Poor Law - 3.7 Flashcards
increase in employment between 1918 and 1920
- 9 million extra workers found jobs although 500,000 women left the work they had taken before the war
- post war boomed was short lived, collapsing in 1921
which areas experienced high levels of unemployment in the 1920s and the depression in the 1930s?
- South Wales
- NE and NW of England
- Northern Ireland
- clydeside
- they had the old staple industries (iron, steel, textiles especially cotton and ship building)
- the impact was heightened due to the geographical concentration of these industries/ there were simply no other jobs because the traditional industries had been so dominant
which areas didn’t go into decline during the 1920s?
- unemployment wasn’t seen throughout Britain
- the Midlands and south of England that specialised in electrical goods, cars and chemicals
- they experienced a rise in real wages (the purchasing power of earnings when set against prices- If prices are high money will be less) , employment in new industries, improvements in healthcare, education and housing.
- this was fuelled by the McKenna duties and the safeguarding industries Act
- the skills of workers had been adapted to this and could meet demand for convenience and leisure goods
why was there a decline in heavy industries?
- international disarmament meant reduced size of navies. this affected the ship building industry (had managed to maintain 40% of its work output in the 1920s but only 7% in 1933)
- growth in international competition of the 1920s meaning Japan and the USA were producing goods at for lower rates (e.g. coal) undercutting the price of home produced goods.
- onset of the depression caused steel to fall by 45% in 1929
- refused tariff protection
- differential pricing meaning produces could sell the same good to different customers at different prices
- immediate investment post war to resort staple industries meant many become overcapitalised meaning more shares had been issued than its assets worth.
safeguarding industries Act 1921
an act intended to protect strategic industries against foreign competition (e.g. optic glass and synthetic chemicals)
- these had been vital during WW1
- in these cases a tariff of 33.3% was levied on foreign imports, the tariff to last for five years
McKenna Duties
- intended to be temporary snd impressed during the war
- put 33.33% tariff on importing commercial vehicles
- remained in place until 1956 giving help to British Moto industry.
- Reginald McKenna was home secretary in 1915 and introduced a series of tariffs. originally this excluded commercial vehicles because they were needed in wartime but in 1936 was extended to include them.
what did the war do to trade?
changed the structure of it
-Britain’s role at the centre of the financial word had been challenged by the USA
-the gold standard which had been the basis of trade prior to 1914 collapsed
in April 1925, Britain went back on the gold standard but this was done at a time when the price of gold was high making British exports more expensive
gold standard
the value of a current defined in terms of the price of gold, for notes and coins could be exchanged
-currencies therefore fixed against eachother
why was Britain so affected by the depression?
- USA was Britain’s biggest trading partner limiting their market
- the income made from US trade was the may way Britain raised funds to repay FWW debts meaning the government could no longer meet their repayments
- britain was owed money by most of the FWW allies but this wasn’t being paid
- return to cold standard exacerbated this
DID the depression cause a country of two nations?
- unemployment 3 million especially in the north
- USA stopped trading
- perception of the north differed to the south, mutual lack of understanding
- London based parliament that was struggling to manage the economy and a turbulent nation
DIDN’T cause a country of two nations
- old industries were delving anyway due to disarmament and technological advancements
- gov failed to prose t the north, tariffs tailored towards the south
- cyclical unemployment die to nature of northern industries
consequences of a country of two nations
- massive regional disparities
- overpopulation
- increased come and so poor perception and less more obligation for those wanting to help
- drain state welfare funds
- protests/marches
Rowntree’s second study
- in the years 1935-36 carried outa second study of poverty in York using a glitchy more generous poverty line
- 31% were shown to be living in poverty
- in 1899 the main cause was low wages yet in the 1930s it was unemployment
- Tout came to similar conclusions in Bristol
- unemployment benefit was usually between 45 and 66% of a man’s previous wage
unemployment benefit
-paid out of the national insurance and was intended to help working people get through a few weeks, originally 15, while they looked for a new job
what was the jarrow march?
- October 1936
- mass unemployment and poverty drove 200 men to march 300 miles form the Tyneside Town of Jarrow to London
- 27 days
- they carried a petition signed by 11,000 people and intended to present it to parliament requesting the establishment of industry in Jarrow
- important secondary objective was to generate sympathy by showing that they were law abiding responsible citizens through the way they march. medical fit men were selected for over 1200 volunteers, women not invited. blessed by the bishop
- just a local affair and wasn’t representative of a particular political persuasion
- from each town they visited they collected financial statement to compare to Jarrow’s human development and poor law rate
what triggered the jarrow March?
- the closure of Palmer’s shipyard the moan employer of labour in the area
- acquired by NSS in summer 1934
- 75% of people left unemployed
- in the background was the NSS (National Shipbuilders Security) a company created by the government to buy up failing yards and dismantle them so that production could be focused on smaller more profitable ones
what was T Vosper Salt’s reaction to Jarrow
an American investor
- convinced that with its existing rail networks, docks and labour force it was the ideal place for steelworks
- the feasibility study he financed supported this
- Yet the British Iron and Steel federation was less enthusiastic saying steel production could be increase through the existing works and this put pressure on London’s financial institutions to not back the scheme
support for the jarrow March
- at some stopovers in the south the marchers were greeted warmly and provided with accommodation, spare clothes and food, at others bed in workhouses were all that was offered
- the general public turned out line the route of the marshy in their thousands
- the October Labour Party conference held in Edinburgh wasn’t supported. Wilkinson was criticised for doing hungry and poorly clothed men that would tax their strength without any appreciable outcome
Trade Unions Congress
an umbrella group for the trade unions in Britain. individual unions weren’t obliged to follow their advice yet they usually did
- represented a powerful voice for organised labour
- TUC and the Labour Party Branches not to offer ant assistance or support to the marchers although they often ignored this advice.
Bishop of Durham for Jarrow March
Hensley Henson
criticised Bishop of Jarrow for blessing the march saying it was nothing more than a mob pressure designed to support the about party
why was the Jarrow March unsuccessful
- the petition was only discussed by parliament for a few minutes, nothing came of it
- the Jarrow marches retuned home empty handed nothing in the short term. there Idle had been cut because they weren’t available for work even though that hadn’t been any available as to claim unemployment benefits you had to be available in the town
- TUC and LP advised people not to help them
- poor time to negotiate with government due to abdication of the kind happening at the same time which distracted Westminster