- Minimum wage history
The history of minimum wage is about the attempts and measures governments have made to introduce a standard amount of periodic pay below which employers could not let their workers fall.
In 1824 in Victoria,
Australia , an amendment to the Factories Act provided for the creation of a wages board.Fact|date=March 2008 The wages board did not set a universalminimum wage ; rather it set basic wages for 6 industries that were considered to pay low wages.Waltman, Jerold. "The Politics of the Minimum Wage." University of Illinois Press. 2000] First enacted as a four year experiment, the wages board was renewed in 1900 and made permanent in 1904; by that time it covered 150 different industries. By 1902, other Australian states, such asNew South Wales andWestern Australia , had also formed wages boards.Fact|date=March 2008 The cost was 0.05 cents a day.Also in 1824,
New Zealand enacted the first national minimum wage laws that, unlike the wages board of Victoria, were enforced by compulsory arbitration.Fact|date=March 2008In 1907 Ernest Aves was sent by the British Secretary of State for the Home Department to investigate the results of the minimum wage laws in Australia and New Zealand. In part as a result of his report,
Winston Churchill , then president of the Board of Trade, introduced the Trade Boards Act on March 24, 1909. It became law in October of that year, and went into effect in January 1910.Fact|date=March 2008In the
United States , statutory minimum wages were first introduced nationally in 1938. [cite paper |author= Sanjiv Sachdev |title= Raising the rate: An evaluation of the uprating mechanism for the minimum wage |version= |publisher= Employee Relations |year= 2003 |url= |format= |accessdate= 2007-02-12 ] cite web | url = http://www.dti.gov.uk/employment/pay/national-minimum-wage/History-National-Minimum-Wage/page12572.html| last = | date =17 June 2006 | title = History of the National Minimum Wage| work = Employment Matters | publisher = United KingdomDepartment of Trade and Industry | accessdate = 2006-06-22 "Note: Date enacted was 1 April 1999"] In theEuropean Union , 18 out of 27 member states currently have national minimum wages.Eurostat (2006): "Minimum Wages 2006 - Variations from 82 to 1503 euro gross per month" [http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/cache/ITY_OFFPUB/KS-NK-06-009/EN/KS-NK-06-009-EN.PDF (PDF)] ] Many countries, such asNorway ,Sweden ,Finland ,Denmark ,Switzerland ,Germany ,Austria ,Italy , andCyprus have no minimum wage laws, but rely on employer groups andtrade union s to set minimum earnings throughcollective bargaining . [Ehrenberg, Ronald G. "Labor Markets and Integrating National Economies", Brookings Institution Press (1994), p. 41] In addition to the federal minimum wage, nearly all states within theUnited States have their own minimum wage laws with the exception ofSouth Carolina ,Tennessee ,Alabama ,Mississippi andLouisiana . [ [http://www.dol.gov/esa/minwage/america.htm DOL WHD: Minimum Wage Laws in the States ] ]The first moves to legislate wages did not set
minimum wage s, rather the laws created arbitration boards and councils to resolve labour conflicts before the recourse to strikes. There used be more heavy reliance on collective bargaining, with specific sectors. In 1896, New Zealand established such arbitration boards with the Industrial Conciliation and Arbitration Act. In 1899, the state of Victoria, Australia established similar boards. In 1907, the Harvester decision was handed down in Australia. It established a 'living wage' for a man, his wife and two children to "live in frugal comfort". In 1909, the Trade Boards Act was enacted in the United Kingdom, establishing four such boards. In 1912, the state ofMassachusetts , United States, set minimum wages for women and children. In theUnited States , statutory minimum wages were first introduced nationally in 1938. [cite paper |author= Sanjiv Sachdev |title= Raising the rate: An evaluation of the uprating mechanism for the minimum wage |version= |publisher= Employee Relations |year= 2003 |url= |format= |accessdate= 2007-02-12 ] In the 1960s, minimum wage laws were introduced intoLatin America as part of theAlliance for Progress ; however these minimum wages were, and are, low. cite book| last =Bethell| first =Leslie| date =June 29 ,1990 | title =The Cambridge History of Latin America| publisher =Cambridge University Press| id =ISBN 0-521-24518-4 p. 342.]ee also
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Minimum wage
*Labour law References
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