25. How Division of Labour Arises.
When a number of workmen are engaged on any work,
we find that each man usually takes one part of the
work, and leaves other parts of the work to his mates.
People by degrees arrange themselves into different
trades, so that the whole work done in any place is
divided into many employments or crafts. This
division of labour is found in all civilised countries,
and more or less in all states of society, which are
not merely barbarous. In every village there
is the butcher and the baker, and the blacksmith and
the carpenter. Even in a single family there
is division of labour: the husband ploughs, or
cuts timber; the wife cooks, manages the house, and
spins or weaves; the sons hunt or tend sheep; the daughters
employ themselves as milkmaids. There is a popular
couplet which says “When Adam delved
and Eve span,
Who was then the gentleman?”
It seems to express the fact that
this division of labour existed in very early times,
before there were any gentlemen.
In modern times the division of labour
is immensely complicated: not only has every
town and village its different tradespeople, and artisans
and men in different posts and employments, but each
district has its peculiar manufactures. In one
place cotton goods are produced; in another, woollen
goods; in other parts of the country flax, jute, silk
are manufactured. Iron is made in Staffordshire,
Cleveland, South Wales, and Scotland; copper is smelted
in South Wales; crockery is baked in the potteries;
hosiery is manufactured in Nottingham and Leicester;
linens are sewed in the North of Ireland; and so on.
In every separate factory, again, there is division
of labour; there is the manager, the chief clerk,
the assistant clerks; the foremen of different departments,
the timekeeper, the engine-tenter, and stokers,
the common labourers, the carters, errand boys, porters,
&c., all in addition to the actual mechanics of different
kinds and ranks who do the principal work. Thus
the division of labour spreads itself throughout the
whole of society, from the Queen and her Ministers,
down to the errand boy, or the street scavenger.
26. Adam Smith on the Division
of Labour. There are many ways in which we gain by
the division of labour, but Adam Smith has treated
the subject so excellently that we had better, in
the first place, consider his view of the matter.
There are, as he thought, three ways in which advantage
arises from the division of labour, namely
(1.) Increase of dexterity in every particular
workman.
(2.) Saving of the time which is commonly lost
in passing from one kind
of work to another.
(3.) The invention of a great number of machines,
which facilitate and
abridge labour, and enable one man to do the
work of many.
There can be no doubt as to the increase
of dexterity, which arises from practice. Any
one who has tried to imitate a juggler, or to play
the piano, without having learned to do it, knows how
absurdly he fails. Nobody could possibly do the
work of a glass-blower without long practice.
Even when a man can do a job in some sort of way, he
will do it much more quickly if he does it often.
Adam Smith states that if a blacksmith had to make
nails without having been accustomed to the work,
he would not make above 200 or 300 bad nails in a day.
With practice he might learn to make 800 or 1000 nails
in a day; but boys who are brought up to the nailer’s
trade can turn out 2300 nails of the same kind in the
same time. But there is no need of many examples:
everything that we see well or quickly made has been
made by men who have spent a great deal of time and
trouble in learning and practising the work.
Secondly, there is a great deal of
time lost when a man changes from one kind of work
to another many times in the day. Before you
can make a thing you must get all the right tools
and materials around you; when you have finished one
box, for instance, you are all ready to make another
with less trouble than the first; but if you have to
go off and do something quite different, such as to
mend a pair of shoes or write a letter, a different
set of implements have to be got ready. A man,
as Adam Smith thought, saunters a little in turning
his hand from one kind of employment to another, and
if this happens frequently, he is likely to become
lazy.
In the third place, Smith asserted
that the division of labour leads to the invention
of machines which abridge labour, because men, he
thought, were much more likely to discover easy methods
of attaining an object when their whole attention
is directed to that object. But it seems doubtful
how far this is correct. Workmen do occasionally
invent some mode of lessening their labour, and a
few important inventions have been made in this way.
But, as a general rule, the division of labour leads
to invention, because it enables ingenious men to make
invention their profession. The greatest inventors,
such as James Watt, Bramah, Fulton, Roberts, Nasmyth,
Howe, Fairbairn, Whitworth, the Stephensons, Wheatstone,
Bessemer, Siemens, have not been led to invention in
the way described by Adam Smith, but have cultivated
an original genius by careful study and long practice
in mechanical construction. But the division
of labour greatly assists invention, because it enables
each factory to adopt particular kinds of machinery.
In England the division of labour is continually becoming
more and more minute, and it is not uncommon to find
that the whole supply of some commodity is furnished
from a single manufactory, which can then afford to
have a set of machines invented on purpose to produce
this one commodity. Such is even more the case
in the large manufactories of the United States.
I will now describe four other ways
in which great saving of labour arises from the division
of labour, as follows:
27. The Multiplication of Services.
A great deal of labour is often saved by arranging
work so that a labourer may serve many persons as
easily as one. If a messenger is going to carry
a letter to the post-office, he can as readily carry
a score. Instead of twenty people each carrying
their own letters, one messenger can do the whole work
without more trouble. This explains why the post-office
is able to forward a letter from any part of the kingdom
to any other part for a penny or even a halfpenny.
There are so many people sending and receiving letters,
that a postman usually carries a great many, and often
delivers half-a-dozen at once. But it would be
quite impossible to send telegrams so cheaply, because
every message has to be separately telegraphed along
the wires, and then delivered at once by a special
messenger, who can seldom carry more than one message
at a time. Archbishop Whately pointed out that
when a party of travellers exploring a new country
camp out at night, they naturally divide the work:
one attends to the horses, another unpacks the stores,
a third makes a fire and cooks the supper, a fourth
goes for water, and so on. It would be quite
absurd if a dozen travellers in one party were to light
a dozen separate fires, and cook a dozen separate
meals. The labour of lighting a fire and cooking
for twelve persons is not much greater than doing the
same for one or two. There are many things which,
if once done, will serve for thousands or millions
of people. If a person gets important information,
as, for instance, that a storm is coming across the
Atlantic Ocean, he can warn a whole nation by means
of the newspapers. It is a great benefit to have
a meteorological office in London, where two or three
men spend their labour in learning the weather all
over the country by means of the telegraph, and thus
enable us to judge, as far as possible, of the weather
which is coming. This is a good case of the multiplication
of services.
28. The Multiplication of Copies
is also a means of increasing immensely the produce
of labour. When the proper tools and models for
making a thing are once provided, it is sometimes possible
to go on multiplying copies with little further trouble.
To cut the dies for striking a medal or coin is a
very slow and costly work; but, when once good dies
are finished, it is easy to strike a great many coins
with them, and the cost of the striking is very small.
The printing press, however, is the best case of multiplication
of copies. To have the whole of Shakespeare’s
Plays copied out by a law stationer would cost more
than two hundred pounds, and every new copy would cost
as much as the first. Before the invention of
printing, books used to be thus copied out, and manuscript
books were therefore very expensive, besides being
full of mistakes. The whole of Shakespeare’s
Plays can now be bought for a shilling; and any one
of the Waverley Novels can be had for sixpence.
It may cost several hundred pounds to set up the type
for a large book and stereotype it; but when this
is once done, hundreds of thousands of copies can
be struck off, and the cost of each copy is little
more than that of the paper and the binding.
Almost all the common things we use
now, such as ordinary chairs and tables, cups and
saucers, teapots, spoons and forks, &c., are made by
machinery, and are copies of an original pattern.
A good chair can be bought for five shillings or less,
but if you wanted to have a chair made of a new pattern,
it would cost perhaps five or ten times as much.
29. Personal Adaptation. A
further advantage of the division of labour is that,
when there are many different trades, every person
can choose that trade for which he is best suited the
strong healthy man becomes a blacksmith; the weaker
one works a loom or makes shoes; the skilful man learns
to be a watchmaker; the most ignorant and unskilful
can find work in breaking stones or mending the hedges.
Each man will generally work at the trade in which
he can get the best wages, and it is an evident loss
of skill if the artisan should break stones or sweep
the streets. Now, the greater the division of
labour and the more extensive factories become, the
better chance there is for finding an employment just
suited to each person’s powers; clever workmen
do the work which no one else can do; they have common
labourers to help them in things which require no
skill; foremen plan out the work, and allot it to the
artisans; clerks, who are quick at accounts, keep
the books, and pay and receive money; the manager
of the factory is an ingenious experienced man, who
can give his whole attention to directing the work,
to making good bargains, or to inventing improvements
in the business. Every one is thus occupied in
the way in which his labour will be most productive
and useful to other people, and at the same time most
profitable to himself.
30. Local Adaptation. Lastly,
the division of labour allows of local adaptation that
is, it allows every kind of work to be done in the
place most suitable for it. We have already learnt that each kind of labour should be
carried on where it is most productive; but this cannot
be done unless there be division of labour so
that while the French grow wine, weave silk, or make
articles de Paris, they buy the cottons of
Manchester, the beer of Burton-on-Trent, or the coals
of Newcastle. When trade is free, and the division
of labour is perfect, each town or district learns
to make some commodity better than other places:
watches are made in Clerkenwell; steel pens in Birmingham;
needles at Redditch; cutlery at Sheffield; pottery
at Stoke; ribbons at Coventry; glass at St. Helen’s;
straw bonnets at Luton; and so forth.
It is not always possible to say exactly
why certain goods are made better in one place for
instance, silks in Lyons than anywhere else;
but so it often is, and people should be left as free
as possible to buy the goods they like best.
Commodities are manufactured in order that they may
produce pleasure and be useful, not, as we shall see,
in order that labourers may be kept hard at work.
Now, when trade is left free it gives rise to division
of labour, not only between town and town, county
and county, but between the most distant nations of
the earth. Thus is created what may be called
#the territorial division of labour. Commerce
between nation and nation is not only one of the best
means of increasing wealth and saving labour, but
it brings us nearer to the time when all nations will
live in harmony, as if they were but one nation.
31. The Combination of Labour.
We now see what great advantages arise from each man
learning a single trade thoroughly. This is called
the division of labour, because it divides up the
work into a great many different operations; nevertheless,
it leads men to assist each other, and to work together
in manufacturing the same goods. Thus, in producing
a book, a great many trades must assist each other:
type-founders cast the type; mechanics make the printing
press; the paper is manufactured at the paper works;
printers’ ink is prepared at other works; the
publishers arrange the business; the author supplies
the copy; the compositors set up the type; the reader
corrects the proofs; the pressmen work off the printed
sheets; then there are still the bookbinders, and
the booksellers, besides a great many other small
trades which supply the tools wanted by the principal
trades. Thus, society is like a very complicated
machine, in which there is a great number of wheels,
and wheels within wheels; each part goes on attending
to its own business, and doing the same work over and
over again. There is what we should call a complex
organization (Greek, organon, instrument), that is
to say, different people and different trades work
as instruments of each other, all assisting in the
ultimate result.
But it is to be observed that nobody
plans out these systems of divided labour; indeed
few people ever know how many trades there are, and
how they are connected together. There are said
to be about thirty-six distinct kinds of employment
in making and putting together the parts of a piano;
there are about forty trades engaged in watchmaking;
in the cotton business there are more than a hundred
occupations. But new trades are frequently created,
especially when any new discovery takes place; thus,
there are at least sixteen different trades occupied
in photography, or in making the things required by
photographers; and railways have produced whole series
of employments which did not exist fifty years ago.
These trades arise without any Act of Parliament to
make them or allow them. There is no law to say
how many trades there shall be, nor how many people
shall go into each trade, because nobody can tell
what will be wanted in future years. These things
are arranged by a kind of social instinct.
Each person takes up the kind of work which seems
to suit him and to pay him best at the time.
Another and a totally different kind
of combination of labour arises when men arrange to
assist each other in doing the same work. Thus,
sailors pulling at the same rope combine their labour
together; other instances are, carrying the same ladder,
rowing the same boat, and so forth. In this case
there is said to be simple combination of labour,
because the men do the same sort of work. When
the men have different operations to perform, there
is said to be complex combination of labour, as
when one man points a pin and another makes the head.
On board a ship there is both simple and complex combination.
When several men work at the same capstan the combination
is simple, because one man does exactly the same as
the others. But the captain, mate, steersman,
carpenter, boatswain, and cook work together in complex
combination, since each attends to his own proper
duties. Similarly, in a company of soldiers the
privates act together in simple combination, but the
officers of different ranks have distinct duties to
perform, so that the combination becomes complex.
Men who thus assist each other are usually able to
do far more work than if they acted separately.
32. Disadvantages of the Division
of Labour. There are certainly some evils which arise
out of the great division of labour now existing in
civilised countries. These evils are of no account
compared with the immense benefits which we receive;
still it is well to notice them.
In the first place, division of labour
tends to make a man’s power narrow and restricted;
he does one kind of work so constantly, that he has
no time to learn and practice other kinds of work.
A man becomes, as it has been said, worth only the
tenth part of a pin; that is, there are men who know
only how to make, for instance, the head of a pin.
In the time of the Romans it was said, ne sutor
ultra crepidam, let not the shoemaker go beyond
his last. When a man accustomed only to making
pins or shoes goes into the far west states of America,
he finds himself unfitted for doing all the kinds
of hard work required from a settler. The poor
peasant from Norway or Sweden, who seems at first sight
a less intelligent man, is able to build his own house,
till the ground, tend his horse, and in a rough way,
make his own carts, implements, and household furniture.
Even the Red Indian is much better able to take care
of himself in a new country than the educated mechanic.
The only thing to be said is that the skilled shoemaker,
or mechanic of whatever sort, must endeavour to keep
to the trade which he has learnt so well. It
is a misfortune both for himself and for other people
if he is obliged to undertake work which he cannot
do so well.
A second disadvantage of the division
of labour is that trade becomes very complicated,
and when deranged the results are ruinous to some
people. Each person learns to supply only a particular
kind of goods, and if change of fashion or any other
cause leads to a falling off in the demand for that
kind of goods, the producer is left in poverty, until
he can learn another trade. At one time the making
of crinoline skirts for ladies was a large and profitable
trade; now it has ceased almost entirely, and those
who learnt the business have had to seek other employments.
But each trade is generally well supplied with hands
perfectly trained to the work, and it is very difficult
for fresh workmen, especially when old, to learn the
new work, and compete with those who have long practised
it. In some cases this has been successfully
done; thus the Cornish miners, when the mines in Cornwall
were no longer profitable, went into the collieries,
where more hewers of coal were much wanted. But,
generally speaking, it is very difficult to find a
new employment in England, and this is a strong reason
why trades-unions should make no objection to new
men entering a trade to which they have not been brought
up.
The colliers tried to keep the
Cornish miners out of the coal pits. In order
to keep their own wages as high as possible they would
let other men starve. But this is a very selfish
and hurtful way of acting. If every trade were
thus to try and keep all other people away, as if the
trade were their own property, there would constantly
be a number of unfortunate people brought to the workhouse
through no fault of their own. It is most important,
therefore, to maintain a man’s right to do whatever
kind of work he can get. It is one of the first
and most necessary rights of a labourer to labour in any honest way he finds
most profitable to himself. Labour must be free.