Wages, Earnings and Real Earnings in Teesside: A Re-assessment of the Ameliorist Interpretation of Living Standards in Britain, 1870–1914
In: International review of social history, Band 26, Heft 2, S. 202-219
Abstract
The following article attempts to trace the course of working-class living standards in Britain in the comparatively neglected period between 1870 and the First World War. A considerable body of historical opinion sees this period as a time of marked improvement in standards of life, an improvement based essentially on rising real wages. Studies of this period have owed a considerable debt to the pioneering work of A. L. Bowley and G. H. Wood, which produced an invaluable collection of indices for wages and real wages, upon which most general accounts of living standards in the later nineteenth century have drawn. Wood's contention that real wages, in the years roughly between 1874 and 1900, rose by 36 per cent lies at the heart of an interpretation which sees the late-Victorian period as a time of crucial economic and social amelioration. The data are sufficiently comprehensive to show these improvements to be common to all occupations and to lead to the inescapable conclusion that "industrialization paid off generally in higher real wages for all groups in society in the second half of the nineteenth century".
Problem melden