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Australia:
Our Neighbor Down UnderThe
Labor ProblemAustralia is best known to
the rest of the world as a continent where for about half a century Labor has
been one of the most powerful political parties and has pursued policies which
seem radical to outsiders. At present Labor governments are in power in four states
and in the federal field. In some states a Labor ministry is as normal as is a
Democratic government in some of our southern states or a Republican one in Maine. This
condition is the result of the development of strong labor unions at an early
stage in the country’s development. The free immigrants of the 1840’s
and 1850’s came from Britain, where labor was just getting organized and
voicing its demands for standard wage rates and an eight-hour day. In Australia
wages were good during the gold days, but the weather was hot; so the immigrants
formed craft unions, demanded an eight-hour day, and got it. Soon eight hours
became the standard working day throughout the continent. As
organization spread to mining, shipping, and sheepshearing, the unions sought
to maintain wages in times of depression or falling prices; to stop the entry
and use of Chinese; or to persuade parliaments to pass better labor laws, widen
the franchise, and improve the educational system. At times they felt that some
day it might be necessary to elect representatives of their own instead of pressing
or persuading the old-line parties to action. Much collective bargaining was accomplished,
and relations between employers and employed were often quite good. In
1590, however, the lid blew off. Employers, faced with falling prices, tried to
reduce wages. Labor retorted by demanding the closed shop. Strikes swept the mines,
wharves, ships, and ranches during 1590–94, and in every case the strikers
lost the fight. For the time being, the unions seemed to be down and out, but
after 1900 they recovered and advanced rapidly. By 1912, 1 in every 11 of the
population was a member of some union; by 1920 it was 1 in every 8, and by 1943
it was 1 in every 6 1/2. The membership in 1943 was over 1,100,000, which would
be equivalent to 21,000,000 in the United States, Next:
Labor in Politics |