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CHAPTER XXI - ON THE CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES OF LARGE FACTORIES

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 August 2010

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Summary

(204.) On examining the analysis which has been given in Chap. XVIII. of the operations in the art of pin-making, it will be observed, that ten individuals are employed in it, and also that the time occupied in executing the several processes is very different. In order, however, to render more simple the reasoning which follows, it will be convenient to suppose that each of the six processes there described requires an equal quantity of time. This being supposed, it is at once apparent, that, to conduct an establishment for pin-making most profitably, the number of persons employed must be a multiple of ten. For if a person with small means has only sufficient capital to enable him to employ half that number of persons, they cannot each of them constantly adhere to the execution of one process; and if a manufacturer employs any number not a multiple of ten, a similar result must ensue with respect to some portion of them. The same reasoning extends to all manufactories which are conducted upon the principle of the division of labour, and we arrive at this general conclusion—

When (from the peculiar nature of the produce of each manufactory) the number of processes into which it is most advantageous to divide it is ascertained, as well as the number of individuals to be employed, then all other manufactories which do not employ a direct multiple of this number, will produce the article at a greater cost. This principle ought always to be kept in view in great establishments, although it is quite impossible, even with the best system of the division of labour, to carry it rigidly into execution.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2010
First published in: 1832

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