Progressive AgeΒ
Railroads important β first great concentrations of wealthΒ
Creation of uniform time zonesΒ
Access to remote marketsΒ
However, the wealth accumulated in very few individualsΒ
As a result, unions popped upΒ
Steel was produced a lot as it was strong β thus no need to constantly main steel & buildings/objects made of steelΒ
Era of SteelΒ
Everything had steel in itΒ
Coal and steam β electricity, oil, gasolineΒ
Electricity β a versatile form of energyΒ
New technologies from electricity:Β
Electric carsΒ
LightsΒ
Homes were litΒ
Middle-class could live farther away from the city β electric carsΒ
They could go out at night β street lightsΒ
Lights = safetyΒ
Alexander Graham Bell β created the telephone in 1886Β
Telephones sped up communications for businessesΒ
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US joined the Gold Standard in the 1870sΒ
Amount of money in circulation was equal to the amount of gold in banksΒ
Therefore, the government canβt just print money all it wantsΒ
However, it does lower the amount of money circulationΒ
Less money to go aroundΒ
Hard for small businesses and those in debt to take out a loanΒ
In circulation β how much physical cash in the US outside of the Fed reserveΒ
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Trust β any large corporation that seemed to wield excessive power (colloquial)Β
Monopolies and oligopolies stifle innovation
There was no need to innovate as they were so powerful and dominated the market β no competition β no innovationΒ
Economy stagnatesΒ
Β Can take control of the market:Β
Bought other small businessesΒ
Coercion, predatory pricing β a couple of tacticsΒ Β
Can set a huge price on their goods β no competitionΒ
Therefore, consumers have to pay moreΒ
Less money in other parts of the economyΒ
John D Rockefeller β oilΒ
Cornelius Vanderbilt β railroadsΒ
Andrew Carnegie β steelΒ
John Pierpont Morgan β finance & bankingΒ
The corporate economy was not only run by the 4 men
Including all who worked for those companiesΒ
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Gustavus Swift invented the assembly lineΒ
Deskilling of laborΒ
One person has one job β knows only how to do that one job β by extension only one skillΒ
Master of one stepΒ
Donβt know the steps before and afterΒ
Therefore, the workers were worth lessΒ
Smaller businesses are hurt y efficient large scale operationsΒ
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Control all aspects of production from beginning to endΒ
Can cut costs and save moneyΒ
Predatory pricing was not yet illegalΒ Β
Merge with competitor companies to gain a market advantageΒ
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More machines β fewer humansΒ
The humans needed to fix and oversee the machinesΒ
Machines were more efficientΒ
More efficiency β cheaper goods β more consumers can buyΒ
Deskilling of labor comes tooΒ
Only need to oversee the machines or know only 1 skillΒ
Increases interchangeability of workersΒ
Economy gets better in the late 1800sΒ
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Study the best way to make thingsΒ
Frederick Taylor β Taylorism
Pioneer of scientific managementΒ Β
Used rules to govern worker behaviorΒ
Timed the workers β more efficiencyΒ
Time card machineΒ
Punched hole and recorded the time when the worker comes in and leavesΒ
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OSHA β occupational safety hazard administrationΒ
Made in 1971Β Β
Workers protections administration in the US governmentΒ
Not there in the Gilded AgeΒ
So many people had to get injured before something was brought up in Congress for workers protectionΒ
Dangerous conditions and there was no regulationsΒ
1 in 20 railroad workers died/disabledΒ
2000 coal miners died per yearΒ
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Childβs income supplemented familyβs incomeΒ
How poorly parents were being paidΒ
Child β not much educationΒ
Louis Han took pictures of children working to show CongressΒ
Educate prosperous Americans about factory life and child laborΒ
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Immigrants were another source for cheap laborΒ
Between the Civil War and WWI β 20+ million people immigrated to the USΒ
75+% of NYC and San Francisco residents had 1 foreign born parentΒ
Immigrants were far more desperate, so they accepted lower wagesΒ
Different languages β hard to organize unionsΒ
If there were an economic downturn β immigrants went back to the home countryΒ
Department stores popped upΒ
1 place where different shops rent part of the space and sell their stuff thereΒ
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Blue Collar and White Collar workersΒ
Blue Collar β labor, using your body to workΒ
White Collar β use your brain to workΒ
Middle management and sales positions increasedΒ
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Women worked in secretarial positionsΒ
Women also worked in the department stores:Β
Put makeup on you that type of workΒ
End of the 1800s, 77% of women were stenographersΒ
Women were skilled laborersΒ
Women got advantage through labor saving devicesΒ
Canned food β can use whenever convenientΒ
Cans were good at preserving foodΒ
VacuumsΒ
Sewing machinesΒ
Therefore, women got extra timeΒ
Had a social life, could get a job as a resultΒ
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