The Market Sum | Insight after the bell
By Caleb Silver, Editor in Chief Monday's Headlines 1. Labor Day and its History Photo of Women' Suffragette marchers in New York, 2013 courtesy Library of Congress
It's Labor Day here in the U.S., and most people, including us, have the day off. The stock and bond markets are closed in the U.S.. For many, Labor Day is the unofficial end of the summer. Officially however, Labor Day commemorates something far more important.
Here is a little backstory of the origins of Labor Day here in America, and a couple of charts on the state of labor and income around the world today.
Origins of Labor Day Workers leave the Pullman Palace Car Works, 1893. Photo courtesy wikcommons The Pullman Strike
Labor Day became a national holiday in response to the Pullman Strike, which began in May 1894. The wildcat strike came in reaction to the abuses of the industrialist George Pullman, who housed his workers in a company town he intended to be a utopian community. Workers lived in company-owned housing, paying rent – they were not allowed to buy their homes – and utility bills to the company. Alcohol was prohibited. When a depression hit the U.S. economy in 1893, Pullman laid off hundreds of workers and cut pay, but did not lower rent. When the workers struck, he would not negotiate.
Demand for Better Wages Company owners began to accept that workers' demand for better treatment was legitimate in the 20th century. In 1914 Henry Ford more than doubled wages to $5. When his profits doubled over two years, rivals realized he might be onto something. In 1926 he cut workers' hours from nine to eight. New Deal legislation would lock in 40-hour weeks for many workers, with overtime pay mandated for longer shifts. By the 1940s, according to Costa, the average workweek had fallen to five 8-hour days. Today, in a reversal of the old arrangement, it's even lower for lower-skilled laborers – not always by choice – while white-collar workers put in longer weeks.
Average Annual Wages by Country: 2018 This chart, courtesy of the OECD, shows average wages in developed countries around the world. The results were obtained by dividing the national-accounts-based total wage bill by the average number of employees in the total economy, which is then multiplied by the ratio of the average usual weekly hours per full-time employee to the average usually weekly hours for all employees. This indicator is measured in USD constant prices using 2016 base year and Purchasing Power Parities (PPPs) for private consumption of the same year.
Zoom in or visit the OECD site to use the interactive tool. It's fascinating.
Highest/Lowest GDP Per Capita: 2018 The World Bank's chart of the highest and lowest per capita GDP shows the average per capita contribution made by individuals in each developed country. Zoom in to see each country and the range of per capita GDP contribution, or better yet, visit the World Bank's site to use its interactive tool that allows you to scroll over each country for more detail. We'll be back tomorrow with a fresh edition of Market Sum.
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Monday, September 2, 2019
Labor Day
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