A path to fair, productive industry that serves workers, capital, and the community.
This work surveys how industry can align its laws, practices, and incentives with the common good. It centers on the idea that government in industry should support living standards, safety, and just rewards for effort.
The book examines the core issues shaping modern industry: how wages, work hours, and remuneration affect effort and efficiency; the roles of education, training, and health; and the ways labor, management, capital, and the community can share responsibility for progress. It argues that a balanced framework—grounded in practical measures and human values—can reduce conflict and foster lasting reconstruction.
- How remuneration methods influence motivation, efficiency, and fairness
- Ways to improve health, safety, and living standards for workers
- The roles of education, training, and research in industrial progress
- Paths to representation and collaboration among labor, capital, management, and the community
Ideal for readers interested in the human side of industrial change, policy makers, and anyone seeking a practical theory of how industry can work for all involved.