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Kleingewerbe und Hausindustrie in Österreich. Beiträge zur Kenntnis ihrer Entwicklung und ihrer Existenzbedingungen

1894

by Schwiedland

Knowledge EconomicsLabor MarketEconomic PolicyGuildsWagesGustav SchmollerKarl BucherAdam SmithMonetary TheoryLabor LawTrade PolicyInternational TradeMax WeberMercantilismLabor MobilityWerner SombartCapital TheoryEconomies of ScaleDivision of LaborTaxationOverproductionProfit and LossSlaveryAnthropologyCooperativesGeopoliticsCompetitionLujo BrentanoAnne-Robert-Jacques TurgotTrade UnionsBusiness CyclesProtectionismSocial DemocracySupply and DemandBoom and BustPrice TheoryCredit ExpansionSpeculationStatismEducationEconomic CrisisClass StrugglePublic HealthDemographyUnemploymentInsuranceFixed CapitalMarket StructureSocialismMinimum WageCollective BargainingEconomic Development

Table of Contents · 107 segments

1
Google Books public domain notice and usage guidelinesessay
2
German Google Books public domain notice and usage guidelinesessay
3
Title page, library marks, and publication dataessay
4
Author’s introduction to the study of small trades and domestic industryessay
5
Table of contents for the general partessay
6
General part and Chapter I outlinechapter
7
Chapter I opening: forms of house industry formationchapter
8
Derivative house industries: household production in self-sufficient economiestheoretical
9
From household production to exchange, specialization, and proto-industrytheoretical
10
Emergence of the putting-out system from household productiontheoretical
11
Derivative Home Industry from Household Labor and Ambiguous Textile Originschapter
12
Lohnwerk and Its Transformation into Verlagchapter
13
Localized Rural Handicraft, Market Intermediaries, and Dependence on Verlegerchapter
14
Historical Epochs of the Verlagssystem and Urban Export Craftschapter
15
Urban Crafts, Trade Freedom, and the Statistical Growth of Putting-Outchapter
16
Conditions for Export Handicrafts to Become House Industrytheoretical
17
Organization and Definition of the Putting-Out Systemchapter
18
Retail, Export, Factory, and Rural Expansion of Verlag Laborchapter
19
Original Rural House Industries under Monastic and Manorial Controlchapter
20
Serf-Based Lordly House Industry in Russiachapter
21
Cheap Rural Labor and the Planting of Verlag House Industrieschapter
22
Factories Converting to Verlag and Derivative House Industrychapter
23
Factorei Systems and General Conditions for the Rise and Transformation of House Industrychapter
24
Chapter II Opening: Capital Shortage of the Independent Small Masterchapter
25
Factory Competition and Statistical Evidence of Handicraft Declinechapter
26
Industrial Tax and Employment Table, 1880–1890chapter
27
Factory Competition, Repair Trades, and the Limits of Surviving Handworkchapter
28
Commercial Capital, Retail Transformation, and the Loss of Direct Customerschapter
29
Apprentice Breeding, Capital Poverty, Price Pressure, and Crisis Dependencechapter
30
Industrial Freedom and the Proliferation of Weak Craft Enterpriseschapter
31
Chapter II: Gewerbefreiheit, Trade Policy, and the Transformation of Austrian Small Craftschapter
32
Conclusion of Chapter II: Decline of the Independent Small Masterchapter
33
Appendix I: Home Industry in Berlin According to the 1882 German Trade Censuschapter
34
Appendix II: Parisian Home Workers Employed by Tradesmen in 1860chapter
35
Appendix III: Home Workers in Vienna Manufacturing Trades in 1890chapter
36
Publisher Advertisements for Duncker & Humblot Social-Statistical Worksbibliography
37
Title Page and Contents of the Special Part on the Viennese Shell Turnersbibliography
38
Chapter III Opening: Pearl Shell Raw Material, Sources, and Global Fisherieschapter
39
Organization and Exploitation of Pearl Divers in the Red Sea and Persian Gulfchapter
40
Pearl-Shell Fisheries and Labor Forms in Ceylon, Southeast Asia, Australia, and Polynesiachapter
41
Mother-of-Pearl Varieties, Grading, and Global Staple Marketschapter
42
London-Dominated Pearl-Shell Trade, Import Statistics, and Brokeragechapter
43
Vienna Distribution Chain and Middlemen in the Pearl-Button Industrychapter
44
Historical Uses of Mother-of-Pearl and the Early Viennese Craftchapter
45
Technical Development of Mother-of-Pearl Work from Sawing to Mechanized Luxury Goodschapter
46
Viennese Exports, Prices, Fashions, and Raw-Material Strategieschapter
47
French Putting-Out Industry and the Provincial Shift of Pearl-Button Productionchapter
48
Chapter III Conclusion: Competition, House Industry, and Product Shifts in Shell Turningchapter
49
Chapter IV Opening: Origins and Definition of Schutzdekretechapter
50
Guild Masters, Protected Artisans, and State Supervision of Guild Privilegeschapter
51
Mother-of-Pearl Work in the 1759–1765 Reclassification of Minor Tradeschapter
52
Nadler and Drechsler Jurisdiction over Mother-of-Pearl Button Makingchapter
53
Nineteenth-Century Dekretists, Gewerbefreiheit, and Genossenschaft Practicechapter
54
Continuation of Chapter IV: Austrian Guild Reform, Compulsory Trade Associations, and the Limits of Gewerbefreiheitchapter
55
Chapter V: The Condition of Masters and Market Cycles in the Mother-of-Pearl Button Tradechapter
56
The 1889 Strike, American Tariff Expectations, and the Onset of the MacKinley Crisischapter
57
European Crisis, Worker Resistance, and Relief During the MacKinley Shockchapter
58
Supply, Demand, American Specialization, and the Limits of Mechanizationtheoretical
59
The Masters’ Precarious Position Under Cyclical Boom and Crisischapter
60
Statistical Evidence on Master Numbers, Raw-Shell Imports, and Crisis Effectschapter
61
Factory, Craft, and Putting-Out Systems Comparedtheoretical
62
Putting-Out, Seasonal Stagnation, and Proletarianizationchapter
63
Overcrowding, Cheap Labor, Mechanization, and Wage Elasticitychapter
64
Export Houses and Producer Dependence on Intermediarieschapter
65
Speculative Mass Production, Credit Expansion, and Insolvent Masterschapter
66
Case Studies of Viennese Pearl-Button Masters and Causes of Declinechapter
67
Market Power among Importers, Exporters, Raw-Material Dealers, and Workerschapter
68
Exporter Price Pressure, Quality Disputes, and Abuses Against Mother-of-Pearl Button Masterschapter
69
Credit, Bons, and Intermediary Traders in the Button Industrychapter
70
Master Organization, Anti-Semitism, and Failed Price Solidaritychapter
71
State Aid, Raw-Material Cooperatives, and the Proposed Sales Hallchapter
72
Chapter VI Outline: Auxiliary Workers, Apprentices, and Journeymenchapter
73
Origins and Mediation of Apprentices in Viennese Craftschapter
74
Confessional Apprentice Welfare and the Jewish Handcraft Associationchapter
75
Recruitment, Apprenticeship Length, and Delayed Registration in the Pearl-Shell Tradechapter
76
Vocational Schooling and Educational Deficits of Drechsler Apprenticeschapter
77
Abuse, Overwork, and One-Sided Training of Shell-Button Apprenticeschapter
78
Crisis, Output Quotas, Health Screening, and Legal Limits on Apprentice Protectionchapter
79
Journeyman Reform Efforts, Runaway Apprentices, and Apprentice Limitschapter
80
The Journeyman, Concubinage, and Working-Class Marriage Barrierschapter
81
Worker Education, Fachvereine, and Social-Democratic Self-Organizationchapter
82
Worker Libraries, Lectures, Theater, Festivals, and Socialist Presschapter
83
Viennese Small-Craft Unions, Emergency Laws, and Worker Presschapter
84
Pearl-Button Turners, Occupational Disease, and Socialist Solidaritychapter
85
From Patriarchal Workshop to Class Conflict in Pearl-Button Turningchapter
86
Irregular Work, Overwork, and Chamber Testimony on Pearl-Button Turnerschapter
87
Sickness-Fund Statistics, Tuberculosis, Mortality, and Workshop Hygienechapter
88
1892 Union Survey of Pearl-Button Journeymen, Wages, Apprentices, and Illnesschapter
89
Worker Organization, Economic Education, Blue Monday, and the Lump of Labour Ideachapter
90
Workers’ Wage, Work-Time, Union, and Social-Policy Demandschapter
91
The Spread of Pearl-Button Domestic Industrychapter
92
Economic Advantages of the Putting-Out System for Entrepreneurschapter
93
General Advantages of the Verlag System and the Burdens of Home Industry Workerschapter
94
Forms of Home Work in the Shell-Button Industrychapter
95
Case Study of F. R., a Relatively Favored Viennese Home Workerchapter
96
Case Study of B., a Poor Viennese Home Worker with a Large Householdchapter
97
Case Study of Family S. and Extreme Proletarianization in Viennese Home Industrychapter
98
Rural Shell-Button Home Industry, Factories, Factors, and Debt Dependencechapter
99
Case Study of a Lower Austrian Half-Farmer Combining Agriculture and Button Turningchapter
100
Further Rural Examples: Hut Home Workers, Workshop Discipline, and Rented Rural Workroomschapter
101
Chapter VII continuation: rural home workers and the economic causes of house industrychapter
102
Chapter VIII opening: cooperatives, cartels, and vocational trainingchapter
103
Chapter VIII: legal abolition and regulation of home workchapter
104
Chapter VIII: worker organization as the remedy for house industrychapter
105
Chapter VIII Conclusion: Free Worker Organization as Social Reformchapter
106
Appendix: Description of Pearl Fishing in Ceylonessay
107
Publisher Catalogue of Social and Economic Studiesbibliography