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Wages
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7
WAGES
Working people live on wages which are obtained
in their places of employment.
Some workers own government bonds or company shares and derive income
from
these and from other sources. But all sources other than wages form a
very small
part of the average workers’ income. Mainly the workers live on wages
and any
changes that occur in the amount of wages have a definite bearing on
their conditions of life.
The wages which they receive represent a portion of the wealth
they produce. This portion
takes the form of money and is given to them by the owners of the
places where they work in
return for the use by the owners of their ability to work for specified
periods of time.
This is a condition of existence common to all workers, not less
to those who wear white
collars and receive salaries than to those who wear overalls and
receive pay envelopes. The
boy leaving school at the age of 16 or 17 searches at once for an
employer. There is nothing
else he can do. His father does not own a "place of business". Neither
do his relatives nor his
friends. Nor is there any way in which he can start a business of his
own. There are
exceptions, it is true, but in general the youngster leaves school and
works all his useful life
for some other person and lives through the years on wages.
So wages are very important to him and if unemployment causes his
wages to stop, or if they
become reduced or are not increased in times of rising prices, then he
faces troublous times.
Yet the worker does not give to wages the thought and consideration
which their importance
obviously urges. That is because he is subjected to mental conditioning.
He picks up his newspaper in the evening to find that world
affairs are detailed and analyzed
without reference to wages. He turns on the radio or television and
gets lengthy periods of
sports, popular music, plays and other things but not wages. Perhaps he
goes to a movie
house, to see a love story, a mystery, a Western or some other type of
film, in which the
characters all seem to live in some manner that precludes the existence
of wages. On Sunday
he takes himself to church to become removed to heights so lofty that
the very thought of
wages could only be disturbing if not blasphemous. There is a stigma
attached to wages. The
subject is dull and boring. Wages are not to be discussed except to
reveal that they are an
incontestable condition of existence for workers, but must be taken in
modest sums.
How could the matter of wages be treated otherwise? All the main
sources of information and
entertainment are owned by the capitalist class, and these gentry are
hardly likely to allow
them to be used to call sympathetic attention to the wages question or
to be critical of the
system of wages payment. They like the wages system and they like wages
to be low. It is
from this state of affairs that their privileges and luxuries emerge.
And they know that the
more the minds of the workers are directed into channels remote from
wages the less attention
will they give to wages, and this can react only to the benefit of the
employers.
But in spite of these diversionary activities, which attain a
great deal of success in keeping
them passive, workers do give attention to the question of wages. The
pressures resulting from
their status as wage workers, particularly the constant readiness of
the employers to use every
opportunity to lower their level of existence, compels activity in
their own interest, even
though this activity is all too reluctant and lacking in depth.
8
Over the years working people throughout the world have employed
a variety of methods in
the hope of improving their living conditions. They have petitioned
Parliament, supported
candidates for office, organized political parties. They have paraded
in the streets, erected
barricades and fought against police. But, most important, they have
organized in trade unions
which have provided them with their most effective weapon, the strike.
The trade union exists to protect and improve wages and working
conditions. It engages in a
number of other activities most of which are worthless, sometimes
harmful. Because its
members are not politically informed, it often allows itself to be used
as a stepping stone to
office by aspiring politicians. Indifference and apathy amongst its
members sometimes lead to
racketeering, cases of this kind recently being played up prominently
in the daily press. But
when all these things are taken into account, the real worth of the
trade union must not be
overlooked.
It seldom happens that a worker by himself can approach an
employer and obtain an increase
in wages. Workers in certain specialized types of employment may be
able to do this, but not
the average worker. He would be more likely to find himself on the
street searching for
another employer. Workers may influence their wages and working
conditions only by
collective effort and only by being in the position to stop working if
their demands are not
met. The ability to withhold their services is a weapon in their
possession. It is the only final
logic known to employers. Without it wages tend to sink below
subsistence level. With it a
substantial check can often be placed on the encroachments of the
employers and
improvements both in wages and working conditions can be made.
The strike is not a sure means of victory for workers in dispute
with employers. There are
many cases on record of workers being compelled to return to work
without gains, sometimes
with losses. Strikes should not be employed recklessly but should be
entered into with
caution, particularly during times when production falls off and there
are growing numbers of
unemployed. And it should not be thought that victory can be gained
only by means of the
strike. Sometimes more can be gained simply by the threat of a strike.
Workers must bear all
these things in mind if they are to make the most effective use of the
trade union and the
power which it gives them.
But, above all, the workers, besides making the greatest possible
use of the trade union, must
also come to recognize that even at their best the unions cannot bring
permanent security or
end poverty .These aims cannot be gained within the limits of
capitalist society .When the
workers have raised their sights high enough to envisage a society
where there can be no
conflict over wages, and where each will contribute to the production
of wealth according to
his ability and receive from the produce according to his needs, they
are thinking of a goal that
can be gained only after they have become organized into a political
organization having for
its object the introduction of Socialism. Such an organization is the
Socialist Party.
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