Shop Management
Forfatter: Frederick Winslow Taylor
År: 1911
Forlag: Harper & Brothers Publishers
Sted: New York and London
Sider: 207
UDK: 658.01 Tay
With an introduction by Henry R. Towne
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188
SHOP MANAGEMENT
considerable of their time scaring up grievances
whether they exist or not This naturally fosters
antagonism instead of friendship between the two
sides. There are, of course, marked exceptions to
this rule; that of the Brotherhood of Locomotive
Engineers being perhaps the most prominent.
The most serious of the delusions and fallacies
under which workmen, and particularly those in
many of the unions, are suffering is that it is for
their interest to limit the amount of work which a
man should do in a day.
There is no question that the greater the daily
output of the average individual in a trade the
greater will be the average wages earned in the trade,
and that in the long run turning out a large amount
of work each day will give them higher wages,
steadier and more work, instead of throwing them
out of work. The worst thing that a labor union
can do for its members in the long run is to limit
the amount of work which they allow each workman
to do in a day. If their employers are in a competi-
tive business, sooner or later those competitors
whose workmen do not limit the output will take
the trade away from them, and they will be thrown
out of work. And in the meantime the small day’s
work which they have accustomed themselves to do
demoralizes them, and instead of developing as men
do when they use their strength and faculties to the
utmost, and as men should do from year to year,
they grow lazy, spend much of their time pitying
themselves, and are less able to compete with other
men. Forbidding their members to do more than