A History of American Economic LifeCrofts, 1946 - 810 páginas |
Dentro del libro
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Página 676
... employers , and after the war employers , slightly altering the conception , promoted com- pany unions wholesale . At their height in 1928 nearly four hundred com- panies had plans covering over a million and a half workers . Most of ...
... employers , and after the war employers , slightly altering the conception , promoted com- pany unions wholesale . At their height in 1928 nearly four hundred com- panies had plans covering over a million and a half workers . Most of ...
Página 723
... employers had to pay 10 per cent of the Federal tax to the Federal government and employers in states where there was no unemployment insurance paid the whole sum . By July , 1937 , all the states , the District of Columbia , Alaska ...
... employers had to pay 10 per cent of the Federal tax to the Federal government and employers in states where there was no unemployment insurance paid the whole sum . By July , 1937 , all the states , the District of Columbia , Alaska ...
Página 728
... Employers could divide and rule . A series of strikes to compel recognition of the unions followed . The ad- ministration responded by the creation first of the National Labor Board and later of the National Labor Relations Board ...
... Employers could divide and rule . A series of strikes to compel recognition of the unions followed . The ad- ministration responded by the creation first of the National Labor Board and later of the National Labor Relations Board ...
Contenido
THE IMPERIAL FRONTIER | 3 |
PRODUCTION IN THE BRITISH COLONIES | 40 |
THE DOMAIN OF COLONIAL COMMERCE | 92 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
acres agricultural American Atlantic banks Britain British Canal capital cent century coal colonies commerce commodities Company competition construction coöperative corn corporations cotton Court crop decade East economic employers England English enterprises Erie Erie Canal established Europe European exports factory farm farmers Federal foreign fur trade Homestead Act immigration important increased industrial revolution industry investment iron islands J. P. Morgan Knights of Labor labor Lake land later legislation loans machine machinery manufacturing Massachusetts ment mercantilist merchant methods mills Mississippi North northern Ohio operations organization Pacific Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Railroad plantations planter ports production profits purchase putting-out system railroads rates region revolution River roads secured Sherman Anti-Trust Act ship slaves soil sold South South Carolina southern steel sugar tion tobacco trade traffic transportation unions United vessels Virginia wages water frame West western wheat workers York