Tuesday, 16 October 2007

The Long Depression and Labour Issues.

The Long Depression of course began before the collapse of the Bank of Glasgow in 1878. Virtually all of the available land in the South was now occupied by run holders. Sheer greed meant that most runholders had overgrazed their land (too many sheep for to long). Continual burn-offs and the rabbit plague had left a lot of land bare and unproductive. There was nowhere left to expand into. The drop in world wide wool prices hit the overstretched mortagages of the runholders hard and pushed many to the wall. The drop in prices and the collapse of the rural economy led to the depression.

We've been through this in class but remember the downward spiral...

The Depression took almost 5 years to be felt in the North. Why? Because, the north was less reliant on sheep, and Maori land continued to come onto the market allowing that economy to expand. Eventually the depression did arrive but the advent of refrigeration in the ealry 1880's also helped to aleviate the economic downturn.

Older Historians (Sinclair, Oliver) have described the period as a depression but Belich has called it a stagnation. Technically a depression is a continual series of regression (prices & wages fall).

Another effect was in the area of employment. In the South a lot of money was withdrawn from the sheep stations and needed new investment areas. There was still plenty of wool about and it was cheap. Money was pushed towards processing the wool. Woolen Mills sprang up and were filled with women whose wages and conditions were kept down.

Eventually Reverend Waddell gave his sermon on the 'Sin of Cheapness' and the Sweating Commision was created in the wake of public outrage that Sweating had followed them to this 'Better Britain'. This possibility struck a raw nerve in the minds of settlers whose aspirations did not include the poverty and its attendant problems. The Royal Commission report denied the presence of sweating although many of the 'necessary conditions' existed in Dunedin and other southern towns. The Tailoresses Union was widely supported and soon other Unions appeared to protect workers and to employ collective bargaining as a bargaining tool.

In areas where Unions had similar interests they grouped together, the Maritime Unions - Wharfies, Seamen (stop laughing Rowan) and Railway workers had common interests (employers) and in 1889 chose to join their equivalent Australian Unions in a strike. They lost.

However it awoke a underlying class conciousness and political awareness in settlers especially those who had redently acquired the vote. Having a say in Government gave many people the belief that their MP's should actually represent them.

It was this that led to the election of the Liberals.

8 comments:

  1. Hi there

    Very interesting. I have a question. What is a "runholder" oder "run holder"?
    Regards Markus

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  2. Hi Markus,

    a Run Holder was the owner of a large sheep farm - sometimes called a Sheep Station or Sheep Run. These were very large affairs sometimes being thousands of acres in size, consequently the sheep were given the 'run' of the largely unfenced land.

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  3. "too many sheep for to long"?

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  4. Interesting are you commenting on my use of too and to or what this means?

    As to what it means, overgrazing occurred when a runholder put the pasture (grass) under pressure by keeping more sheep on it than it could support. If the grass could not recover the sheep ran out of food and starved... or lost condition meaning the wool and meat production went down.

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  5. HI there,

    I was interested how the depression came to an end? How did it stop and when? Thanks

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  6. Hi,
    this may be a bery stupid question but what is "sweating"? are they referring to the creation of a working class???

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  7. Today 'sweating' has become synonomous with 'swaetshops'... it effectively means the same to day as it did then. Workers are confined to small overcrowded work shops usually for a small wage... they have few rights and little chance of improving their lot.

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  8. I had been searching for why there were so many bankruptcies in the family in these years and this explains things..Thanks

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