Political and Social Issues of Industrialisation
- Created by: book.of.wisdom
- Created on: 25-06-20 10:49
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- Political and Social Issues of Industrialisation
- Social
- It bred the new middle class and urban workers
- Middle class
- Were able to influence local decisions however before 1905 had no voice in central government
- The new middle class had no voice in central government and so fostered many revolutionaries
- Professionals like bankers and doctors in great demand
- Growing middle class found home in councils of Zemstva
- Were able to influence local decisions however before 1905 had no voice in central government
- Urban workers
- 1900: 2 million factory workers. 1913: 6 million workers
- Women were 1/3 workforce by 1914, but paid less than half average wage
- Women comprised about a fifth of the workforce and were amongst the lowest paid with no pensions and they suffered from premature decrepitude.
- Women were 1/3 workforce by 1914, but paid less than half average wage
- 1914: 3/4 of people in St. Petersburg were peasant by birth
- The facilities were barely adequate as were cramped with low sanitation
- They lived in barracks were the bosses could monitor them with little privacy
- St. Petersburg: 40% of houses had no running water or sewage system
- 1908-09: 30,000 died of cholera
- 1904: St. Petersburg had average of 16 people in apartment
- Rents were high, often half of workers wage
- St. Petersburg: 40% of houses had no running water or sewage system
- 1900-08: Industrial depression, wages didn't keep up with inflation
- Some feared if labour costs rose, foreign investors and factory owners would withdraw
- Development of large working class was gravest mistake
- Overthrew regime 1917
- 1900: 2 million factory workers. 1913: 6 million workers
- Middle class
- Shanty towns were set up to accomodate the influx of migrant
workers into cities, where workers lived in 'appalling and overcrowded
conditions' John Morison.
- Migrant workers tended to be young and literate so their
grievances were voiced through strike action
- e.g. at the large scale strike of the St. Petersburg textile workers in 1896.
- Migrant workers tended to be young and literate so their
grievances were voiced through strike action
- Diseases flourished and work was unrelenting with long hours, low
wages and harsh discipline, reminding workers of the days of serfdom
- Town authorities faced 'large numbers of rootless and disaffected
workers who had had their expectations of a better life raised
- only to
be dashed by harsh economic realities' Lynch
- The regular presence on the streets of thousands of unemployed and
embittered workers
- played an important part in the growth of serious social unrest in Russia between 1900 and 1917
- The regular presence on the streets of thousands of unemployed and
embittered workers
- only to
be dashed by harsh economic realities' Lynch
- Industrial workers did not gain from the industrial and financial expansion
- The absence of effective trade unions and lack of legal protection left the workforce at the mercy of the employers
- Indirect taxes rose 450% and inflation rose by 40% whilst the
average industrial wage only rose from 245 roubles to 265 roubles
- making workers dissatisfied and reducing their purchasing power
- Town authorities faced 'large numbers of rootless and disaffected
workers who had had their expectations of a better life raised
- In 1914 about four-fifths of the population were still peasants
which would seem to discredit any claim that there had been significant
industrial development
- 20-30% of Russia's grain was exported whilst peasants in the countryside suffered famine
- The argicultural sector squeezed by the increase in taxation to pay for industrial development
- The aim was to bolster the Tsarist regime so industrialisation was
only successful in enriching a few people at the top
- some peasants were even worse off than before
- 20-30% of Russia's grain was exported whilst peasants in the countryside suffered famine
- Random
- Led to social tensions and labour unrest that periodically threatened to undermine to autocracy
- Railways facilitated the spread of news and ideas, not all supportive to the Tsarist regime
- Rapid population growth in towns was not organised or supervised and led to acute overcrowding
- Putting the rouble on the gold standard kept it at a high value which, together with the tarriff policy, resulting in scarce goods and high costs within Russia so the poor suffered, increasing discontent
- Led to social tensions and labour unrest that periodically threatened to undermine to autocracy
- It bred the new middle class and urban workers
- Political
- Voting
- Liberals wanted stronger parliaments and wider protection of individual rights
- They also sought a vote for the propertied classes
- They wanted commercial legislation that would favour business growth
- They also sought a vote for the propertied classes
- Liberals wanted stronger parliaments and wider protection of individual rights
- Economic
- increased production and higher demand for raw materials
- exploitation of mineral resources
- population explosion and expanding labor force
- Old ideas about how countries are run - such as absolute monarchies - are questioned by new political ideas
- Middle-class people joined political protests hoping to win new rights against aristocratic monopoly
- Workers increasingly organized on their own despite the fact that new laws banned craft organizations and outlawed unions and strikes
- The sheer intensity of work constrained leisure
- city administrations tried to limit other traditional popular
amusements, ranging from gambling to animal contests to popular festivals
- Leisure of this sort was viewed as unproductive, crude, and—insofar as it massed urban crowds
- dangerous to political order
- Leisure of this sort was viewed as unproductive, crude, and—insofar as it massed urban crowds
- city administrations tried to limit other traditional popular
amusements, ranging from gambling to animal contests to popular festivals
- there was an emerging, vibrant, economic and politically powerful independent class known as merchants
- This group made money by moving goods and services through the economic system of the preindustrial world
- They were an urban class, acquiring charters from nobles that allowed them to incorporate towns
- Many of these urban centers were guaranteed political autonomy and were run by a group of the most successful merchants, known as Burgers
- They were an urban class, acquiring charters from nobles that allowed them to incorporate towns
- This group made money by moving goods and services through the economic system of the preindustrial world
- Voting
- Social
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