Essay On The Unemployment Problems
There is no need to stress the serious sufferings of men and families who are out of work for long periods of time -- lack of food, decent housing, health, and all the pleasures of life; nor the injury a country as a whole suffers when so large a part of its population is idle and is a burden on the rest. Let us glance at the different ways in which the problem is being tackled.
At one time emigration was the chief remedy. People who could not get work at home were helped to emigrate to the Colonies, and went across the seas to people Australia, New Zealand and Canada. But emigration on any large scale to these countries is, no longer possible, as they have big populations of their own. Either work or support has now to be found for the wordless at home.
Private charity, administered by philanthropic societies, has done much to relieve the distress of families out of work by supplying them with money and food. But the problem is too big a one for private effort to deal with adequately.
So the State has had to step in; and to-day it supports families who are out of work on what is called the -dole". The unemployed can now claim a certain allowance out of State funds, so long as they are genuinely out-of-work. This is sufficient to secure to them food and housing, and medical attention in time of sickness. This has saved thousands from starvation; but it has its disadvantages.
Living on the dole in idleness is not good for the character of any man. The honest workman feels degraded at Having to live on charity, when all he wants is to earn an honest living by honest toil. And the effect on others is to make them idle and work¬shy, and unwilling to take work even when they can get it. So the problem is not solved, but only alleviated.
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