Abstract
The previous analysis suggested that under certain circumstances trade unions possess the ability to increase the wages paid to organised workers relative to those of the unorganised and also to increase the general level of money wages. Little has been said about the movement of wages and salaries compared with changes in other types of income. The behaviour of real wages over a long period depends upon the growth of real income per head and upon the distribution of total income. The present chapter concentrates upon the distribution of income between labour (i.e. the human resources used in production) and property;1 in any economy this is determined by the interaction between technical conditions and social relationships.
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