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1 - Mexico City: the slow rise of wage-centered households

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 June 2010

Joan Smith
Affiliation:
University of Vermont
Immanuel Wallerstein
Affiliation:
State University of New York, Binghamton
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Summary

Throughout the latter part of the nineteenth century, the workforce in Mexico City can be conveniently divided into three basic groups. First, there were the common laborers. They were employed as unskilled labor in workshops, as day labor on construction sites, and as factory operatives and outworkers. Secondly, there were the skilled artisans working for wages, who maintained a status somewhat higher than common laborers. Thirdly, there were those who offered goods and services in the marketplaces, in the streets and plazas. These were petty merchants and sellers of homemade products, and those offering personal services. Included among this group were the independent artisans who operated family workshops, or had been reduced to hawking their products on the street. During the 1890s, the demand for common labor of both genders increased, due primarily to the expansion of large-scale textile and tobacco manufacture, and to the boom in construction. The demand for skilled male laborers increased slightly. In contrast, opportunities for petty market activities were reduced as commerce came to be taken over by larger establishments and merchants.

Women made up better than one-third of the workforce in Mexico City from the middle of the eighteenth century to the beginning of the twentieth. Women were already quite active during the mid-nineteenth century in numerous occupations and trades, with domestic service representing only one-third of women's employment.

Type
Chapter
Information
Creating and Transforming Households
The Constraints of the World-Economy
, pp. 150 - 169
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1992

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