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Escape from the Market

Negotiating Work in Lancashire

Michael Huberman author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Cambridge University Press

Published:12th Sep '96

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Escape from the Market cover

This book describes how wages were set in post-industrial revolution Lancashire.

This book questions the idea that wages were set by thoroughgoing competition in the heyday of laissez-faire capitalism. Drawing on the experience of workers during industrialisation, this book shows that workers and firms have good reasons to fix wages independently of market fluctuations.At the outset of the industrial revolution the Lancashire labour market was a model of thoroughgoing competition. Wages adjusted quickly and smoothly to changes in the demand for and supply of labour. Within two generations, however, workers and firms had retreated from the market. Instead of busting wages, firms paid fixed rates; instead of breaking ties on short notice, workers sought longer-term associations. Social norms - doing the right thing - protected and preserved the fresh labour market arrangements. This book explains the causes and effects of changes in the labour market in the context of developments in labour economics and fresh research in social and economic history.

Review of the hardback: 'This book is a contribution to a major debate which has both historical and contemporary dimensions. … Huberman's argument is buttressed by both economic theory and substantial amounts of evidence.' History
Review of the hardback: '… an important book and an eloquent argument to be reckoned with by all historians of nineteenth- and twentieth-century Western economies'. Pat Hudson, English Historical Review

ISBN: 9780521561518

Dimensions: 229mm x 152mm x 17mm

Weight: 530g

242 pages