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A very peculiar practice: Underemployment in Britain during the interwar years

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 April 2006

S. BOWDEN
Affiliation:
University of York and Centre for Historical Economics & Related Research at York
D.M. HIGGINS
Affiliation:
University of York and Centre for Historical Economics & Related Research at York
C. PRICE
Affiliation:
University of York and Centre for Historical Economics & Related Research at York
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Abstract

This article presents new evidence on the determinants of short-time working in Britain during the interwar period. Using a selection of manufacturing industries we test the impact that output volatility, the benefit-wage ratio, and trade union density had on short-time working. We find that persistence effects (captured by lagged values of output fluctuation) and gender differences in trade union density were important for a number of industries. However, perhaps our most interesting finding is that the benefit-wage ratio also exercised a statistically significant impact on short-time working. This suggests that the Benjamin-Kochin thesis may be important after all. In other words, the army of short-time workers that existed in Britain between the Wars may, indeed, have been a ‘volunteer army’.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Cambridge University Press 2006

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