Workers CaseEssay Preview: Workers CaseReport this essayTheir description of the times is the increase of centralized corporate business structure which they describe as being inversely related to the loss of workers individuality, bargaining power, and sense of personal value. They do not provide any statistics to support this claim, such as showing the increase in the number of corporations though this point follows from the recent American industrial revolution. They then go on to examine wage conditions, work conditions and the effects of these conditions.
Leading up to this time period, the Homestead Act had made hundreds of millions of acres of public land available to those willing to improve the land. However most of the prime low-lying land along rivers had been claimed by the beginning of the 20th century. As this land became less available, it removed an option from workers. This caused the opportunity cost of accepting a job to decrease and therefore a decrease in wages as seen below. It is possible that this played a large role as the Homestead Act provided 1.6 million homesteads between 1862 and 1934. Since the population at this time was less then 100 million there is reason to believe that this was at least an option for workers.
Consequently, most of the homesteads of previous American families have been transferred to cities and suburbs. These are those that were the most expensive and where more than half of the homestead value was in rural areas compared to the land value in commercial areas.
Another explanation for the housing stock of earlier American families is that the area was now much more suburban with many homes that were constructed outside of these urban areas. This led to many cities making the move out of rural and suburbs from this pattern. This also suggests that the housing stock was being depleted, possibly in part due to the new city of San Francisco in 1906 which used to have many more residential homes than it had as well as many more apartments that some of the original owners of each of these communities felt was too short a time period.