Men at work. Wages and industriousness in southern Sweden 1500–1850
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Men at work. Wages and industriousness in southern Sweden 1500–1850. / Gary, Kathryn; Olsson, Mats.
In: Scandinavian Economic History Review, Vol. 68, No. 2, 2020, p. 112.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Men at work. Wages and industriousness in southern Sweden 1500–1850
AU - Gary, Kathryn
AU - Olsson, Mats
PY - 2020
Y1 - 2020
N2 - In this paper, we use a brand new dataset to estimate and compare wages for casually and annually hired workers in early modern southern Sweden. We ask whether men in either situation could have supported families on the basis of their earnings. Findings indicate that casual earners would have been able to out-earn annual employees for most of the period 1500–1850, but by the eighteenth century when food prices had risen their relative comfort likely reversed. Similarly, while it was possible for long periods of time for men to earn a respectability basket on the basis of approximately 150 days work this was no longer true by the end of the eighteenth century. By that time, both groups would have increasingly struggled and other family members needed to contribute. Not only is this account inconsistent with the standard story of a nineteenth century male breadwinner family but it suggests that industriousness might not have been prompted by a desire to consume new commodities but by the need to maintain basic standards.
AB - In this paper, we use a brand new dataset to estimate and compare wages for casually and annually hired workers in early modern southern Sweden. We ask whether men in either situation could have supported families on the basis of their earnings. Findings indicate that casual earners would have been able to out-earn annual employees for most of the period 1500–1850, but by the eighteenth century when food prices had risen their relative comfort likely reversed. Similarly, while it was possible for long periods of time for men to earn a respectability basket on the basis of approximately 150 days work this was no longer true by the end of the eighteenth century. By that time, both groups would have increasingly struggled and other family members needed to contribute. Not only is this account inconsistent with the standard story of a nineteenth century male breadwinner family but it suggests that industriousness might not have been prompted by a desire to consume new commodities but by the need to maintain basic standards.
KW - Wages
KW - casual labour
KW - annualy hired
KW - Early Modern
KW - Industrious revolution
U2 - 10.1080/03585522.2019.1704859
DO - 10.1080/03585522.2019.1704859
M3 - Article
VL - 68
SP - 112
JO - Scandinavian Economic History Review
JF - Scandinavian Economic History Review
SN - 1750-2837
IS - 2
ER -