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6 - The labour market and industrial mobilization, 1915-1917

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 December 2009

Jay Winter
Affiliation:
University of Cambridge
Thierry Bonzon
Affiliation:
University of Paris – I
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Summary

Introduction

After the initial crisis of 1914-1915, which to different degrees disturbed the labour market in the three capital cities, their urban populations entered a period of massive mobilization. Given the presence of a highly skilled labour force, transport and communications networks, and central political and financial institutions, Paris, London, and Berlin were repositories of economic assets essential to the war effort.

Three processes governed the reorganization of the metropolitan labour market: the expansion of industrial activity to fulfil war contracts for goods ranging from shells to military uniforms; the rapid growth in urban activity in general, such as food and fuel provision for the civil population; and the concomitant recession in consumer-goods production. The outcome was an unprecedented social and occupational reordering of production, which changed not only the labour market but the very appearance of the three capital cities themselves.

We should note that on the eve of the war these cities were very large reservoirs of labour. For the Department of the Seine the overall estimate of the number of wage-earners in 1914 was 1,750,000. The order of magnitude of the labour force in Greater Berlin was similar. There were more than 1,400,000 workers registered in Krankenkasse (national health-insurance bureaux) in July 1914.2 A London County Council (LCC) estimate for July 1914 gives a figure of close to 1,400,000 workers in the twenty-eight metropolitan boroughs under the jurisdiction of the LCC. These are almost certainly underestimates, given the exclusion of domestic workers and many women workers whose employment went unreported before the war.

Type
Chapter
Information
Capital Cities at War
Paris, London, Berlin 1914–1919
, pp. 164 - 195
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1997

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