. With those marvels the politician has done
-little. The scientist has applied his skill to locomotion;
-the politician has refused to avail himself of that skill in
-order to distribute the population healthily. The scientist
-has stated the conditions of health; the politician has
-refused to create those conditions. The scientist has
-supplied the tools; the politician has neglected to take
-them up.</p>
-
-<p>The problem of riches and poverty is of the simplest.
-It presents none of the difficulties which attach to the
-measurement of the mass of the sun, or the treatment of
-such a disease as cancer. Science has presented us with
-such instruments that we can easily create a tremendous
-superfluity of commodities if we choose to do so. We
-know how to produce; we know how to transport the
-results of our production. The appliances at our command,
-wielded by the labour of 44,000,000 people, could furnish
-many more foot-tons of work than are needed to give
-proper housing, suitable clothing and good food to every
-unit of the community. There is here no impenetrable
-secret; we have read enough in the book of Nature to
-control her forces to effect; our power of production is not
-too small, but already greater than our need. As I have
-pointed out in an earlier page, if invention went no further
-if science now came to a standstill, we should have tools
-more than adequate to abolish poverty.</p>
-
-<p>Unfortunately the politicians and the economists have
-never discussed the question of poverty from this point of
-view. They have found men buying and selling, and as
-buyers and sellers hunting for profits they have discussed
-them. Volumes have been written on such subjects as
-"rent," "interest," or "value," but nothing has been done to
-inquire how much work is needed to feed, clothe and house
-a community, and how best that work may be accomplished.
-In designing an engine, the man of science considers the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_348" id="Page_348">{348}</a></span>
-work to be done and the known means to do it. Is it too
-much to ask that in ordering the affairs of a nation, statesmen
-should consider the quantity of commodities needed
-to give material happiness and the known means to produce
-and distribute them? To make the best use of our
-energies, to profit fully by the discoveries and inventions
-of the living and the dead, we must come to a common
-agreement as to the work which needs to be done and
-determine that that work shall be accomplished. For
-want of that agreement and determination, for want, that
-is, of a wise collectivism, the greater number of our people
-are poor.</p>
-
-<p>It is probable that the earliest readers of this book will
-be of those who, like myself, are amongst the favoured
-few whose work brings them pleasure and the means of
-happiness. To these the first appeal. Is it a good thing,
-is it an honourable thing, to be one of the few whose bark
-is borne upon the waters of wretchedness, whose fortunes
-float upon a sea of unfathomable depths of despair? Look
-downwards and you shall see monsters that once were
-human, frailties that once were women, devils that once
-were children. These are the product of the individual
-strife in which it is not always the noblest thing to
-succeed, but in which it is ever a terrible thing to
-fail. Is success worth having which is purchased at such
-a price?</p>
-
-<p>The last appeal shall be to the poor. It is no escape
-from labour which the thinking man offers the people.
-There are no honourable avenues to ease and luxury
-in the organization which would abolish poverty. It is
-a world of service which a civilization would substitute
-for a world of serfdom and pain. But if, realizing that the
-world has no room for the idle, the people would rise to a
-freedom only bounded by the knowledge of, and necessity
-for, collective decision, then there is the broadest avenue
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_349" id="Page_349">{349}</a></span>
-for hope and the clearest call to action. The achievements
-of those who are gone, these are the inheritance of the
-people. The only true riches of the nation, men and
-women, these are the people themselves. The people
-have but to will it, and we set our faces towards a
-civilization.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_62" id="Foot_62" href="#Ref_62">[62]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-"Deaths from Starvation or Accelerated by Privation (London)." Issued
-Sept. 14th, 1904.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_63" id="Foot_63" href="#Ref_63">[63]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Quoted from Dudley Baxter's "The National Income," by kind permission
-of the publishers, Messrs Macmillan &amp; Co.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_64" id="Foot_64" href="#Ref_64">[64]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-In saying this Dudley Baxter committed one of the few errors which can
-properly be laid to his charge. See Chapter 19.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_65" id="Foot_65" href="#Ref_65">[65]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-"Usury," a preface re-published in "On the Old Road."</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_66" id="Foot_66" href="#Ref_66">[66]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-"Encyclopædia Britannica," Volume 33, page 200.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_351" id="Page_351">{351}</a></div>
-
-<h2>INDEX</h2>
-
-<div class="index">
-
-<ul>
-
-<li>Abatements, Income Tax, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_297">297</a></li>
-
-<li>Accidents, Industrial: Engineering Works, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>
- <ul><li>Factories and Workshops, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>, <a href="#Page_128">128</a></li>
- <li>Mines, <a href="#Page_133">133</a></li>
- <li>Railways, <a href="#Page_136">136</a></li>
- <li>Ships, <a href="#Page_137">137</a></li>
- <li>Total, all Trades, <a href="#Page_138">138</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Advertising, <a href="#Page_253">253</a></li>
-
-<li>Afforestation, <a href="#Page_248">248</a></li>
-
-<li>Aged Poor, <a href="#Page_272">272</a></li>
-
-<li>Agricultural Labourers' Wages, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>, <a href="#Page_155">155</a></li>
-
-<li>Agricultural Land, Value of, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_68">68</a></li>
-
-<li>Agriculture, as Field for Employment, <a href="#Page_240">240</a></li>
-
-<li>Anderson, Miss A. M., on Maternity Funds, <a href="#Page_180">180</a></li>
-
-<li>Andrew, George, Report on German Schools, <a href="#Page_192">192</a></li>
-
-<li>Anthrax, <a href="#Page_130">130</a></li>
-
-<li>Area, Control of, <a href="#Page_242">242</a></li>
-
-<li>Area, Distinguishing Attribute of Land, <a href="#Page_81">81</a></li>
-
-<li>Area of United Kingdom, <a href="#Page_81">81</a></li>
-
-<li>Army Material, Value of, <a href="#Page_66">66</a></li>
-
-<li>Ashby, Dr Hy., on Poor Mothers, <a href="#Page_174">174</a></li>
-
-<li>Asquith, H. H., Death Duties, <a href="#Page_321">321</a>
- <ul><li>Differentiates Income Tax, <a href="#Page_303">303</a></li>
- <li>Old Age Pensions Act, <a href="#Page_284">284</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Average Wage, <a href="#Page_29">29</a></li>
-
-</ul>
-
-<ul>
-
-<li>Back-to-Back Houses, <a href="#Page_214">214</a></li>
-
-<li>"Back to the Land," <a href="#Page_242">242</a></li>
-
-<li>Bateman, John, on Landowners, <a href="#Page_82">82</a></li>
-
-<li>Bathing in Schools, <a href="#Page_193">193</a></li>
-
-<li>Baxter, Dudley, on Conditions of Labour in 1868, <a href="#Page_333">333</a>
- <ul><li>On Income Tax Evasion, <a href="#Page_13">13</a></li>
- <li>On Loss of Wages, <a href="#Page_26">26</a></li>
- <li>On National Income in 1867, <a href="#Page_330">330</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Beaulieu, M. Leroy, on Eliminating Middlemen, <a href="#Page_254">254</a></li>
-
-<li>Beer Consumption, <a href="#Page_332">332</a></li>
-
-<li>Belgian State Railways, Success of, <a href="#Page_265">265</a></li>
-
-<li>Bentham, Jeremy, Suggested Exemption of Small Incomes from Taxation, <a href="#Page_317">317</a></li>
-
-<li>Births, in United Kingdom, <a href="#Page_173">173</a></li>
-
-<li>Board of Trade, Estimate of Wages, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>
- <ul><li>Wage Census, <a href="#Page_21">21</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Boot Trade, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_156">156</a></li>
-
-<li>Bournville Garden City, <a href="#Page_223">223</a></li>
-
-<li>Bowley, A. L., Estimate of Wages, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>
- <ul><li>On Loss of Wages, <a href="#Page_26">26</a></li>
- <li>On Wages in 1867, <a href="#Page_330">330</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Boy Labour in Mines, <a href="#Page_136">136</a></li>
-
-<li>Bradford School Children, Condition of, <a href="#Page_194">194</a></li>
-
-<li>Bread, Fall in Price of, <a href="#Page_332">332</a></li>
-
-<li>Bricklayers' Wages, <a href="#Page_108">108</a></li>
-
-<li>British Association, Committee on Small Incomes, <a href="#Page_21">21</a></li>
-
-<li>British Government, Poverty of, <a href="#Page_326">326</a></li>
-
-<li>Budget, Is an Annual Debate Necessary?, <a href="#Page_315">315</a>
- <ul><li>Tradition of Secrecy Unnecessary, <a href="#Page_315">315</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Building Societies' Funds, <a href="#Page_56">56</a></li>
-
-<li>Burns, John, Housing Act, <a href="#Page_221">221</a></li>
-
-</ul>
-
-<ul>
-
-<li>Campbell-Bannerman, Sir H., on Poverty, <a href="#Page_5">5</a></li>
-
-<li>Canals, Value of, <a href="#Page_62">64</a></li>
-
-<li>Capital, In Few Hands, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>
- <ul><li>In Relation to Housing, <a href="#Page_229">229</a></li>
- <li>Of United Kingdom, <a href="#Page_62">62</a></li>
- <li>Of Working Classes, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, <a href="#Page_80">80</a></li>
- <li>Waste of, <a href="#Page_158">158</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Capitalization of Usury, <a href="#Page_101">101</a></li>
-
-<li>Carpenters' Wages, <a href="#Page_108">108</a></li>
-
-<li>Casual Workers, Earnings, <a href="#Page_27">27</a></li>
-
-<li>Census, Inadequacy of, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>
- <ul><li>Of Incomes, Importance of, <a href="#Page_308">308</a>, <a href="#Page_312">312</a>, <a href="#Page_315">315</a></li>
- <li>Of Wages, <a href="#Page_21">21</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Charity Organization Society, Thought Old Age Pensions Too Costly, <a href="#Page_283">283</a></li>
-
-<li>Children, National Responsibility for, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>
- <ul><li>Should be the Chief Care of the Reformer, <a href="#Page_173">173</a></li>
- <li>Underfed, <a href="#Page_196">196</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Clerks, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>
- <ul><li>Number of, <a href="#Page_253">253</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Coal Distribution, should be Municipal, <a href="#Page_269">269</a>
- <ul><li>Miners, Number of, <a href="#Page_268">268</a></li>
- <li>Production, <a href="#Page_267">267</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Collectivism, Assisted by Joint-Stock Principle, <a href="#Page_344">344</a>
- <ul><li>By Economizing Labour Creates Individual Freedom, <a href="#Page_345">345</a></li>
- <li>Necessity of, <a href="#Page_343">343</a></li>
- <li>And Revenue, <a href="#Page_326">326</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Combination Accentuating Error of Distribution, <a href="#Page_269">269</a></li>
-
-<li>"Comfortable" Persons, Number of, <a href="#Page_48">48</a></li>
-
-<li>Commercial Travellers, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>
- <ul><li>Number of, <a href="#Page_252">252</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Commons, Value of, <a href="#Page_66">66</a></li>
-
-<li>Company Promotion, <a href="#Page_166">166</a></li>
-
-<li>Competition Disappearing, <a href="#Page_269">269</a>
- <ul><li>Waste through, <a href="#Page_255">255</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Compositors' Wages, <a href="#Page_109">109</a></li>
-
-<li>Consumption of Food, Growth of, <a href="#Page_332">332</a></li>
-
-<li>Continuation Schools Advocated, <a href="#Page_204">204</a></li>
-
-<li>Co-operative Societies' Funds, <a href="#Page_56">56</a></li>
-
-<li>Cost of Living, <a href="#Page_115">115</a></li>
-
-<li>Cotton Trade, <a href="#Page_143">143</a></li>
-
-<li>Criminals, Decline of, <a href="#Page_332">332</a></li>
-
-<li>Crowley, Dr R. H., on Bradford School Children, <a href="#Page_193">193</a></li>
-
-<li>Cunningham, Professor D. J., on Physical Deterioration, <a href="#Page_173">173</a></li>
-
-<li>Customs Duties, <a href="#Page_3">3</a></li>
-
-</ul>
-
-<ul>
-
-<li>Death Duties: And Length of Life, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>
- <ul><li>Assessments, Stationariness of, <a href="#Page_76">76</a></li>
- <li>Avoidance of, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a></li>
- <li>Described, <a href="#Page_320">320</a></li>
- <li>Do they Waste Capital?, <a href="#Page_323">323</a></li>
- <li>Still Low, <a href="#Page_323">323</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Death-rate, Fall of, <a href="#Page_332">332</a></li>
-
-<li>Deaths from Mining Accidents, <a href="#Page_132">132</a></li>
-
-<li>Deaths in United Kingdom, <a href="#Page_54">54</a></li>
-
-<li>Declaring Incomes, Importance of, <a href="#Page_308">308</a></li>
-
-<li>Differentiation of Income Tax, <a href="#Page_303">303</a></li>
-
-<li>Diseases of Occupations, <a href="#Page_129">129</a></li>
-
-<li>Distribution, Combination in, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>
- <ul><li>Of Capital, <a href="#Page_79">79</a></li>
- <li>Of Income, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>, <a href="#Page_48">48</a></li>
- <li>Of Land, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a></li>
- <li>Of Wealth in Practice Illustrated, <a href="#Page_94">94</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Doctor, in the School, <a href="#Page_193">193</a></li>
-
-<li>Dressmaking, <a href="#Page_151">151</a></li>
-
-<li>Dundee, Physical Deterioration, <a href="#Page_139">139</a></li>
-
-</ul>
-
-<ul>
-
-<li>Education, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>, <a href="#Page_190">190</a>
- <ul><li>Children should be Trained in Expression, <a href="#Page_201">201</a></li>
- <li>Continuation Schools Necessary, <a href="#Page_204">204</a></li>
- <li>Importance of Training in Observation, <a href="#Page_199">199</a></li>
- <li>Science Teaching, <a href="#Page_202">202</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Education (Provision of Meals) Act, <a href="#Page_198">198</a></li>
-
-<li>Eichholz, Dr A., on Poor Children, <a href="#Page_174">174</a></li>
-
-<li>Electricity Should be Publicly Controlled, <a href="#Page_257">257</a></li>
-
-<li>Employers Compelled to Disclose Employees' Incomes, <a href="#Page_311">311</a></li>
-
-<li>Engineers, Unemployment amongst, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>
- <ul><li>Wages, <a href="#Page_109">109</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Estate Duties. See Death Duties</li>
-
-<li>Estates, 1904-1908, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>
- <ul><li>Classified by Nature, <a href="#Page_78">78</a></li>
- <li>Classified by Size, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>, <a href="#Page_74">74</a></li>
- <li>Passing Per Annum, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>, <a href="#Page_55">55</a></li>
- <li>Of Rich and Poor, <a href="#Page_51">51</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Expectation of Life, <a href="#Page_211">211</a></li>
-
-<li>Expenditure Directs Labour, <a href="#Page_141">141</a></li>
-
-</ul>
-
-<ul>
-
-<li>Factories, Accidents in, <a href="#Page_127">127</a></li>
-
-<li>Factory and Workshop Act, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>
- <ul><li>And Maternity, <a href="#Page_178">178</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Factory Inspection, <a href="#Page_126">126</a></li>
-
-<li>Farmers' Capital, <a href="#Page_62">63</a>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>
- <ul><li>Profits, <a href="#Page_19">19</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Finance Act, 1907, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_302">302</a></li>
-
-<li>Fiscal Policy, <a href="#Page_3">3</a></li>
-
-<li>Food, Consumption, Growth of, <a href="#Page_332">332</a>
- <ul><li>Duties for Revenue, <a href="#Page_289">289</a></li>
- <li>Expenditure on, <a href="#Page_154">154</a></li>
- <li>Price of, <a href="#Page_115">115</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Foreign Competition and Education, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>, <a href="#Page_204">204</a></li>
-
-<li>Foreign Investments, <a href="#Page_14">14</a></li>
-
-<li>Fox, Arthur Wilson, on Agricultural Wages, <a href="#Page_155">155</a></li>
-
-<li>Friendly Societies' Funds, <a href="#Page_56">56</a></li>
-
-<li>Furniture, Value of, <a href="#Page_62">64</a>, <a href="#Page_70">70</a></li>
-
-</ul>
-
-<ul>
-
-<li>Gas Companies' Profits, <a href="#Page_105">105</a></li>
-
-<li>Gas Works, Value of, <a href="#Page_62">64</a></li>
-
-<li>Genius not a Class Possession, <a href="#Page_191">191</a></li>
-
-<li>George, Henry, on Necessary Monopolies, <a href="#Page_255">255</a></li>
-
-<li>Germany, Large Revenue from Socialism, <a href="#Page_328">328</a></li>
-
-<li>Giffen, Sir Robert, Estimate of Aggregate Wages, 1886, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>
- <ul><li>On Wages, <a href="#Page_22">22</a></li>
- <li>On Waste of Capital, <a href="#Page_341">341</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Government by the Rich, <a href="#Page_270">270</a></li>
-
-<li>Growth of National Income, <a href="#Page_17">17</a></li>
-
-</ul>
-
-<ul>
-
-<li>Hackney, Unemployed in, <a href="#Page_119">119</a></li>
-
-<li>Harcourt, Sir Wm., Death Duties, <a href="#Page_321">321</a></li>
-
-<li>Horsfall, T. C., on Town Planning, <a href="#Page_221">221</a></li>
-
-<li>Houses, Clue to Income Tax Payers, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>
- <ul><li>In Great Britain, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>, <a href="#Page_43">43</a></li>
- <li>Value of, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_68">68</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Housing, <a href="#Page_88">88</a>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>
- <ul><li>Loans Proposed, <a href="#Page_231">231</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Hunter, Robert, on American Poverty, <a href="#Page_5">5</a></li>
-
-<li>Hygiene Should be Taught in Schools, <a href="#Page_181">181</a></li>
-
-</ul>
-
-<ul>
-
-<li>Income, Average in 1908, <a href="#Page_32">32</a></li>
-
-<li>Income Tax, Abatements, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_297">297</a>
- <ul><li>As it is, Illustrated, <a href="#Page_307">307</a></li>
- <li>Assessments, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a></li>
- <li>Assessments, 1893-1908, <a href="#Page_10">10</a></li>
- <li>Chapter on, <a href="#Page_291">291</a></li>
- <li>Differentiation, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_303">303</a></li>
- <li>Evasion, <a href="#Page_13">13</a></li>
- <li>Graduation Advocated, <a href="#Page_312">312</a></li>
- <li>History of, <a href="#Page_291">291</a></li>
- <li>Origin of Schedules, <a href="#Page_292">292</a></li>
- <li>Payers, Growth of, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_112">112</a></li>
- <li>Payers Measured by House Rent, <a href="#Page_42">42</a></li>
- <li>Payers, Number of, <a href="#Page_44">44</a></li>
- <li>Payers over £700, <a href="#Page_44">44</a></li>
- <li>Provisions Summarized, <a href="#Page_306">306</a></li>
- <li>Reaches Unearned Increment, <a href="#Page_296">296</a></li>
- <li>Reforms Advocated, <a href="#Page_308">308</a></li>
- <li>Schedule A Described, <a href="#Page_298">298</a></li>
- <li>Schedule B Described, <a href="#Page_299">299</a></li>
- <li>Schedule C Described, <a href="#Page_300">300</a></li>
- <li>Schedule D Described, <a href="#Page_300">300</a></li>
- <li>Schedule E Described, <a href="#Page_302">302</a></li>
- <li>Successor of "Land Tax," <a href="#Page_291">291</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Incomes, between £160 and £700, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>
- <ul><li>Of Lower Middle Classes, <a href="#Page_20">20</a></li>
- <li>Of Middle Classes, <a href="#Page_36">36</a></li>
- <li>Revealed by Employers, <a href="#Page_311">311</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Individual Freedom through Collectivism, <a href="#Page_345">345</a></li>
-
-<li>Industrial Accidents, <a href="#Page_125">125</a></li>
-
-<li>Infant Mortality, <a href="#Page_177">177</a></li>
-
-<li>Inhabited House Duty, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>
- <ul><li>Described, <a href="#Page_302">302</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li><i>Inter Vivos</i> Avoidance of Death Duties, <a href="#Page_77">77</a></li>
-
-<li>Interest and Distribution, <a href="#Page_93">93</a></li>
-
-<li>Invalidity Insurance, <a href="#Page_286">286</a></li>
-
-<li>Inventions, Foreign Progress, <a href="#Page_202">202</a></li>
-
-<li>Iron Works, Value of, <a href="#Page_62">64</a></li>
-
-<li>Ironfounders' Wages, <a href="#Page_109">109</a></li>
-
-</ul>
-
-<ul>
-
-<li>Jews and Maternity, <a href="#Page_185">185</a></li>
-
-</ul>
-
-<ul>
-
-<li>Labour Exchanges, <a href="#Page_124">124</a></li>
-
-<li>Labour Party and Unemployment, <a href="#Page_124">124</a></li>
-
-<li>Land, and Town Planning, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>
- <ul><li>Nationalization, <a href="#Page_242">242</a></li>
- <li>Of United Kingdom, <a href="#Page_81">81</a></li>
- <li>Recovery in Agricultural Values, <a href="#Page_246">246</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Land-Tax, was an Income Tax, <a href="#Page_292">292</a></li>
-
-<li>Land Values, <a href="#Page_86">86</a></li>
-
-<li>Landowners, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a></li>
-
-<li>Lead Poisoning, <a href="#Page_130">130</a></li>
-
-<li>Legal Profession, Persons Employed, <a href="#Page_254">254</a></li>
-
-<li>Levi, Leone, on Manual Labourers' Earnings in 1866, <a href="#Page_330">330</a>
- <ul><li>On Unemployment, <a href="#Page_25">25</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Living, Cost of, <a href="#Page_115">115</a></li>
-
-<li>Lloyd George, D., Death Duties, <a href="#Page_321">321</a>
- <ul><li>Grants Special Abatement in Respect of Children, <a href="#Page_314">314</a></li>
- <li>Income Tax Reforms, <a href="#Page_303">303</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Local Loans, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a></li>
-
-<li>London, Area of, <a href="#Page_92">92</a></li>
-
-<li>Lower Middle Classes, Incomes of, <a href="#Page_17">17</a></li>
-
-<li>Luxuries, Expenditure on, <a href="#Page_160">160</a></li>
-
-</ul>
-
-<ul>
-
-<li>McCleary, Dr G. F., on Milk Supply, <a href="#Page_260">260</a></li>
-
-<li>Mackenzie, Dr Leslie, on Milk Supply, <a href="#Page_260">260</a></li>
-
-<li>Malins, Dr E., on Poor Children, <a href="#Page_174">174</a></li>
-
-<li>Manual Workers, Number of, <a href="#Page_21">21</a></li>
-
-<li>Marshall, Professor A., on Waste, <a href="#Page_158">158</a></li>
-
-<li>Maternity amongst Poor, <a href="#Page_178">178</a></li>
-
-<li>Maternity Fund, Suggestion for a National, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>, <a href="#Page_185">185</a></li>
-
-<li>Medical Officers of Health, <a href="#Page_183">183</a></li>
-
-<li>Middle Classes, Small Incomes of, <a href="#Page_36">36</a></li>
-
-<li>Middlemen, Waste through, <a href="#Page_253">253</a></li>
-
-<li>Milk Distribution, Waste in, <a href="#Page_259">259</a></li>
-
-<li>Milk Supply, Should be Publicly Owned, <a href="#Page_261">261</a></li>
-
-<li>Mill, John Stuart, on Principle of Graduation, <a href="#Page_317">317</a></li>
-
-<li>Miners' Wages, <a href="#Page_108">108</a></li>
-
-<li>Mines, Value of, <a href="#Page_62">64</a></li>
-
-<li>Mining, Accidents, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>
- <ul><li>Employment, <a href="#Page_268">268</a></li>
- <li>Royalties, <a href="#Page_85">85</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Misdirection of Labour, <a href="#Page_150">150</a></li>
-
-<li>Monopoly, Economy of, <a href="#Page_256">256</a></li>
-
-<li>Monopoly of Capital, <a href="#Page_72">72</a></li>
-
-<li>Monopoly of Wealth a Danger to the State, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>, <a href="#Page_158">158</a>, <a href="#Page_324">324</a></li>
-
-<li>Multiple Shops, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_254">254</a></li>
-
-<li>Municipal Trading, Case for, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>
- <ul><li>Success of, <a href="#Page_262">262</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-</ul>
-
-<ul>
-
-<li>National Capital, <a href="#Page_61">61</a></li>
-
-<li>National Debt, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_62">63</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a></li>
-
-<li>National Dividend, how Distributed, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>, <a href="#Page_48">48</a></li>
-
-<li>National Housing Loans Proposed, <a href="#Page_231">231</a></li>
-
-<li>National Income, Growth of, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>
- <ul><li>How Distributed, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>, <a href="#Page_48">48</a></li>
- <li>In 1908, <a href="#Page_31">31</a></li>
- <li>What it is, <a href="#Page_8">8</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>National Medical Service, <a href="#Page_183">183</a></li>
-
-<li>National Property, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_62">65</a></li>
-
-<li>Nationalization of Land, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>, <a href="#Page_242">242</a></li>
-
-<li>Navy, Value of, <a href="#Page_66">66</a></li>
-
-<li>Notification of Births, <a href="#Page_184">184</a></li>
-
-</ul>
-
-<ul>
-
-<li>Occupations Influenced by Wealth Distribution, <a href="#Page_141">141</a></li>
-
-<li>Old Age Pensioners, Number of, <a href="#Page_285">285</a></li>
-
-<li>Old Age Pensions, <a href="#Page_272">272</a>
- <ul><li>Cost of Not "Expenditure," <a href="#Page_286">286</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Old Age Pensions Act, <a href="#Page_284">284</a></li>
-
-<li>Organization of Industry, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>, <a href="#Page_250">250</a></li>
-
-<li>Overcrowding, <a href="#Page_212">212</a></li>
-
-<li>Oversea Investments, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_62">65</a>, <a href="#Page_160">160</a></li>
-
-</ul>
-
-<ul>
-
-<li>Paupers, Day Counts of, <a href="#Page_274">274</a>
- <ul><li>Decline of, <a href="#Page_332">332</a></li>
- <li>Relieved in a Year, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>, <a href="#Page_276">276</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Physical Deterioration, <a href="#Page_139">139</a></li>
-
-<li>Physical Training, <a href="#Page_192">192</a></li>
-
-<li>Poor, Property of, <a href="#Page_57">57</a></li>
-
-<li>Population, Growth of, <a href="#Page_332">332</a></li>
-
-<li>Poverty, Campbell-Bannerman quoted, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>
- <ul><li>In Old Age, <a href="#Page_272">272</a></li>
- <li>Line, <a href="#Page_153">153</a></li>
- <li>Measured, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>, <a href="#Page_50">50</a></li>
- <li>Now Unnecessary, <a href="#Page_347">347</a></li>
- <li>Of British Government, <a href="#Page_340">340</a></li>
- <li>Shortens Life, <a href="#Page_211">211</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Power Supply, Should be National, <a href="#Page_256">256</a></li>
-
-<li>Prices, Fall of, <a href="#Page_332">332</a>
- <ul><li>Index Number, <a href="#Page_332">332</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Production, Combination in, <a href="#Page_256">256</a></li>
-
-<li>Production and Waste, <a href="#Page_251">251</a></li>
-
-<li>Profits Examined, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>
- <ul><li>Growth of, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>, <a href="#Page_112">112</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Progress since 1867, <a href="#Page_332">332</a></li>
-
-<li>Prosperity and Fiscal Policy, <a href="#Page_3">3</a></li>
-
-<li>Prussian State Railways, <a href="#Page_329">329</a></li>
-
-<li>Public Ownership, the only Path to Equitable Distribution, <a href="#Page_262">262</a></li>
-
-<li>Public Works and Unemployment, <a href="#Page_124">124</a></li>
-
-</ul>
-
-<ul>
-
-<li>Railway Capital, Watering of, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>
- <ul><li>Fares under Nationalization, <a href="#Page_266">266</a></li>
- <li>Servants, Accidents, <a href="#Page_136">136</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Railways, Value of, <a href="#Page_62">63</a></li>
-
-<li>Rates, in Nature of Rent-charge, <a href="#Page_90">90</a></li>
-
-<li>Rent, and Profit, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>
- <ul><li>Estimate of Aggregate, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a></li>
- <li>Why Small Relatively to Profits, <a href="#Page_86">86</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Revenue without Taxation, <a href="#Page_326">326</a></li>
-
-<li>Rich, Estates of, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>
- <ul><li>Number of, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>, <a href="#Page_50">50</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Right to Work Bill, <a href="#Page_123">123</a></li>
-
-<li>Roads, Value of, <a href="#Page_66">66</a></li>
-
-<li>Rowntree, Poverty Line, <a href="#Page_153">153</a></li>
-
-<li>Rural Depopulation, <a href="#Page_234">234</a></li>
-
-<li>Ruskin, John, His modern version of the Beatitudes, <a href="#Page_339">339</a></li>
-
-</ul>
-
-<ul>
-
-<li>Savings, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>
- <ul><li>Growth of, <a href="#Page_332">332</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Savings Banks' Funds, <a href="#Page_56">56</a></li>
-
-<li>Science, Important to Teach, <a href="#Page_202">202</a></li>
-
-<li>Seamen, Accidents, <a href="#Page_137">137</a></li>
-
-<li>Segregation of Unfit, <a href="#Page_187">187</a></li>
-
-<li>Shop Assistants, <a href="#Page_18">18</a></li>
-
-<li>Shopkeepers, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_254">254</a></li>
-
-<li>Site Value, <a href="#Page_87">87</a></li>
-
-<li>Smith, Adam, on Taxation, <a href="#Page_287">287</a></li>
-
-<li>Socialism, Reduces Taxation, <a href="#Page_328">328</a></li>
-
-<li>Super-Tax, <a href="#Page_305">305</a></li>
-
-</ul>
-
-<ul>
-
-<li>Taft, President, on Inheritance Duties, <a href="#Page_324">324</a></li>
-
-<li>Taxation and Distribution, <a href="#Page_289">289</a>
- <ul><li>Direct, Advocated, <a href="#Page_318">318</a></li>
- <li>Doctrine of Ability, <a href="#Page_288">288</a></li>
- <li>Indirect, Deprecated, <a href="#Page_317">317</a></li>
- <li>Not the Only Means of Revenue, <a href="#Page_326">326</a></li>
- <li>Should be Simplified, <a href="#Page_318">318</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Teachers, <a href="#Page_18">18</a></li>
-
-<li>Thrift Institutions, <a href="#Page_56">56</a></li>
-
-<li>Town Planning, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a></li>
-
-<li>Trade Capital, Value of, <a href="#Page_62">63</a>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a></li>
-
-<li>Trade Unions, Expenditure on Unemployment, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>
- <ul><li>Funds, <a href="#Page_56">56</a></li>
- <li>Superannuation, <a href="#Page_280">280</a></li>
- <li>Unemployment, <a href="#Page_116">116</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Tradesmen, <a href="#Page_254">254</a></li>
-
-<li>Transport should be a National Function, <a href="#Page_256">256</a></li>
-
-<li>Trust Rule, <a href="#Page_269">269</a></li>
-
-</ul>
-
-<ul>
-
-<li>Unemployed, Probable Number of, <a href="#Page_122">122</a></li>
-
-<li>Unemployment, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>
- <ul><li>Amongst Trade Unionists, <a href="#Page_116">116</a></li>
- <li>Cost of, <a href="#Page_121">121</a></li>
- <li>During <a href="#Page_40">40</a> Years, <a href="#Page_337">337</a></li>
- <li>In America, <a href="#Page_5">5</a></li>
- <li>In Middle Classes, <a href="#Page_122">122</a></li>
- <li>Insurance, <a href="#Page_123">123</a></li>
- <li>Only to be Remedied by Public Ownership, <a href="#Page_270">270</a></li>
- <li>"Remedies" for, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>, <a href="#Page_124">124</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Unfit, Segregation of, <a href="#Page_187">187</a></li>
-
-<li>United Kingdom, Area, <a href="#Page_81">81</a></li>
-
-<li>United States, Industrial Fatalities, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>
- <ul><li>Poverty of, <a href="#Page_5">5</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Usury, <a href="#Page_101">101</a></li>
-
-</ul>
-
-<ul>
-
-<li>Wage Census, <a href="#Page_21">21</a></li>
-
-<li>Wage Earners, Number of, <a href="#Page_21">21</a></li>
-
-<li>Wage, Average, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_331">331</a>
- <ul><li>Growth of, <a href="#Page_332">332</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Wages, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>
- <ul><li>Aggregate in 1908, <a href="#Page_29">29</a></li>
- <li>Average in 1908, <a href="#Page_27">27</a></li>
- <li>In 1886, <a href="#Page_23">23</a></li>
- <li>Movement of, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>, <a href="#Page_112">112</a></li>
- <li>Not Raised by High Profits, <a href="#Page_101">101</a></li>
- <li>Stationariness of, <a href="#Page_50">50</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-
-<li>Waste of Labour, <a href="#Page_251">251</a></li>
-
-<li>Waterworks, Value of, <a href="#Page_62">64</a></li>
-
-<li>Wheat, Imports of, <a href="#Page_245">245</a></li>
-
-<li>Wheat Prices, <a href="#Page_247">247</a></li>
-
-<li>Whitehaven Colliery Explosion, <a href="#Page_131">131</a></li>
-
-<li>Woollen Trade, <a href="#Page_145">145</a></li>
-
-<li>Women Health Inspectors, <a href="#Page_182">182</a></li>
-
-<li>Women Workers in America, <a href="#Page_6">6</a></li>
-
-<li>Workhouse Inmates Classified, <a href="#Page_281">281</a></li>
-
-<li>Working Class "Capital," <a href="#Page_80">80</a></li>
-
-<li>Working Classes, Material Progress of, <a href="#Page_330">330</a></li>
-
-</ul>
-
-</div>
-
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