*THE
WORKER*
Brisbane
November 18, 1893
THE
EDITORIAL MILL.
What
wages some of the storemen in Brisbane receive: The writer knows one
who has a wife and three children, making five persons, to support on ₤5 per month and pay rent. Originally his wages were 7 pounds
per month, but his employer told him to take ₤5 per month or
leave.
Thus
a correspondent. The case referred to is only one of hundreds.
Employers – like the mass of humanity – are very like sheep, one
jumps, all jumps. It is only necessary for a few unscrupulous
employers, anxious to become rapidly rich, to lower the rate of
wages, and talk of the depression of trade as an excuse, for dozens
of others to follow their example, failing to observe that such a
course of action aggravates and does not in the remotest degree
alleviate any depression that may exist. According to the census
taken on the 5th April, 1891, there were in this colony
123,983 males and 85,248 females between the ages of 15 and 50. The
greater number of these persons are wage-earners. For instance about
9000 are domestic servants, 4000 tailors and dressmakers, 1500 boot
and shoemakers, 2000 seamen, 4000 carpenters, joiners , &c., 2000
navvies, &c., 6000 farm servants and agricultural labourers, and
so on, nearly all wage – earners, having dependent on them father,
mother, sister or brother, son or daughter, showing that the great
proportion of Queenslander's population of 400,000 are persons whose
power to purchase goods is restricted by the amount of wages they
earn. These “working classes,” as a whole, of necessity, live up
to what they earn, consequently if certain employers reduce the
tailors, and others the domestic servants, carpenters, &c., it
necessarily follows that their ability to purchase goods is curtailed
by the amount of the reductions, whatever it might be.
The
carpenter has therefore to do without his new hat for a while longer,
the servant girl without her new dress, the tailor without his new
boots, thus decreasing all round the trade of the dressmaker,
bootmaker, hatter, &c., &c., and making things intensely
uncomfortable for nearly all persons in the community who are not
capitalists and have to work for a living. These are facts which do
not seem to be taken sufficient notice of by the average shopkeeper
and working manufacturer who are nearly always the most bitter
opponents of the agitators who wish to raise the wages of the working
classes all round. Business was never so brisk and Australia never so
prosperous as when the disagreeable agitators were supposed to “boss
the show.” Employers might recollect this, and bear in mind also
that reductions in wages precede depression, and that an increase in
the rate of wages precedes prosperity.
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