Labor-Making Machinery argues that labor-saving machines expand employment and raise living standards, not destroy them.
This nonfiction work analyzes the history and economics of machinery in the modern economy. It uses examples from printing, knitting, farming, and mining to show how new tools can shift work rather than wipe it out, and it addresses common myths about displacement and unemployment. The discussion also looks at immigration, wages, and trade policy to explain how industry, workers, and communities fit together in a growing, changing economy.
- Discover how invention can extend the range of jobs, not just cut positions.
- See wage trends, employment patterns, and productivity across industries.
- Understand debates on tariffs, free trade, and the costs and benefits of protection.
- Get a historical perspective on farm size, manufacturing, and the shift from handcraft to machine work.
Ideal for readers of economic history and policy debates who want a clear, fact-based defense of labor and production in the machine era.