The political economy of minimum wage setting: The Factories and Shops Act of Victoria (Australia), 1896–1913

IF 1.6 1区 历史学 Q3 ECONOMICS
Andrew J. Seltzer
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Abstract

The Victorian Factories and Shops Act of 1896, the second minimum wage law in the world, empowered administrative agencies (‘Special Boards’) to set trade-specific minimum rates on the basis of age, sex, and occupation. Some Victorian supporters of minimum wages looked to end sweating and protect women and children, while others sought to use the law to protect adult men. Opponents argued that they would disrupt labour markets, increasing employers’ costs and creating unintended consequences for workers. Evidence from actual minimum wages suggests that boards were loosely constrained by market factors, but also that they had some discretion. Some Special Boards essentially followed the market for their trades while others set rates that were binding for some workers. To the extent that minimum rates were binding, they tended to reduce inequality among adult male workers, particularly after a 1907 federal law established a living wage covering employers with operations in multiple states. However, they also increased inequality across groups, increasing wages of adult men relative to those of women and youths. The act formally institutionalized gender-based pay differences, a practice that continued in Australian minimum wage setting for more than 70 years.

Abstract Image

最低工资设定的政治经济学:维多利亚(澳大利亚)的工厂和商店法案,1896-1913
1896年的《维多利亚工厂和商店法》是世界上第二部最低工资法,授权行政机构(“特别委员会”)根据年龄、性别和职业设定特定行业的最低工资标准。维多利亚州最低工资的一些支持者希望结束流汗,保护妇女和儿童,而其他人则试图利用法律保护成年男性。反对者认为,他们会扰乱劳动力市场,增加雇主的成本,给工人带来意想不到的后果。来自实际最低工资的证据表明,董事会受到市场因素的松散约束,但他们也有一定的自由裁量权。一些特别委员会基本上遵循市场的交易,而另一些特别委员会则为某些工人设定具有约束力的利率。在最低工资具有约束力的程度上,它们往往会减少成年男性工人之间的不平等,尤其是在1907年的一项联邦法律确立了涵盖在多个州开展业务的雇主的生活工资之后。然而,它们也加剧了群体之间的不平等,成年男性的工资相对于女性和年轻人的工资有所增加。该法案正式将基于性别的工资差异制度化,这种做法在澳大利亚的最低工资设定中持续了70多年。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.60
自引率
27.30%
发文量
84
期刊介绍: The Economic History Review is published quarterly and each volume contains over 800 pages. It is an invaluable source of information and is available free to members of the Economic History Society. Publishing reviews of books, periodicals and information technology, The Review will keep anyone interested in economic and social history abreast of current developments in the subject. It aims at broad coverage of themes of economic and social change, including the intellectual, political and cultural implications of these changes.
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