CH. 9, SEC. 4: REACTIONS AGAINST INDUSTRIAL ABUSES - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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CH. 9, SEC. 4: REACTIONS AGAINST INDUSTRIAL ABUSES

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CH. 9, SEC. 4: REACTIONS AGAINST INDUSTRIAL ABUSES 1) Laissez-faire government policy: - free market policies* - minimal to no government regulation of business – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: CH. 9, SEC. 4: REACTIONS AGAINST INDUSTRIAL ABUSES


1
  • CH. 9, SEC. 4 REACTIONS AGAINST INDUSTRIAL
    ABUSES
  • 1) Laissez-faire government policy
  • - free market policies
  • - minimal to no government regulation of
    business
  • - minimal taxation (primarily for defense,
    infrastructure)
  • WHY?
  • To maximize PROFITS in as free a manner as
    possible
  • Corporate leaders tend to favor unobstructed
    free market competition during times of
    growth economic expansion, BUT will also
    lobby for government intervention
    assistance (i.e. bailouts, tax breaks) when
    profits decline in a free market.

2
  • 2) FAVORS laissez-faire policies
  • OWNERS upper class Industrialists, business
    leaders, corporations, capitalists, advocates of
    free market ideology, political libertarians
    WHY?
  • Allows businesses to set their own terms of
    production, and maximize profit with less
    spending that would otherwise be required from
    rules regulations prefer less government.
  • RESENTS laissez-faire policies
  • Working class, some middle class, very few upper
    class
  • WORKERS CONSUMERS WHY?
  • These groups are either directly exploited by
    industrial conditions, or are morally opposed to
    its abuses (if not directly affected) they view
    the government as having a responsibility to
    actively improve economic social conditions for
    all citizens.

3
  • 3) Capitalism basic themes
  • PRIVATE ownership of property/assets
  • Goal is to maximize INDIVIDUAL wealth profit
    (law of self interest)
  • The FREE MARKET efficiency progress
  • ? law of competition forces better goods
    services
  • ? law of supply demand will produce the
    right amount of products at the lowest
    price
  • all of this will naturally happen as a result
    of the invisible hand of the market, rendering
    government involvement as unnecessary
  • Multiple classes are a natural outcome (upper,
    middle, lower) there will be winners and losers!

4
  • 4) Capitalist philosophers
  • I. ADAM SMITH The Wealth of Nations (1776)
  • - Published original ideas of free market
    capitalism (identified in question 3)
  • II. THOMAS MALTHUS (1798)
  • - World population will increase faster than
    food supply, leading to mass poverty
    misery
  • - Population growth will be continually limited
    by starvation, wars, and disease
  • Do Malthusian thinkers have a credible
    argument? IF so, what can/should be done in
    response? By whom?
  • III. DAVID RICARDO (1817)
  • - A permanent underclass is to be expected, as
    ongoing population growth will always
    drive down wages as the supply of labor
    outpaces demand

5
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6
  • 5) Capitalism - positives and negatives
  • () Drives economic growth
  • () Creates wealth
  • () Motivates creativity in production
    innovation
  • () Provides more choice availability of goods
    services, at affordable prices
  • COSTS of growth
  • (-) exploited workers (low wages, safety)
  • (-) environmental damage / habitat destruction
  • (-) resource depletion
  • (-) Disproportionate wealth (actual wage vs. a
    living wage)
  • (-) Can a free market police itself against
    corruption?
  • (-) Privatized Basic Needs Poverty PROBLEMS
  • (-) Minimizes importance of labor
  • (-) Does concentrated economic power replace
    democracy with plutocracy?

7
  • PRIVATE BUSINESS earns a
  • PROFIT
  • (or LOSS)
  • Solution build the business! (pricing,
    marketing, etc.)
  • GOVERNMENT GOAL break even more often, result
    is a
  • SURPLUS
  • Solution Build a rainy day fund grow gov
    services reduce pay off debt cut
    taxes.
  • or DEFICIT
  • Solutions CUT spending
  • RAISE revenues (raise taxes)
  • Stimulate economy (more taxes coming in
    w/o raising them)

8
  • 6) Utilitarianism basic themes
  • - ALL things should be judged upon their
    utility, or USEFULNESS.
  • - Government is obligated to promote the
    greatest good for the greatest amount of
    people
  • - Individuals should be free to pursue personal
    gain without government interference EXCEPT
    when the common good is harmed
  • Utilitarian Philosophers
  • I. Jeremy Bentham (see above)
  • II. John Stuart Mill
  • - Favored more humane conditions for the
    working class
  • - Favored government action to promote economic
    fairness
  • - Favored a fairer distribution of business
    profits
  • - Favored equal rights for women, including
    voting rights
  • - Favored more universal education
    opportunities
  • III. Robert Owen
  • - Utopian working towns (failed!)

9
  • 7) Socialism basic themes
  • Ideological response to the ill effects of
    industrialization
  • Factors of production (i.e. property, assets) to
    be collectively owned, for the well-being of all
    citizens
  • Governments role is to actively manage the
    economy, rather than depend on free market
    capitalism, by assuming public ownership of
    major industries (nationalization, instead of
    privatization).
  • Profits to be spent on social programs to end
    poverty and promote equality
  • Reasoning Workers CREATE wealth through their
    labor, and are therefore collectively entitled to
    it (rather than owners keeping all of it) no
    labor no production
  • Can be democratically promoted via the right to
    vote, OR

10
  • 8) MARXISM basic themes
  • Radical Socialism a violent, global revolt is
    the only way workers can take over the means of
    production (economic fairness cannot be obtained
    via voting or negotiation)
  • History is an enduring conflict between the
    haves and have nots
  • (the bourgeoisie vs. the proletariat)
  • Unless the working class rises up, the rich will
    get richer, the poor will get poorer widening
    wealth gaps

11
  • 8) MARXISM basic themes (continued)
  • Capitalist system is destined to destroy itself
  • ? Large producers would eliminate absorb
    small producers (monopolies)
  • ? Too few producers would control too much
    wealth
  • ? The larger working class would revolt, seize
    control of all production, and achieve
    economic equality (from each according to
    their ability, to each according to their
    need)
  • ? Result a dictatorship of the proletariat,
    in which the working class collectively
    controls the government, giving way to

12
  • 9) COMMUNISM basic themes
  • The end stage of Marxist ideology
  • The dictatorship of the proletariat enters a
    stage of cooperative living and education,
    after which
  • The state (organized government) withers away,
    giving way to
  • A classless society
  • No nations, no borders, no governments just
    cooperative worker collectives across the world
    producing for the mutual benefit of all

13
  • 10) Original Marxist publication
  • The Communist Manifesto (1848)
  • inspired 20th century revolts in
  • Russia (1917)
  • (Lenin)
  • China (1949)
  • (Mao Tse-Tung)
  • Cuba (1959)
  • (Fidel Castro)

14
KARL MARX
15
  • 11) Marxist flaws
  • Economic forces alone dominated society always
    true?
  • Humans motivated by things OTHER than
  • ? Religion (Marx opiate of the masses)
  • ? Nationalism (patriotism - loyalty to nation)
  • ? Ethnic Identity (other ethnic groups are
    easier targets of violence than owners
    prevents worker cooperation!)
  • Many workers focused on democratic political
    reform
  • (i.e. union organizing, voting), rather than
    using violence
  • Rich got richer, but not all poor got poorer, as
    the middle class slowly grows (although, income
    gaps did widen)
  • Popular hope, optimism for SOCIAL MOBILITY,
    rather than risk violent revolt (belief that
    conditions will improve)
  • Effects of EMIGRATION... some people left!
  • Human greed, corruption (prevents cooperative
    action)

16
  • 12) LABOR UNIONS Goals (WHAT do they want?)
  • - Better wages
  • - Shorter hours
  • - Safety
  • - Job security
  • - Generally better working conditions!
  • 13) Union methods (HOW do they try to get what
    they want?)
  • - Collective Bargaining negotiate with owner
  • - Strike withhold labor
  • no guarantees of success
  • compromise is best outcome

17
  • 14) WHY were labor unions formed (instead of
    seeking alternative methods of addressing
    worker grievances)?
  • - Utilize biggest strength numbers
  • - Take direct action (rather than wait for
    gov. action)
  • - Had no alternative means of political
    expression (working class lacked voting
    rights)
  • 15) Gov responses to unions during early
    industrialization
  • Unions lack legal recognition, are outlawed as a
    threat to social order stability (i.e.
    British Combination Acts of 1799 1800), BUT
  • This slowly changes during the 1800s, and into
    the 1900s
  • - Legal status in UK (Combination Acts repealed
    in 1824)
  • - Right to strike (UK, 1875)
  • - US lags behind AFL (American Federation of
    Labor) wins some hard-fought gains in 1886
  • (but unions not legal until 1935 Wagner Act)

18
  • Unions will influence the slow pace of government
    reforms in response to the worst abuses of
    industrialism throughout the 1800s 1900s. So,
    how strong are they today?
  • 11!

19
  • Implications of declining union membership for
    society

20
  • Implications of declining union membership for
    society

21
  • 16) Slow social reform and progress
  • Slavery ? Abolished! (UK 1843 US 1865)
  • for moral reasons or economic?
  • low wages cheaper than slave labor!
  • Child Labor ? Reduced restricted
  • (UK 1833 US 1938)
  •  
  • Womens rights ? Improves.. especially suffrage
    (voting rights UK 1918 1928 US 1920)
  •  
  • Public education ? Expands grows
  • UK 1880 (elementary)
  • US 1918 (elementary)

22
  • Can socialism and capitalism achieve a BALANCED
    coexistence?
  • Can we SOCIALIZE needs, and CAPITALIZE wants?
  • Utilitarianism?
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