ABSTRACT

In this title, first published in 1918, Lord Leverhulme explores the ideas of co-partnership, piece-work, housing, and the benefits of shorter hours of labour. The most notable of these discussions, collected by Stanley Unwin, with a Preface by Lord Haldane, advocates a six-hour day, with two shifts, in all industries in which the overhead charges are equal to or larger than the cost of weekly wages. Lord Leverhulme's view is that the employees work better in a short working day and might produce as much in six hours as in eight hours, and that in any case the machinery could be utilized more profitably by running for the double shift of twelve hours than for the single shift of eight hours. This seminal work will be of interest to students of business studies and human resource management.

chapter

Introduction

part |55 pages

The Six-Hour Day

chapter I|11 pages

Introductory. The Industrial Situation

chapter II|22 pages

The Six-Hour Day

chapter III|14 pages

Tools to the Men who can use them

chapter IV|7 pages

National Possibilities

part |82 pages

Co-Partnership

chapter I|15 pages

Co-Partnership

chapter II|17 pages

Co-Partnership and Business Management

chapter III|5 pages

Right Constitution of Co-Partnership

chapter IV|2 pages

Essentials of Co-Partnership

chapter V|10 pages

Co-Partnership and Efficiency

chapter VI|5 pages

Co-Partnership and High Wages

chapter VII|11 pages

Harmonizing Capital and Labour

chapter VIII|16 pages

Traders’ Partners

part |57 pages

Housing and Social Welfare

chapter II|15 pages

Land for Houses

chapter III|13 pages

Visit of International Housing Conference

chapter IV|13 pages

Standardizing Welfare

part |47 pages

Education and Business

chapter I|11 pages

Yourself is Master

chapter II|11 pages

chapter III|10 pages

Victims of Education

chapter IV|5 pages

Girls and Boys

chapter V|8 pages

Output and Intake

part |84 pages

Some Industrial Questions

chapter I|13 pages

Industrial Administration

chapter II|14 pages

Combines

chapter III|16 pages

X Problems

chapter IV|19 pages

Zero Yields of Capital and Labour

chapter V|20 pages

Day-Work or Piece-Work—Which?