ITERNATIONAL LABOUR OFFICE GENEVA — Studies and Reports Series.K No. 5 February 192-1. The Eight Hour Day in Agriculture before the French Chamber of Deputies. A number of documents have already been published relative to the regulation of agricultural labour, a question which has been discussed at great length in the Press of different countries. The object of this series is to malee known the various points of view in the matter. The French Press has made many references to a report by M. Mercier, Deputy, proposing the rejection of a Socialist Bill for the introduction of the eight hour day in agriculture. Below are given the texts of the bill and of the report. I. BILL for the Regulation of the Hours of Labour in Agriculture, presented by : MM. Chaussy, Compère-Morel, etc. (Here follow the names of the whole Socialist group in the Chamber). 1 PREAMBLE Gentlemen, The question of agricultural labour has a particular interest for deliberative assemblies. There are -many complaints in agricultural circles that immediately after the war, to which agricultural workers paid such a heavy tribute, and at the moment when agriculture lacks labour, many workers arc leaving the fields to go to the towns. 1 Documents parlementaires. Chambre — 1920. —Appendix 687. — 2 — I t is well briefly to describe the reasons for this, in order to consider remedies. The first cause of migration is that the wages of agricultural workers are very low and barely make life possible. On the other hand, the accommodation of farm servants leaves much to be desired; many of them sleep in byres and stables, breathing the poisonous odour of the animals' litter. Further, the social legislation which benefits the workers of industry and commerce are unknown for them. In vain they demand the laws on trades councils, on hygienic sleeping accommodation in farms, on industrial accidents, passed by the Chamber in 1915, but still waiting for adoption by the Senate. Finally, when in 1848, 1890. and 1919 the law intervened to regulate t h e . hours of labour in industry and commerce, agricultural workers did not enjoy the same advantages. Thus, in certain districts where farming is on a large scale, labourers Avork twelve and fourteen hours per day. More and more agriculture is being industrialized; it will have to be further industrialized to allow the earth to give its maximum yield. We see to-day a mechanic driving a tractor compelled to work twelve hours a day, while in the neighbouring factory a worker of the same trade has his day limited to eight hours. I t is for these reasons that the agricultural labourers leave the fields to go to the factory or public services, where they will have better conditions of life. It is thus urgently necessa,ry to regu.la.te the working day of agricultural' labourers, and not to leave them as outcasts of the working classes. I t was with this object that at the request of the central workers' organizations, the delegates of the workers' federations in agriculture, horticulture, vine-growing, wood cutting, hoop making and resin-cupping met the delegates of the great agricultural, horticultural and vinegrowing associations at the Ministry of Agriculture on July 30, 1919. The Commissions on Agriculture of the Senate and of the Chamber of Deputies were represented at this meeting. After discussion, the text of the bill which Ave have the honour to submit to you was adopted. This scheme does not propose a rigid regulation of the hours of labour; on the contrary, it can be adapted to different " districts and different forms'of cultivation. • Its object is to abolish excessÌATely long Avorking days, Avhich prevent agricultural Avorkers enjoying any family life. • It cannot in any way injure production, but will on the contrary encourage OAvners to leave the old routine of the past and to modernise their equipment. Thanks to the development of machinery in agricolture, the produce of the earth will be much increased. — 3 — The workers will see their lot improved, their position becoming equal to that of the town workers, and they will remain on the land. Consequently, gentlemen, we have the honour to lay on the table of the Chamber the following bill : BILL § I. — In agricultural, horticultural and vinegrowing undertakings, or in their subsidiary branches, of whatever kind, whether public or private, secular or ecclesiastical, even if they are of an educational or philanthropic nature, the effective hours of work for manual and non-manual workers of either sex and all ages shall not exceed eight hours per day, forty-eight hours per week, or an equivalent limit calculated on an annual basis of 2496 hours, always provided that the working day shall never exceed ten effective hours, whatever the season. § II. — The period within which and the conditions under which the foregoing paragraph is to become operative shall be fixed by administrative regulations, according to district and form of cultivation, these districts to be established on the publication of the Act. These regulations shall be made either officially, or at the request of one or more of the employers' or workers' organisations concerned, whether national or regional. In either case, the employers' and workers' organisations shall be consulted. These regulations shall refer to agreements made between the employers' or workers' organisations concerned, whether national or regional, where such exist. The revision of a' regulation shall be compulsory, if the time limits for action and the conditions laid down therein are contrary to the stipulations of international conventions on the subject. § III. — Administrative regulations shall further determine : 1. The distribution of the hours of work, so as to allow a rest of one day in seven, as Avell as on Saturday afternoon, or some other equivalent arrangement. 2. The time-limits within which the length of day at present in force in agriculture or the industrial category under consideration shall be reduced by one or more stages to the limits fixed in § 1, 3. Temporary exemptions which may be granted in order to deal with exceptional press of work, national emergencies, or accidents, actual or impending. — i — à. The conditions in which, for certain classes of workers Avhose work only requires that- they should be on watch (e. g. shepherds, cowherds), permanent exemptions may be allowed. 5. Methods of regulating hours of work and rest periods and the duration of actual work, as well as the procedure by which exemptions shall be granted or utilised. § IV. — The reduction of the hours of labour shall in no case be a valid ground for the reduction of wages. § V. — Collective agreements actually in force shall be abrogated in every district and for every industrial category as from the application of administrative regulations to the said industry or industrial category in the district concerned § VI. — This Act shall apply to Algeria and the Colonies. II REPORT presented by Mr. Paul Mercier, deputy, on behalf of the commission on agriculture charged with the examination of the Bill, proposed by Mr. Chaussy and some of his colleagues, for the regulation of the hours of labour in agriculture. % Gentlemen, a number of deputies belonging to the Socialist party have, during the present session, proposed a Bill for the regulation of the hours of labour in agriculture. This Bill, which was introduced by Messrs. Chaussy, Compère-Morel, and Albert Thomas as chief signatories, was referred to the commission on agriculture, which has instructed me to present to you a report on the matter. The vital clause in the Bill is as follows : "The effective hours of work for manual and; non-manual workers of either sex and all ages shall not exceed eight hours per day, forty-eight hours per week, or an equivalent limit calculated on an annual basis of 2,496 hours, always provided that the working day shall never exceed ten effective hours, whatever the season. " To begin with, it appears that of thè four limits proposed, among the first three of which choice is free, only the annual and daily maxima are of real importance. 2 Documents parlementaires. of July 21, 1920. — Chambre — Annexe N° 1323. Sitting But before entering on an analysis of the reasons advanced in support of the Bill, it is important to survey the history of the question. Subsequent discussion cannot but be more clearly defined thereby. According to Mr. Manger, deputy, now Senator, "who took an important part in the discussions on the general eight hour question, the agricultural labourers have since 1890 or 1891 sought means of obtaining the benefits of the legislation -applied to workers in industry, from which they are generally excluded. The eight-hour day has figured for thirty years in the programme of working class demands. I t was, nevertheless, only in 1905, at the agricultural congress of la Guerche, that the same demand was for the first time formulated on behalf of workers on the land. In the course of the extraordinary session of Parliament in 1910, Edouard Vaillant, Albert Poulain, Albert Thomas and others of their colleagues introduced a Bill with the object of establishing an eight-hour day and a minimum wage. The first clause, though very comprehensive, was nevertheless far from taking into account agricultural labourers in general. It only touched large-scale and industrial or intensive farming. This omission, of great significance in a bill of a very general character, is clearly explained by the preamble of the Bill. The first promoters of the short working day sought support almost exclusively in reasons of individual and social hygiene. These same reasons were advanced in the course of the discussion in the Chamber on the eight-hour day in April, 1919. Mr. Pottevin recalled on this occasion, that in 1903 one of the men most justly famed throughout the world as an authority on tuberculosis, Doctor Grancher, said : " What shall we doctors do to cure or try to cure the worker who has developed tuberculosis ? We shall simply give him what he has hitherto lacked : air, nourishment,. rest. " Why not give him these beforehand, if such a thing is possible ? And it is possible, since England has done it, and by doing so has halved her infant mortality. " Is not the eight-hour day under consideration in Parliament ? Let our legislators pass it; it will contribute enormously to the improvement of the condition of the workers and to the battle with tuberculosis. " " In these words ", adds Mr. Pottevin, " there was no thought of opportunism. I t was only a question of conscience and scientific truth. " It was the same scientific argument which Edouard Vaillant developed in the preamble of the Eight-Hour Bill in 1910. " Work should be carried on," it was therein stated, "in a healthy environment and at a healthy trade; it should — 6 — be made normal and human by guarantees which take into account not merely physical accident, , but also more particularly the individual and collective limits which protect the working classes from fatigue and exhaustion, according to age, sex, strength, the nature of the occupation, technical education and experience. " To avoid fatigue, there is a physiological limit to the muscular and mental energy which are always combined in any mechanical work, though in varying proportions, thus a limit to the effort of action and attention, and to the intervals between the renewals of it, which, if they are too short, make impossible the nervous relaxation and partial repair after each muscular contraction which allows the continuance of work for a certain length of time. Work can only exceed these limits of duration and intensity at great risk to the worker ". ' The argument of Edouard Vaillant rests entirely on the idea of industrial production.. He notes particularly that sickness among the workers diminished in proportion as the hours of work were decreased in the factories; it was the same with the number of industrial accidents. It is only by assimilation to industrial occupations that he has included large scale and industrial or intensive farming in his list. As is well known, the movement in favour of the reduction of. the working day to eight hours only began to spread among the European nations after the armistice. Since 1917, Russia and Finland have adopted the measure. The more Western countries did not yield to the same pressure till a year later. In France it was during the session of 1919, on January 28th, that the bill for the application of the eighthour .day and the English week to industry and commerce was introduced by Messrs. Pierre Eenaudel,. Lucien Voilin, Joseph Lauche and Albert Thomas. In this the agricultural labourers are passed over in complete silence. It must be recognized that the authors of the bill advanced purely opportunist arguments which may be summarised as folio Avs :— the reduction of the hours of labour would make it easier to overcome the crisis of unemployment which must result from the cessation of war production and the return of the soldiers to their homes ; on the other hand, France must pass this measure rapidly, in order to have regained equilibrium in her production, necessarily upset by the first application of the shorter day, by the time that international competition commenced to have full play. Neither of these arguments were in any way applicable to workers on the land; unemployment did not appear as a threat in a country deprived by death or disablement of 1,600,000 rural workers. And on the other hand, as no other nation proposed to establish the éight-hour limit in agriculture, the theory of restoring equilibrium to production lost all plausibility. Further, the Bill presented on April 8, 1919, by the Minister of Labour, Mr. Colliard, makes no mention of agricultural workers. The supplementary report of Mr. Justin Godart, secretary to the Commission on Labour, also considers the question from the point of view of industry and commerce. The same arguments as we have just reviewed are to be found there. The author insists, further, on the fact that technical progress in industry is bound up with the introduction of the shorter day. . The opponents of the regulation of labour seem to him possessed by a spirit of routine which wishes to economize in, mechanical improvements. The fundamental argument is that the change from long working days to the eight-hour day has not diminished the product, it has even in many cases increased it. Numerous instances, says the secretary, quoted in many Avorks, demonstrate this. In summarising the more recent history of this fundamental demand, he recalls the attitude adopted with regard to it during the last weeks before the presentation of the report, by the working classes as well as the employers. In conformity with a wish formulated in general terms by the International Trade Union Congress, the national committee of the C. G. T. expresses an opinion which one can hardly doubt refers principally to the hours of labour in industry. " I t is in the improvement of its plant, by increasing its production that French industry should find the means to respond favourably to this demand. For— and this characterises the state of mind of the Trade Union leaders at that time — this reduction in the hours of labour should not result in a diminution in the production which is essential for the needs of the people". The question having been discussed in a commission on which representatives, employers and workers, of the great national industries sat, known as the Commission on International Labour Legislation, the employers' members expressed the opinion that the principle of the eight-hour day ought not to be inserted in the Peace Treaty; contrary to the workers' opinion, it seemed to them that the eight-hour day will involve a reduction of production which they estimated at 50 %. In brief, it appears from this debate that the principal argument advanced in favour of the eight-hour day is improvement in industrial hygiene. Its introduction ought not to involve any decrease in production. The decreased effort demanded of the worker would be compensated by an improvement in machinery. Up till then, the question might be said not to have arisien as far as agricultural workers are concerned. The committee of the C. G. T. did not speak in their name, and the Commission on International Labour Legislation did not include a single representative of them. Mr. Brancher, chief secretary for agricultural labour, and Mr. Hitier, secretary to the agriculturists of France, alone represented the interests of agriculture on the latter body. It was doubtless under their inspiration that the employers' members drew attention to the consequences which the introduction of the eight-hour day in industry Avould have for agriculture; namely, to encourage the exodus to the towns of the rural workers, whose losses in the war actually represent about 55 % of the total losses of France. In short, the eight-hour Act was only framed with a view to .workers in industry and commerce. If the measure was accepted, after a feeble opposition by the employers, it was because the agricultural world had absolutely no concern with it. The application of this same measure to agriculture has only given rise to brief discussion in the course of the debates. Mr. Justin Godart first devotes to it a few passing words in the middle of his report. " The text of the commission," he said, " makes it possible to frame measures according to the necessities of different industries ; leaving aside all arrangements in the month or the year other than the fortyeight hour week, it sets up a system, experience of which will make it possible to achieve legal protection even for agricultural workers." I t was because of the nature of the scheme analysed above, that the Mauger amendment, proposing to insert in article 6 after the words ; '.. .educational or charitable nature ", the phrase " as well as in all branches of forestry, agriculture and vine growing " was not accepted by the Chamber. Nevertheless, it was a first attempt to compare agricultural workers with those in industry. From this moment the arguments which oppose this assimilation appear clearly, so much so, that in the preamble of the present bill, its authors have preferred not to attempt to establish this comparison. It is for entirely new reasons t h a t they demand the reduction of the hours of agricultural labour. We shall examine these shortly. Mr. Mauger, in defending his amendment, was amazed that in the conferences on international labour legislation no reference was made to international legislation on agricultural labour. This might be taken as an indication of a view which refused to confuse, either abroad or in France, two types of question, differing by their very nature, which it was impossible consequently to treat as one. Mr. Mauger refused to admit this distinction. He said that the Chamber ought not to create two categories of workers: it ought to recognize that there is an agricultural proletariat, people who hire out their services in return for wages, and when Mr. Brousse, observing that the seasons and inclemencies of the weather regulate work on the land, he replied that these were variations. From this it was clear how peculiar was — 9 — the nature of a regulation which was to allow for as many variations as nature chose to impose on it, so that production might not be affected. After a short debate, the amendment was rejected, but not before the Minister of Labour had made the following statement : " The Government undertakes to consider the question in the direction which has been indicated (namely, the legal protection of agricultural workers) and to introduce a bill, on which the Commission on Labour will, I am convinced, report as soon as possible ". • From the whole of this discussion it is important to remember this also : it was generally recognized that the admitted inadequacy of working class legislation as far as workers on the land are concerned is due to the inadequacy of their trade-union organization. " In the agricultural world there has not been preparation for legislation by corporate work ", as Mr. de Monzie pointed out. In other words, has the shorter working day yet been the subject of a general claim by the agrarian proletariat ? Thus the Mauger Amendment was framed without' any formally expressed desire even of an inconsiderable majority of rural workers. At this point the following conclusion must be drawn : if the improvement of the condition of these workers is necessary, there can be no question of applying to them a limitation of hours of labour which they themselves would not desire and which would cause them more inconvenience than advantage. Here is the new argument propounded by the authors of the bill which is being discussed to-day and which Mr. Emile Dumas has already indicated ; the regulation of labour is necessary to counteract the depopulation of the rural districts. The contrast is too great between the long working day on the land and the eight-hour day already in force in the towns. Thus the principle has changed : the eight hour Act was founded on the necessity for maintaining industrial hygiene. It should be extended to the rural districts so that it may cease to be a cause of attraction to urban centres. But this Act was also a condition of the maintenance of production. This is a consideration which must not be forgotten. Thus two questions arise. Will the application of the eight-hour day to agriculture keep rural dwellers on the land ? Will it allow the maintenance of agricultural production 1 The Act of April 23rd, 1919, having been passed by Parliament, it remained to study the regulation of labour in agriculture. With this end in view a Commission was set up at the Ministry of Agriculture by order of June 10, 1919. I t met on July 31st. Associations were there represented, both on the employers' and employees' side, in agriculture, vineculture, horticulture and forestry. Three questions were proposed by the Minister of Agriculture for the consideration of the Commission :— — 10 — 1. Is there an urgent necessity for limiting immediately the hours« of work in agriculture ? 2. Ought this limitation and the resultant regulation to be undertaken in Trance before similar measures have been taken abroad ? 3. Having in view the essentially varied character of agricultural undertakings, is it possible to set up precise regulations, or should action be limited to general measures, which administrative regulations will adapt to particular cases? Mr. Mauger, recalling the conditions in which his amendment to the Act of August 23 had been rejected, put the question in these terms : "Agricultural wage-earners cannot continue to be excluded from the law, the principle of which is : eight hours' work, eight hours' family life, eight hours' rest ". He recognized, moreover, that compromises must be studied. Whatever they might be, it was still clear that any movement in favour of the eight-hour day has in view the division of the day into three equal parts. It would be seen that where the measure has been applied, it has only been very slightly evaded. What is now under consideration is a day's work lasting from dawn till dark. The discussions of the commission consisted mainly in an exchange of divergent opinions expressed by the employers' and workers' delegates, as to the possibility of regulating agricultural labour, some declaring that the shortage of labour makes limitation of the working day more than ever inopportune, others maintaining that it is possible to establish it, on the example of Germany in particular, some, again, insisting on the peculiar nature of work on the land, in no way comparable to that in the factory. The use of machinery. itself does not carry with it to the land the character of absolute continuity, peculiar to the factory, from which industrial fatigue arises. The efforts of the rural worker are always intermittent. The suggestion of an annual limitation of 2496 hours having been made, the question arose whether in fact the workers dò complete a total exceeding this maximum. After a general discussion, the vote on the questions propounded was negative as to the first two, viz, the urgency of limitation and the possibility of a uniform regulation for the whole of France. The commission accepted, on the other hand, the idea of flexible regulation and of regional application adapted to the conditions of each agricultural district, each type of cultivation, and each category of agricultural workers. At the end of the sitting the workers' delegates handed to the president of the commission a scheme for the application of the eight-hour day; it is this scheme that the authors of the present bill have adopted. The commission noted the deposit of this scheme in view of a further study to be undertaken by the Ministry. — 11 — T H E P R O P O S E D B I L L AND T B A D E U N I O N OPINIONS. We thus come to the proposed bill which is the subject of this report. We should here analyse the preamble wihch supports it. Later we shall on the one hand observe the welcome which it has received from agricultural workers' organisations and, on the other, study the general programme to which it belongs. I t is, in fact, a question of an entire agrarian programme. Its partisans invite us, by the publicity they give this, to give it a place in the present summary. The proposed bill may be summarised as follows : Limitation of the hours of labour to 8 per day, 48 per week, or an equivalent limitation calculated on an annual basis' of 2,496 hours. Maximum working day fixed at 10 hours. Determination of the preceding conditions by administrative regulations according to district and type of cultivation ; the districts will be established as from the publication of the law (though it is not stated how). Introduction of the English weekly rest. Determination by administrative regulation of variations, whether temporary in the different cases of force majeure, or permanent as regards certain classes of workers. Establishment by the same method of measures of control. The authors of the bill have drawn their principal argument from the ' rural exodus. This can only be remedied by improving the conditions of the worker's life; the comparison which he makes between his lot and that of the town worker, protected by important social legislation, only obliged to work eight hours, assured of a high wage, enjoying a more comfortable and easy life, this comparison is far too eloquent. The agricultural worker in effect is said to be badly paid, badly housed, in no way protected, and forced to work long hours. There is some truth in this picture. The leading figures of the agricultural world are the first to recognise this and to seek means to improve the workers' lot. This grave question was the subject of detailed reports by Messrs. Hitier and Anglade at the Congress of Tours. To be able to judge of this problem in itself, it is necessary to have an exact account of the actual conditions of lif e of the rural worker in the different districts of Prance. The National Federation of Agricultural Associations is at this moment commencing an enquiry on this subject, an enquiry intended for presentation for the. consideration of the international conference on agricultural labour which will meet at Geneva during 1921. One may say that it is only there that the question will be sufficiently elucidated and that it will be possible to arrive at decisions with full knowledge of the case. — 12 — We will consider further, after having reviewed legislation in various foreign countries, whether it is opportune for France to forestall the resolutions which will be passed at Geneva by agreement b.etween the qualified representatives of the countries interested. The question having been more fully studied between now and then, it will be- less difficult to ascertain to what extent the limitation of the hours of labour will be of a kind to keep rural workers on the land. The absence of any trade union organisation among the majority of these workers makes it hardly possible to know their opinion on this point. I t is nevertheless probable that they do not consider the length of the working day as one of the reasons for abandoning rural life. If on this point one may believe Mr. Vandervelde, who has studied the question of the rural exodus in a work with manifold references, the abandonment of the rural district is in no way due to psychological causes, — the desire for change, a taste for and interest in amusement, the attraction of an easier life, — so much as to economic causes. It is the impossibility of existence which drives the peasants from the land. The rural exodus is bound up far less with chance causes, capable of simple remedies, than with a profound alteration in the economic equilibrium of the world. Anyone seeking to check this ought first, therefore, to determine if it is possible for this equilibrium to be modified. Will the depopulation of the land which has followed the agricultural crises in many European countries be checked when, by a decrease of agricultural" productivity, the number of men able to extract a subsistence from the soil is smaller? The argument is of such weight that it cannot have completely escaped the responsible authors of the bill which is before you. If they have neglected it, it is because another consideration has attracted them. The reduction of the hours of labour, together with various benefits granted to rural workers, will not fail, doubtless, to make life easier for them. But it will only do so for a small number. Measures of this kind, when their scope is considered, seen much less likely to hasten the repopulation of our country than to diminish its existing capacity for supporting a population. A population which lives on a given soil is more numerous according as it works harder. The example of Germany before the war is one of the most significant in this respect. What do we know of the opinions of the rural working class on questions which affect them? The first agricultural congress, held at Limoges on April 4th and 5th 1920, expressed itself on this subject. What is represented by the Federation of Landworkers, affiliated to the G. G. T., which held this congress? At Lyons, in September 1919, the four federations united, among which the agricultural trade unions had hitherto been divided, namely :— — 13 — 1. The Horticultural and Agricultural Federation of France and the colonies, including the workers in market gardens, gardens, horticulture and large scale farming, more especially in the departments of Seine, Seine-et-Oise and Seineet-Marne. 2. The Federation of Woodmen, including in the central departments (Cher, Nièvre, Yonne, etc), the woodcutters' labourers who work in the forests in the winter and in the fields in the summer. 3. The Federation of Agricultural Workers of the South, including more particularly the vinedressers' labourers of the South of France (Hérault, Aude, Pyrénées-Orientales, Gard and the Arrondissement of Aries); 4. The General Union of Vinedressers of the Marne. It is estimated that the Federation of Land workers now comprises 30,000 members. What is the proportion of the different categories of rural workers included in its organisation 1 The exact figures are not known. We only know — the figures are those published by the C. G. T. — that in 1911 the Agricultural Federation of the South comprised 5,000 members ; on August 1st 1914, the Woodcutters' Federation had about 4,000 adherents ; at the same date the Marne vinedressers numbered 1,050. As for the Horticultural Federation, it had then fallen to the modest figure of 350 supporters. What, however, were the views expressed by the Congress of last April as far as the labour problem is concerned ? The phenomenon of the rural exodus having been considered, the congress demanded, not to mention various other measures :— a) Wages identical with those which are paid in industry and commerce and which are in constant relation to the needs and exigencies of life ; b) The advantages of all social laws by which industrial workers at present benefit ; c) The regulation of the hours of labour and the fixing of the working day at eight hours. This passage from the report made by the secretary, on the rural exodus in different European countries, clearly marks the character of the phenomenon ; in proportion as the rural districts of these countries grow empty and labour scarce, agricultural employers improve their methods of cultivation, perfect their machinery and obtain a higher yield. By the development of mechanical cultivation and by the use of chemical manures — in Germany three times as much chemical manure is used as in France — it will be quite as easy for us to produce twice as much from the soil as at present. — 14 — A diminution in the supply of labour is accompanied by improvement in machinery. But has this improvement in its turn the effect of requiring the presence in the fields of a larger number, of workers ? If the contrary is true ; if in proportion as machines multiply, fewer men are needed on the land, one must conclude that any diminution in the yield obtained by the traditional processes of cultivation, making farming more difficult, leads to technical progress and reduces the demand for labour : thus the position of the rural worker becomes more difficult and the exodus is accentuated. Such has always been, in effect, the process of development. If we concern ourselves solely with the problem, which every day becomes more pressing, of the depopulation of the rural districts, a solution must be sought in an entirely different direction. Thus the resolutions passed by" the Congress of Limoges, as well as the Socialist agrarian programme, tend towards a very different-object : it is a question of a complete transformation of the agrarian system of France, attacking, more or less directly, individual property. One can explain it in this way, that the question of production, on which depends the lot of the peasant masses, is at the.back of all the problems which Avere considered by the Federation of Landworkers. The resolution passed on the subject of the eight hour day is as follows : Application of the eight hour-day to agriculture, in general. Couched in general terms, it is explained by the following declarations : "We wish to have the eight hour day. If climatic necessities force us to accept variations, we consider that these should be in the form of a forty-eight hour week, with a maximum day of ten hours. " "A new understanding of their interests and duties should lead agricultural workers to acquire social rights corresponding to those of industrial workers. When, in place of interminable days,the peasant comes to know the three eights, he will find means to acquire the technical. and social improvementwhich is necessary for him." It, will be observed that the views of the congress differ, in the modes of application of the eight hour day, from the scheme produced by the workers' delegates to the commission which met in July 1919. Yet these delegates were the same and represented the same organisations of rural workers. This difference explains to us the disagreement which now appears between the Federation of Landworkers and the authors of the bill which we are considering. This bill is identical in its text with the scheme mentioned above. This divergence of views corresponds to the positions which are adopted in their agrarian policy by the French Socialist Party on the one side and on the other by the Agricultural Federation attached to the C. G-. T. 1 THE EIGHT HOUR DAY IN AGRICULTURE ABROAD. Agrarian problems have ac'quired remarkable significance in the different European countries in the last few years. They are at the bottom of the Eussian as of the Hungarian revolution. They dominate the entire social problem in Italy. If in. England, Germany and France they are less acute, it is because conditions there are different ; in the first named country the agricultural population only forms 24 % of the total. In Germany and Prance the small holdings counterbalance the large, and the agricultural proletariat is rather scattered. There "can be no question here of drawing a complete picture, but simply of summarizing the ideas which certain people wish to apply to our country, to show what examples have inspired them aud to emphasize the enormous differences which stultify comparison between France and nations which have been and are still disturbed by revolution. First, in order to make matters clearer, let us sketch the conditions by which the hours of labour in rural work have been regulated in some countries of Europe. Only a few have as yet taken legislative steps. The Act passed by the National Assembly of Czechoslovakia, bearing the date December 19th, 1918, declares that the limitation of the. hours of labour applies also to persons regularly employed in agricultural and forestry undertakings, and to persons living outside the family of the owner and receiving a daily, weekly, or monthly wage. In agreement with the parties concerned, the Minister of Social Welfare may allow certain industries, notably transport and agriculture, to make a different arrangement of the working day from that prescribed by the first clause of the Act (eight hours per day and 48 per week), on condition that the total hours of work do not exceed 192 per month. I t is said in another clause that a maximum increase of two hours per day for sixteen weeks per year may be authorized ; the extra hours are paid separately. Auxiliary work, in which is included the care of cattle, is allowed without particular authorization. The staff employed in herding animals is only entitled to twelve hours rest, of which eight are to be devoted to an uninterrupted night's rest. In Germany the agricultural labour code put into force at the end of January, 1919 fixes the length of the working day at an average of eight hours for four months, ten hours for four other months and eleven hours for the remaining 1 The agrarian policy of the Socialist party was the subject of an article recently published by the Bevue politique et parlementaire. ADelemer, 1920. — 16 — four months. All work done beyond these limits must be paid for at an increase of 50% on the wage-scale taken as a basis by the National Insurance Act. The time necessary to reach and return from work is counted in the length- of the actual working day. Neither periods of rest nor time spent in tending or feeding cattle are, however, included in the day's work. Work done on Sundays or holidays is paid on a scale double that set up by the National Insurance code. During the summer, work must be interrupted for at least two hours a day. It should be noted with what prudence Germany sets up legislative limitation of the hours of work, at the same time that the most audacious measures are being introduced in the social sphere. If the number of hours' work per year is totalled for the only two countries which have as yet extended regulation to rural workers^ Czecho-Slovakia gives 2,618 hours, Germany about 2,900, time given to cattle being excluded. I t is in Italy that regulation has been pushed furthest, but it should be noted that here it is the result of a powerful spontaneous agitation of the peasant class. The rural proletariat south of the Alps is known, in fact, to be very highly organised. Italy is and has long been celebrated for her rural strikes. Large holdings predominate still in the greater part of the country, in the rice-grounds of the west and north west of Milan (Novarais, Vereillais, Lonnellina), in the Po plain (Placentin, Parmesan, Ferrarais),' in the Roman Campagna as well as in the whole of South Sicily. Métayage is hardly ever found except in Tuscany and the surrounding districts. In consequence, the work of the fields is almost entirely done by day labourers (braccianti) grouped in a powerful federation of land workers. Since the cessation of hostilities, Italy has been agitated by a violent agrarian movement, breaking out, especially at harvest time, in frequent strikes, which have resulted in several cases in collective labour contracts, by which the eight hour day is sanctioned, almost without variation. I t is admitted in a general 'way that if there is a risk of losing the crop, always provided that there is no agricultural labour available in the commune or the adjacent communes, more than eight hours work may be authorized by agreement between the contracting parties, on condition that they are paid at a higher rate. One might quote as examples of collective contracts those of the Lomallini, dating even from 1909, long before the problem began to arise in industry, of Novarra, Portomaggiore (Ferrara), Vercelli, Padua and Milan. According to the Padua agreement, concluded in December, 1919, the length of the working day is as follows for the different months.^ — 17 — April and October, 8 hours. May, June and July, 10 hours. August and September, 9 hours. March and February, 7 hours. January, November and December, 6 hours. These contracts are characterized in general by two significant points : First, the farm servants are excluded from the benefits of the contract arrangements; second, the trade unions undertake to allow a more extensive use of machinery. Here, in fact, appears the essential difference between Italy and France. Alone among European nations, Italy saw her population increase during the war. Not only was emigration checked, but many emigrants returned to their mother country, either because they had to fulfil their military obligations there or because they were hindered by economic difficulties from finding work in countries where the surplus of Italian labour was usually absorbed. These circumstances have increased the complexity of the social problem. Poor in industry, unable therefore to employ an increasing number of workers, Italy has nothing to support them but the resources of the soil. It followed, therefore, that the greater part of her unemployed energies were directed against the system of landed property. A general movement- appeared in the districts of Rome, Naples and Sicily : this was known as the invasion of the uncultivated land, otherwise the large holdings which were kept in a state of extreme unproductivity. Elsewhere there were strikes, and shorter hours of labour were obtained. But note this : there it was a question solely of finding employment for the largest possible amount of labour. And far from contemplating the general use of machinery as a means of increasing the demand for labour, it was only tolerated so long as it did not produce unemployment. It is hardly necessary to point out how different the situation is in France; instead of a surplus of labour there is a shortage; unemployment, if it appears, is in no way comparable to what it is there; when one speaks here of checking unemployment it is simply a question of the inherent irregularity of work in the fields, where in the winter the workers, few as they are, are partly unoccupied. Finally, while the demand for the eight hour day is general and spontaneous in Italy, it only emanates in France from a small fraction of the rural proletariat placed in peculiar conditions. Account must be taken of these observations to avoid misunderstanding of the scope of the eight hour Act in Italy, which states in its second clause that " in agricultural undertakings the provisions of the present Act apply to the work of day labourers and in general to work paid by wage". — 18 — • Outside the three countries mentioned, there is no legislative regulation in Europe. In Great Britain the Committee on Agricultural Wages decided, it is true, that the maximum number of hours of work which should be paid at the normal rate should be fifty per week in the summer and forty-eight in winter, and that overtime must be paid at a higher rate than that fixed for normal hours. But the British Government has always refused to give agricultural workers as well as sailors the benefit of the provisions of the Eight Hour Bill, which in any case has not yet passed into law. As far as seamen in particular were concerned, while by the law of August 2nd 1919, France gave them the benefit of the eight hour day, England refused to allow the same rule. In a question on which depends in part the economic supremacy of this country, opinion is clearly expressed. Possibly from the congress now being held at Genoa resolutions will emerge favourable to the extension of the eight hour day. Let us, nevertheless, be warned that as such resolutions must be ordinarily submitted, with a*year's grace, for the ratification of the countries represented at the discussion, there is reason to expect stubborn opposition on the part of our ally. Supposing that the eight hour Act should be applied in France to agriculture before the Geneva Conference of 1921, a very similar situation would arise. But while the merchant marine plays a subordinate part in the national economy of France, agriculture holds a predominant place there. This is a sufficient reason for France not to embark on a doubtful project except with great prudence. Eegulation of agricultural labour also exists in a few countries : Australia, Indo-China, Mexico and Ecuador. In certain others the eight hour Act does not apply to farm labour, either because it is not included in the legal definition (Bussia, Poland, Austria, Spain) or because it is explicitly excluded (Finland, Sweden). From the foregoing one may conclude that most states have only legislated for industry and commerce in the question which concerns us, which confirms the general idea that work on thè land is not subject to the same conditions as work in the factory. Where regulation has nevertheless intervened, it usually omits domestic work (herding and tending cattle), and ordinarily implies an annual total - of more than 2,496 hours ; applied in stricter fashion, in Italy especially, it can be explained by peculiar "circumstances. T H E ACTIVE AGRICULTURAL POPULATION. — CONDITIONS OF LIFE. — T H E ACTUAL DURATION OP WORK. In order to be in a position to • calculate exactly the consequences which regulation of the hours of labour would have in agriculture, one must know the actual conditions which — 19 — govern work on the land. It is, unfortunately, difficult to summarise and tabulate them, however roughly, owing to their extreme variability, according to district and cultivation. This variability is recognised by the Socialist Bill itself, since it leaves it to administrative regulation to determine delays and conditions of application of the general measure enacted, according to districts and types of cultivation. It thus appears from the beginning that there is a contradiction in wishing to impose on agriculture a uniform system of labour, which must at once be infinitely diversified, and which doubtless could not be diversified as much as was demanded b>y the very nature of things and the custom of the peasants. The transformation of established and deeply-rooted •customs can hardly be accomplished without the •accompaniment of revolutions, more or less serious. And revolutions are only legitimate — this is our democratic idea — when they arise from the irresistible will of the people. We must be careful not to force them. Are the authors of this proposal under discussion certain that they have behind them the consent of the majority of the country folk whose interests will be affected by such a measure ? And first, how is the rural population distributed ? It is doubtless impossible to know exactly, since up to the present we are ignorant of the significance of this figure of 1,600,000 which represents the losses suffered by agriculture through the war. How many rural employers and workers are there in this total ? ' This can only be partially determined. The 1,600,000 men lost to work on the land are divided as follows :— Killed or missing 1,000,000 Seriously disabled 350,000 Rural workers taken from the country to replace missing urban workers 250,000 I t may be concluded that these 250,000 men are predominantly labourers. It is impossible to distinguish directly between the remaining 1,350,000. We can only arrive at an approximate calculation. The most recent enquiry to which reference must be made for the exact position of rural workers is that instituted by the Ministry of Labour in 1912. By comparing it with the last census of the population in 1911, we can. form some idea of the state of the French rural population before the war. According to the 1911 census, it totalled 8,517,000 persons: — 5,279,000 males and 3,238,000 females. Of this total of 8,517,000, the employers, including managers, numbered 5,219,534, workers, including foremen, 3,297,766. • — 20 — As far as the workers are concerned, the total figure may itself be divided into several categories. There are some discrepancies on this point between the census of 1911, carried out by the Ministry of Labour and Social Welfare, and the enquiry carried out by the Ministry of Agriculture in 1912. The following are the figures as given, by the two sources : Census of Ì911 - Agricultural population according to status : Masters : Owners, tenant-farmers, métayers Gardeners . . • . . 5,119,825 99,639 5,219,464 Workers : Agricultural Day Labourers Farm Servants . . . . Farm Carters . . . . . . * . . . . Gardeners Enquiry of Ministry Agricultural Workers : Labourers with small holdings Labourers without holdings Farm servants 2,403,445 744,937 28,595 115,038 3,292,015 of Agriculture 1912 508,087 537,029 980,656 2,023,782 According to the report made to the Agricultural Congress of 1919 by Messrs. Braucher and Vuigner, the above figure of 2,023,782 is increased to 2,312,357 when completed by indications given elsewhere. The important discrepancies between the two estimates affect the two following categories : 1. Labourers, which the 1911 Census puts at 2,403,445, while the 1912 enquiry estimates only 1,043,116 both for small-holders and non-holders. 2. Farm-servants, which according to. the Census are about 770,000, and according to the enquiry little short of 1,000,000. Under these circumstances it is extremely difficult to give an exact account of the present situation. The rural exodus has taken from the land, since the beginning of the war, 250,000 workers, as we have seen previously. There is reason to believe that t h e category of day labourers, those least connected with the farming processes, has been most affected. . . — 21 — On the other hand, if we refer to the total figure for the active agricultural population in 1911, viz., 8,517,000, Ave find that this number comprised 5,279,000 male persons who were sub-divided into 2,872,935 masters and 2,406,540 workers ; in other words, the number of male workers was then almost equal to that of the masters of the same sex. Thus we may roughly estimate the losses sustained by each category in killed, missing and disabled at one-half of the total. As this total is 1,350,000, we must reckon that about 650,000 agricultural workers have been removed from field work. The proportion of masters to workers would therefore be to-day as follows : Masters : 5,219,464 — 700,000 = 4,519,464. Workers : 3,292,014 — 900,000 = 2,392,015. Is it possible to estimate how far the number of agricultural labourers, properly so-called, has been reduced? To begin with, ák was stated earlier, the rural exodus must have affected this" category almost exclusively. I t seems that the places of farm servants must be filled as soon as they are vacant, and these servants cannot ' fail to be recruited from among the labourers. The figure of 2,405,445- can thus be decreased by 250,000 to 2,153,000. On the other hand, the agricultural labourers were, according to the 1911 census, in a proportion of 5 to 2 to other rural workers. The losses due to the war are therefore divided in this proportion as 464,000 for labourers and 184,000 for other workers, thus : 2,153,000 — 474,000 = 1,699,000 labourers. 889,370 — 184,000 = 705,350 servants. . If we now compare the figures of 1911 with those at which we have arrived, we find that the proportion of masters to workers has noticeably increased. Whereas, in 1911, there were : Masters Workers . . . . . . 5,219,000 3,297,000 there are now : Masters Workers 4,519,000 2,592,000 The proportion has therefore changed from three workers to five masters to one worker to two masters. This shows that the majority of masters, very pronounced even in 1911 r has but been accentuated by the fact of war. Is this a reason for refusing to the country workers the just satisfaction to which they have a right? Certainly not; but it is a sufficient one for examining with even more circumspection a proposal — 22 —• on which only a small minority of the eventual beneficiaries have expressed, an opinion, and which canno^fail on the other • hand to arouse keen opposition from .a majority of those concerned. What are the conditions of life of this population of rural workers, as far as we can know them? We must here distinguish from the beginnning between the different categories of workers. The labourer is essentially the field worker. He hires ' out his labour by the day. He is not necessarily employed for the whole year. Nevertheless, he is generally distinct from the seasonal workers who are employed in gangs under a foreman, and which 'sometimes undertake definite tasks for the farm, e. g., reaping, mowing. These latter do not belong to the local population. They come at the periods of heavy work from other districts and more especially from abroad. ' A labourer, whether a "small holder or not, is a country man. If he is a small holder, the land he owns is not enough to support him, and he is obliged to hire his strength to earn a livelihood. If he has ho holding, he lives in a house. he rents, but escapes the more complete dépendance of the farm servant. The farm servant does the general work of the farm. If single, he usually lives at the farm. When he marries, he receives a separate house, and sometimes a stable for a cow which he may graze on his master's pasture, and a plot of ground which is cultivated with the rest of the farm. This is the system which one would gladly see extended, as the most likely to attach the rural worker to the farm and to wed the man to the land, from which union springs the peasant's deep sense of ownership. Having established these main distinctions, we must fill in the details of the outlines of our picture, which would not be complete unless each district could be described in turn, with the essential characteristics which govern the work carried on there. Unfortunately, documents are not as plentiful at the moment as one could wish. The data are already out of date or sparse and fragmetary. Soon - in a few months - we shall have precise data. In preparation for the International Congress on Agricultural Labour, which will be held at Geneva in 1921, and which will submit recommendations and resolutions for the. approval of the states participating, the National Federation of Agricultural Associations is at this moment instituting enquiries into the present conditions of life of the worker in France. Until this work is complete, we can only make use of the existing documents. The enquiry into agricultural wages,' instituted at the request of the" Ministry of Agriculture in 1911, is. the only complete piece of information. The questions addressed to — 23 — professors of agriculture in the departments bore especially on the following points : .1. Statistics of the different categories of agricultura]; workers, including labourer-proprietors, and an estimate of the number of seasonal workers; 2. Wages. 3. Hours of labour. 4. Conditions of life. 5. The question of the rural exodus. We could find there all the data we need, but how far have things changed since then? .p r ¡- • * . ' ["" As far as statistics of the workers are concerned, it is impossible to obtain anything but the approximate round figures indicated above. The movement of wages is known to us in. its broad outlines : 1. Through the enquiry instituted in 1916 by the Department of Agricultural Instruction, which rectifies the data of the great enquiry of 1912, pursued by the same department on behalf of the Ministry of Agriculture; 2. Through the table of average wages of agricultural workers in 1915 and in 1918-1919, published in the Bulletin of the Ministry of Labour of. March 1919 ; the table summarizes the information given for each department by the prefect. The decree of May 27th 1915, setting up an administrative system in pursuance of the law of July 15th 1914, which extends to forestry the provisions of the law of April 9th 1898 on industrial accidents, set up conditions, in effect, by which the average wage of agricultural workers in each department must be determined. This must be done by the prefect, after consultation with mixed commissions, and an administrative enquiry, in the course of which all useful information was to be brought up to date, from associations of masters and workers, the director of agricultural services and other competent persons. This table provides some extremely brief and fragmentary indications of the hours of labour in vogue in different •departments. On this point we are forced to refer again to the enquiry of 1912, which alone provides complete, if not extensive or detailed, indications. Have the hours of labour changed much since this time? In the opinion of more competent authorities it seems not, if one excepts districts immediately adjacent to the great industrial towns, where the reduction of hours in the factory has reacted to some extent on the country. There the force of events, which ceaselessly exerts its influence on economic problems, and usually succeeds in establishing a certain social equilibrium, made itself felt ; — 24 — and the farmer consented to,reduce the hours of work to the extent necessary to retain the essential supply of labour on his land. Will it not always be so, and is it particularly useful to seek to create by regulation, a state of things which will, establish itself wherever circumstances demand it? When we have examined the consequence of a reduction of hours of labour on the economic system, especially in the rise in price of products and the inevitable increase in the cost of living, we shall be able to balance them against the advantages this measure would have for the rural worker, advantages which the master concedes himself, when necessity forces him to it, and ¿o the extent to which the system of economic competition will allow it. We shall thus be brought to the question, whether the rural worker really demands the regulation of the working day, regardless of conditions of cultivation, which are subject to atmospheric variations. As far as the conditions of life and the causes of the rural exodus are concerned, the information provided by the enquiry of 1912 has not lost all value. The housing question remains as it was before the war, owing'to the fact that all building has been suspended for a long time. The causes of the rural exodus, on the other hand, are psychological as well as economic. They are similar to-day to what they were then. There need be no question of summarizing here the great enquiry of 1912. Anyone can easily consult it. But it seeiiis useful to condense very briefly its essential data as far as the hours of labour are concerned, that being the subject of the present report. "What is the length of the working day, according to the season?" This was one of the questions asked. There is one fairly common rule ; the working day lasts from sunrise to sunset : including rests, its maximum duration during summer reaches 14 or 15 hours. The rests,, during which meals are taken, reduce it to a maximum of actual work of'12 to 13 hours. Note that the proposed Bill submitted to Parliament institutes a daily maximum of ten hours. The maximum of 12 to 13 hours should only be understood to apply to days when the maximum effort is achieved, that is to say, when atmospheric conditions do not hinder full work. I t is quite another question to ascertain the total annual average of hours of work accomplished. This total can only be obtained by empirical calculations and for particular cases. , 25 DEPARTMENT WINTER Ain Aisne Allier. — S e r v a n t s . . „ Labourers. Basses-Alpes Hautes-Alpes . . . . Alpes-Maritimes . . . Ardèchè Ardennes . . . ; . . Aube Aude. —Vine-growing district . . . . Agricultural . . . . Avignon. . . . . . . . Bouches-du-Ehône. . Calvados Cantal Charente Charente-Inférieure Cher Corrèze Corsica Côte-d'Or 8 8-9 (four months) 10 8 7-9 7-8 9 7-8 10 10-12 6-7 — In 12 10 8-11 8-11 11 10 SUMMER 15 10-11% (8 m o n t h s ) 14-15 14-15 11-12 11-12 10 9-10 13 11-12 8 (occasionally more-) 5 — 7 principle, from d a w n to d u s k . 7-8 9-10 — — 8-10 11-12 REMARKS Rests i n c l u d e d . Rests n o t i n c l u d e d . Actual working hours in s u m m e r 12-13. Collective C o n t r a c t s . T e n d e n c y t o reduce' h o u r s of w o r k . Taskmasters work longer. Rests i n c l u d e d . 16-17 10-12 11-14 Sunrise t o sunset ; h o u r a n d a^half's rest d u r i n g h e a v y w o r k . 10 9-10 . 6-8 7 Creuse Côtes-du-Nord.... Dordogne Doubs Drôme Eure Eure-et-Loire . . . . F i n i s t è r e .Gard Haute-Garonne . . . Gers • Gironde Hérault AUTÜMN AND S P R I N G •• • 9-10 11-13 T h e increased u s e of m a c h i n e r y h a s caused a r e d u c t i o n of from 1-1% h o u r s per day. Rests i n c l u d e d . 12-14 10-12 10-11 (Spring) Sunrise t o sunset. R e s t s : winter 1 h o u r , s u m m e r 1 % h o u r s . . T h e work is n o t usually v e r y h e a v y . 11 10 Surince to sunset 8-8% 11 9 10-11 8-10 Sunrise to sunset. 8-10 6-8 8-10 10-12 6-8 10-12 Rests i n c l u d e d . 13-14 7-8 P e r c e p t i b l e decrease in 10-11 7-8 recent y e a r s . 9 10 6-9 68 V i n t a g e , 7-8 h r s . ' — 26 -r- DEPARTMENT AUTUMN WINTER AND S P R I N G Ille-et-Vilaine . Indre . . . . . . . Indre-et-Loire . . . Isère Jura Landes Loire-et-Cher . . . Loire Loire ( H a u t e ) . . . Loire (Inférieure) . Loiret........ Lot L o t - e t - G a r o n n e . '. Lozère Maine-et-Loire. . . Manche Marne. . . . . . . . Marne (Haute). . . SUMMER REMARKS u p t o 16. R e s t s included. H o u r s of w o r k n o w h e r e well arranged. F a r m s e r v a n t s work p r o p o r t i o n a t e l y more. 11-12 9-10 7-8 12-13 8-9 IO-IOV2 8-9 12-14 9-10 , 7-8 10-11 7-8 12 7' (maximum) (minimum) 13 7 (maximum) (minimum) 12-13 10-11 8 10-15 7 10-15 9 10 (spring) 9 11-12 9-10 . 8-9 11 14 9 Sunrise t o sunset. 13' 10 Hi/2 12-14 101/2 10 16-17 Mayenne Meurthe-et-Moselle. Meuse. — L a b o u r e r s „ Servants Morbihan Nièvre . Nord . . Oise. . . • Orne . . Pas-de-Calais Puy-de-Dôme P y r é n é e s (Basses) . E x c l u d i n g 2 !_houTs' rest. Extreme maximum when t h e ; weather necessitates it. 12-13 15 16-17 10 8-9 10 12 . Sunrise to sunset. 8-10 8-10 8I/2-91/2 81/2-9 7i/ 2 -8i/ 2 8-10 (deadseason' 9%-ioy2 9-12 (ordinary work) 8-9 10-12 10-12 Va 11 Vä IOI/2-II 10 '/2 10-15 (heavy season) 11-12 10-11 Pyrénées (Hautes) . Pyrénées-Orientales Haut-Rhin . . . . T w o h o u r s for meals, one h o u r ' s rest i n summer. 6 12 7-9 14 8-12 u p t o 17. A c t u a l work. Sunrise t o sunset. The servants' day is m u c h longer. — 27 — DEPARTMENT Rhône . . . Haute-Saône Saône-et-Loire Sarthe . . . Savoie . . . Haute-Marne Seine . . . . Seine - Inf érieure Seine-et-Marne Seine-et-Oise Deux-Sèvres Somme . Tarn . . Var . . . Vaueluse Vendée Vienne Haute-Vienne Vosges . . '. WINTER AUTUMN AND S P R I N G SUMMER REMARKS 12 14 h o u r s ' a c t u a l w o r k in h e a v y season. 12 h o u r s ' a c t u a l work in s u m m e r . 12 10 11 3 hours' rest. Sunrise to sunset. 12 About 8 hours' actual work, winter a n d summer. 10-12 9-10 u p t o 14 d u r i n g h a r v e s t . 9-10 Including 3 hours' 15 rest. 10-12 8 According t o district. 10-14 7-10 8-10 6-8 R e s t s 2-3 h o u r s Sunrise to sunset. according t o season. 10-14 8-9 H a r v e s t 16-17 10-11 14-15 including r e s t s . 12 14-15 9-10 8-9 Sunrise t o sunset. Sunrise t o sunset. I t will be noted how often in the foregoing table the total number of hours of actual work exceeds 10. But does this mean that the average hours of work, taken over the whole year, are much above this figure ? Short days in winter are found no less frequently than long ones in summer, being ordinarily about 8 hours, and often falling below this. In any case the foregoing table emphasises the extreme irregularity of field work, thus differing most completely from a table of hours of work in a factory. And this is only an average, corresponding but imperfectly to the facts of the case, which could only be realized if one could reckon in the course of a year the distribution of hours of labour for a number of workers in different districts, cultivations and categories of labour. It is. only in this w7ay that the effect of atmospheric conditions on labour can be measured. In order to emphasise the difficulty of applying precise regulation to that which is subject directly to the effects of natural forces, we will quote two instances only. Analysing the causes of the shortage in the crop of 1919, Mr. Henri Hitier points out the grave importance of the bad — 28 — 'weather which prevailed during this year 3. In the" autumn of 1918 sowing was at first carried out under good conditions ; at the end of November continual and general rain interrupted the sowing on all sides in the districts of the Midi, Aquitaine, the South West, and the Centre ; it was said to be impossible to plant wiî'h corn all the land which had been prepared for it, Snow and rain persisted practically throughout the winter iind into the middle of April, so that the March corn could not be sown till very late, with the soil in the worst state of preparation — so much so that many farmers gave it up. Meteorological conditions were no more favourable to the growing of the corn; in March and April heavy crops are assured by working on the cornfields, harrowing, rolling, ploughing and weeding them. This year, however, it was impossible to touch a cornfield, as the soil was sodden. Suddenly on this period of continuous and excessive rain there followed one of drought and east wind. The wet ground dried under the influence of sun and wind; in many cases it became a kind of concrete, in which the roots of the corn found themselves shut up and could not develop ordinarily. " W e know for certain", adds the author, " o f many farms where, from the end of November to April, all work in the fields was suspended; the carters were employed in exercising the horses on the roads to keep them in condition. During bad Aveather one racked.one's brains to find occupation for the staff; one had to keep them for the days when, on the. contrary, work could and must be done as quickly as possible; but while waiting, the general expenses of the farm were increased enormously in a way unknown to the factory, where the yield of the workers' labour is the same whatever the weather ". Such are the conditions of agricultural labour. Supposing regulations to be introduced, will it be impossible, in years when work is interrupted for longer or shorter periods, to get from the worker even this maximum of 2496 hours? In such conditions, the position of the rural worker cannot but grow worse, since his master, who during bad weather bears the cost which he cannot avoid lest he lose his staff, is unable to bear it in good weather unless the worker's yield repays him. We have just seen what a year can be in agriculture — not merely an imaginary year, but one in recent memory. What the system would be under regulation one can imagine from the system occasionally put. into practice during the war. " The agricultural gangs behind the line ", writes M. Emile Guillaurnin in the Information of March 12th, 1919, " have given professionals a fine opportunity for laughter or 3 Bulletin de la Société d'encouragement pour l'industrie September and October, 1919, pp. 257 et seq. nationale, — 29 — wrath. There. triumphed and flourished a strictly regulated system; two spells per day of equal duration, no matter what the weather ". I remember a military farm on the plateau of Pfterhouse, not far from the Swiss frontier, where they were trenching potatoes with horse-hoes in heavy rain, the animals sinking knee-deep in the sodden ground. The crop was' small help to the authorities. In the same district, corn with the ear formed, with blackened thin straw, wilted lamentably, still uncut at ' seed-time. And fodder already cut rotted quietly in the. green of the growing second grass. This fodder had been well cut at the right time on some sunny mornings. But when it was dry in the afternoon, the right time arrived to return to camp and soup. There was an end of it for that day. And the next day it rained, and the following days too, as usual. If elementary common sense had need of support, these examples would have more than confirmed it. Exact rules are incompatible with the work of cultivation. SUMMARY OP FOREGOING ARGUMENTS. GENERAL DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSION. In the course of the foregoing report, Ave have advanced the arguments which naturally come to mind and which prohibit a favourable pronouncement on the bill now before the Chamber for the regulation of the hours of labour on the land. Let us here summarize these arguments. It was shown in the first section of this report, in which the history of the eight hour question was sketched, that the motives supporting the bill have no feature in common with those which formed the principle of the eight hour day in industry. There the fundamental reason, admitted even by certain medical authorities, is its necessity for industrial hygiene. This necessity was not denied at the very moment when the eight hour day was introduced. Its adversaries chiefly emphasized the fact that it was inopportune to enact such a measure at a time when the economic recovery of the country seemed to demand the maximum effort. The bill for the regulation of hours of labour in agriculture is based on entirely different motives. Here it is a question of checking the rural exodus and the depopulation of the rural districts by improving the conditions of the agricultural worker. But if this is so, the question should be considered entirely on its merits, and no assimilation of urban to rural workers should be attempted. The question before us does not deal with humanitarian considerations. There is no reason to safeguard the physical and moral welfare of one class of the French population. The problem is purely one of economics. •— 30 — At this stage a number of points need examination. We have already mentioned them in turn in the course of this xeport, reserving their juxtaposition until now. 1. What is the international situation in this respect ? 2. Will the application of the eight hour day to agriculture keep rural workers on the land 1 3. Will it affect the maintenance of agricultural production? 1. — The International Situation. France is essentially an agricultural country ; her agricultural prosperity is for her the fundamental element of her economic life. Is she encouraged by the example of foreign countries to impose a regulation of the working day í Is there urgent need for her to legislate on this matter 1 We have passed in review the countries which have laws on the subject. In Europe there are three : Czecho-Slovakia, Germany, and, practically, Italy. In Germany the limitation is very wide as regards length of day; in Czecho-Slovakia the supplementary hours raise the total to a higher figure than that provided for in France, and the work done by the farm servants (care of cattle) is not included; in Italy, the situation is radically different. Is it urgent for France to legislate % The question will be discussed in all its bearings at the International Congress at Geneva in 1921. If resolutions ensue, all the nations will have to declare their intentions at the same time. If it were a question of pure humanity, one might maintain that the traditional generosity of France compels her to set the example. I t is not s.o. There is no suggestion here of any but an economic problem. The fascination which the towns have for the country workers proves how easily they can withdraw from the conditions, of their country life as soon as they wish. We can, therefore, consider the problem entirely dispassionately and withoiit introducing sentimental considerations, which rival nations in competition with France are not wont to advance in discussion of facts which affect them. France has no reason for not imitating the example which England has just set her over the application of the eight hour day to the merchant marine. Deeply affected by the question, England did not feel it necessary to forestall the recent conference at Genoa. Far from limiting her liberty of action by imposing one or more general laws on the eight hour day, England is content to live under a system of agreements freely entered into, which necessarily conform to the position of affairs. The average working day is no longer than in France. Short days have been established for an even longer period, but not where they are impracticable. Unhampered by rigid legislative rules, — 31 — England will no doubt be freer to correct the particular agreement on any given point, which no longer meets the needs of the moment. In agricultural matters, France should only forestall international conventions if her economic interest invites her to do so. Is this the case? 2. — Will the application of the eight hour day to agriculture Iceep rural workers on the land ? Nothing leads one .to think so. If the opinion of the agricultural working classes had been clearly expressed on this subject; if they demanded with great energy, as they are doing in Italy, the reduction of the hours of labour, one might hesitate. But, as we have seen, only the Federation of Agricultural Workers has made its voice heard. While the active agricultural population comprises seven or eight million souls, and of this number servants and labourers form about 2,400,000 after the War, the federation comprises at the most 30,000 members, of whom categories of specialised workers form a majority, if not almost the whole. It cannot, therefore, be said that the agricultural workers have expressed a desire for shorter working days. Are they silent because they are not organised? Suppose that they were organised, what demands would they make? Would they claim the eight hours? The agricultural trade unions in Italy have claimed and almost always obtained them, but was the reason the desire for less work? ÏTot at all. We have seen previously that it was the wish to provide work for an excessive supply of labour which prompted them. And the use of machinery was only agreed to by them so long as it did not lessen the demand for labour. In striking contrast, the French rural districts are depopulated, and in this very fact is to be found the reason for the lack of organisation among rural labourers. If they did not find in the towns a perpetual method of escape, and were forced to choose between remaining on the land and emigration in the last resort, no doubt they would combine in unions to demand conditions of work allowing all of them to live. Thus we are brought again to the rural exodus, and this is the moment to examine more closely into its causes. Among the various attractions which the town offers to the rural worker, is the prospect of short and easy work the deciding factor? Let-us hear some authoritative opinions. We shall see that his desire is pre-eminently to get a fixed wage. Just now we heard the opinion of Vandervelde that the rural exodus was caused by the impossibility of living on the land, which has for many years driven country dwellers to the towns. Others give us almost the same opinion. The town offers its inhabitants economic advantages of all kinds. Before the^war the cause of the exodus^was especially the . — 32 — agricultural crisis, when the price of agricultural products remained at a high level in spite of tariff protection, owing to the competition of countries which, were large producers of cereals. At present it arises from the general crisis in the supply of labour, resulting from the losses suffered by Prance owing to the war. The same phenomenon appears in a different form. The invaded districts, where the demand for labour evoked by the work of reconstruction is keen, drain Avorkers from all parts of France, and especially rural workers from adjacent districts. The enquiry by the Ministry of Agriculture in 1912 included two questions on the rural exodus expressed thus :— Concerning especially labourers who have very small holdings, can a figure be given of those who sell their holdings and leave the country ? What is the most frequent reason for this sale and departure? Some of the replies are given here : they emphasize economic difficulties (no doubt this is a question especially of small holding labourers, but the effects must be the same for those without holdings.) Alpes-Maritimes. — The persistance of poor olive crops discourages small proprietors and leads them to leave the country... The horticultural prosperity of the coast attaches the peasant closely to the soil. Stock farming in the mountains and the development of agricultural co-operative undertakings* give the small proprietors sufficient advantages to assure them a comfortable subsistance and to deter them from seeking means of subsistance elsewhere. Ardèche. — Sales generally occur as a result of the poor productivity of the soil, and often of the lack of the necessary capital to develop it. Ariège. — The exodus is caused by the difficulties of mountain cultivation, the small produce of the soil, and the multiplication of factories offering the worker a higher and more certain wage. A u b e . — I n the south of the Department, the exodus is caused by the vine growing crisis, which no longer allows the vine-dresser to live as formerly. The introduction, in the chalk district of Champagne, of improved agricultural machinery and the use of chemical manures, have consigned the very small proprietor to an inferior position. Cher. — I t is especially the small holding vine-dressers who, not gaining a. sufficient reward for their labour, let or sell their small holdings in order to rent a shop or work in a factory. Côte-d'Or. — The cause of the decrease in small holdings is the difficulties experienced by young peasant proprietors in establishing themselves on their return from military — 33 — service, difficulties resulting from the lack of advances by which they might acquire a holding large enough to be cultivated economically, and the scarcity or absence of credit to extend and to buy up-to-date farming equipment and live stock. These quotations could be multiplied. I t would certainly not be without interest to make a complete analysis of the position of rural small holdings, those which do not suffice to support the owner, in the different parts of France. Great diversity would be found to exist among them. Taking everything into account, the desertion of the country by peasant proprietors would rather appear exceptional. Many are the replies which indicate a very slight exodus among peasant proprietors. With all the better reason, shall we conclude, at the present time ? ' For workers with no stake in the land, the attraction of the towns is beyond question more powerful today than before the war. As far as they are concerned, the causes of the rural exodus have been frequently pointed out : the uprooting caused by military service, the prospect of higher wages and less tiring work, the hope of greater comfort and an easier life, the attraction exerted by big businesses ; the better education given to girls, which makes them despise rural life and prefer the small clerk. Elsewhere mention is also made of the development of agricultural'machinery, the high cost of labour, the low birth rate, and the irregularity of farm work, which implies a long period of unemployment in winter. On the whole, the causes are very numerous. They are summarised in the advantages of the town over the country. I t seems not uninteresting to reproduce here part of the reply furnished for Charente-Inférieure. It shows with peculiar clearness the evolution of the phenomenon. " Labour is becoming more and more difficult and scarce. Cultivation is upset, through lack of the necessary care at the right moment ; whole crops are spoiled through remaining exposed too long to the weather. Many farmers are wondering anxiously whether they will be able to continue cultivation under these conditions ; proprietors are letting the farms which they used to prefer to farm directly. In short, complaints are unanimous and very bitter. " How many economists have tried to analyse the causes of the rural exodus. The irresistible attraction of the town and its pleasures ; compulsory education, and military service have been produced in turn after many other causes. In the same way many remedies have been proposed ; some, for example, thought that it would be enough to extol the charms and advantages of the country to the children to stem the tide. Today one no more pays attention to these secondary causes of the rural exodus then one believes in the efficacy — 34 — of such palliatives. The inadequate wages and frequent unemployment of the rural districts must be mentioned as the chief culprits, so that the rural exodus will only be effectively checked by raising wages ; it will only come to an end when the agricultural worker reaches a wage proportionate to that of the industrial worker, that is to say, when he can live as freely on the land as his comrade in the town, and when he is in a position to supply Avith similar ease his needs and those of his family. The causes of the rural exodus having been thus described, we come to the third question ; . 3. — In the present position of affairs, will the application of „ . the Eight Hour Act affect the maintenance of agricultural production ? ' This depends, first of all, on the question whether the establishment of short working days will be enough in itself to check the rural exodus. Its causes are, as we have seen, complex. The longer hours of labour on the land are one of them, but not the most important. How can one imagine that by removing this one the problem will be solved ? Will wages increase at the same time 1 I t might perhaps . be said that with the fixing of a limit implying the permission of overtime the latter would be put on a higher rate. But this is only a small aspect of the question. The question is whether agriculture will be in a position to give the worker a higher wage for a smaller product. For his product cannot fail to be smaller. The least experience of agricultural work shows that it is essentially of the kind Avhich is carried out slowly and continuously. Tne effort is prolonged but not intense. Will this be altered Ì But nature wills it so. Will it be maintained that technical progress will make it possible to reduce the duration of effort ! But let us note first that the use of machinery in agriculture is in no way comparable to its use in industry. There it rules man ; here man still rules it. And, moreover, the general application of mechanical cultivation, supposing that it can be further greatly extended, even through it decreases the difficulty of farming to employers who are short of labour, in no way solves the fundamental problem on which the authors of the bill base their argument : namely, the depopulation of the Trench rural districts. The machine tends to replace the man, not to increase the demand for workers to cultivate the soil. If the worker's product is decreased as a result of the short working day, wages cannot but decrease equally in the long run. We have seen that the inadequacy of wages was, together with insecurity of employment, the chief cause of the rural exodus. The reduction of the hours of labour tends away from the end in view. — 35 — 2í"eed one insist on the peculiar conditions of field work, dominated tyrannically by weather conditions? Taking into account, on the one hand, the impossibility of controlling conditions of wind and weather, and, on the other, the gravity of the social phenomenon of the desertion of the country-sides, we must consider the causes of the latter according to their order of importance, if we wish successfully to combat its effects. To this the agricultural associations, being primarily interested in the solution of the problem, have given their attention. From what has been said previously, it appears that the principal causes of the rural exodus are :— 1. The low level of wages; 2. The insecurity of work; 3. The exodus only affects workers with small holdings, even labourers, to a relatively small extent, and then only when particularly serious economic difficulties arise, e. g., the destruction of the vines by phylloxera, in îformandy the ruin of certain famibes by drunkenness. From this we conclude that the attempt to prevent the abandonment of the land should be on the following lines :— a) by increasing the yield of the land, to endeavour to increase the workers' remuneration. b) to find remedies for the irregularity of work in such a way that from one year's end to the other the greater part of the rural population may be able to earn a useful living ; c) to increase the comfort of rural life; on this point the most effective remedy is none other than means for the worker to acquire small holdings; failing this capital progress, all that is necessary is to establish him, at least for the period of bis engagement, in a dwelling which shall be his own, to which is attached a plot of ground sufficient to give him both victuals and work. Here we enter a sphere foreign to the subject of the present report. The different means of keeping the agricultural worker on the land were studied at the recent French Agricultural Congress at Tours. Two reports were devoted to this kind of problem ; one, of which Mr. Henri Hitier was the author, concerned the participation of the workers in the results of the farming, considered in the form of premiums allotted according to the quantity of the products ; the other, presented by Mr. Anglade, studied the question of rural housing and considered the kinds of credit which would facilitate the erection of rural dwellings and the acquisition by workers of small holdings. We will summarise as follows the conclusions of the present report : The application of the eight hour day to agriculture is not justified on humanitarian grounds, nor by the need of safeguarding the race. — 36 — It can only be justified on economic grounds. Put in this way, the question does not appear urgent, and it is to be hoped that Prance will at the very least await the results of the first international congress on agricultural labour. Moreover, it does not seem that such regulation could be considered in any way as a specific remedy for the.rural exodus. On the other hand, there is little doubt that it would involve a diminution of production, a correlated diminution in wages and in consequence an aggravation of the crisis which always weighs more or less heavily on the agricultural economy, a crisis which is in no way lessened, in spite of the advantages accruing at present to agriculture, by the relaxation or temporary absence of international competition. It appears, consequently, that there is no reason to seek in this direction a remedy for the depopulation crisis. But the question of depopulation having arisen, it is of the greatest importance that the most suitable means should be sought to diminish the -attraction exerted by the towns on the country. This result will only be achieved if the lot of the rural worker improves so as to be roughly equal to that of the industrial worker, all advantages and inconveniences being balanced. Such a study necessitates an exact knowledge of the conditions of life of these two categories of workers and a comparative estimate of their wages. I t arises from the present distribution of labour. It is bound up with the whole political economy of our country. It could not be successfully undertaken unless account were taken of the enormous difference in habit and in conditions of life and of work which separates the rural from the urban worker. These differences are admitted by common-sense, and also by the most authoritative Socialist statesmen. To prove this, one need only quote, in conclusion, these lines from a course of lectures delivered by Vandervelde at the University of Brussels in 1906. " One may admit that the Socialist Party is pre-eminently / ' t h e party of industrial and agricultural wage-earners, " w i t h o u t thereby concluding that a programme inspired " principally by conditions of industrial labour can be " sufficient, since many reforms which are excellent " f o r industrial workers are inapplicable, or. applicable only " with difficulty, to agricultural workers. Doubtless, if an " Old Age Pensions Act were passed, the Act could be applied " t o all workers without questioning whether they were " agricultural or industrial. " But suppose it were a question of an act to regulate the " hours of labour. Could you apply to the varying " forms of agricultural labour, with the irregularities which — 37 — " result from the passage of the seasons, the rules which you " apply to industry? " In the same way, pass an act on accidents of employment and immediately you state that what holds in industry does not hold in agriculture. There is, therefore, a great deal of adaptation to be carried out before reforms originally demanded for the industrial proletariat can be applied to the agricultural proletariat. The one modification of the principle of the eight hour day, which the- authors of the bill under consideration have introduced, is to admit a double maximum of 10 hours per day, or 2496 hours per year; when one thinks that on one side it is extremely difficult to estimate the actual amount of work done in a year, and on the other that the maximum limit of ten hours per day is constantly exceeded during the summer without any regularity, one may say that the proposed regulation would involve a revolution in the cultivation of the soil in France. It is for these reasons that your commission recommends the rejection of the Bill. — 38 — STUDIES AND REPORTS - already issued Where the English or French text of a Report has not yet been published it •will be issued at a later date. Series A. N ° 1. THE AGREEMENT BETWEEN T H E SPANISH WORKERS' SATIONS, issued S e p t e m b e r 25th. 1920. French " " 2. 3. T H E DISPUTE IN THE METAL INDUSTRY UNION CONTROL O F I N D U S T R Y , French and ANNUAL issued 4. IN ITALY. September OF THE TRADES INTERNATIONAL CONGRESS OF UNION and 5. CONGRESS T H E MINERS' French 6. WORKERS and IN T H E FOOD AND 7. T H E CONGRESS T H E MINERS' 1920. " 8. FEDERATION, issued OF T H E LABOUR 9. INTERNATIONAL French and T H E INTERNATIONAL THE INTERNATIONAL and CONGRESS, issued LABOUR ORGANISATION. CONGRESS and OF and I N T H E METAL T H E FOURTH INTERNATIONAL T H E M I N E R S ' STRIKE I N 1920. " 14. A METAL INDUSTRY French and GREAT COMPARISON, WORKERS, IN ITALY. and TRADE issued 15.. OF BOOKBINDERS, issued English. BRITAIN, issued December 21st T H E XVth CONGRESS OF T H E GENERAL CONFEDERATION OF L A B O U R ( C O N F É D É R A T I O N G É N É R A L E D U TRAVAIL) h e l d a t O r l e a n s T H E INTERNATIONAL .CONGRESS O F GENERAL TENDENCIES THE and FACTORY GROWTH OF TRADE UNIONISM and issued WORKERS, English. OF EUROPEAN LABOUR LEGISLATION issued F e b r u a r y l l t h 1921. French " 17. UNION English. issued J a n u a r y 2 4 t h 1921. French " 16. issued November the 27th S e p t e m b e r t o t h e 2 n d October " 1920, D e c e m b e r 23rd 1920. French and English. " issued FEDERATION OF THE GOVERN- ALLIANCE, part) CONGRESS N o v e m b e r 26th 1920. French " 13. 19th English. CONTROL O F I N D U S T R Y . (Second 4 t h 1920. French and English. " 12. October English. T H E BRITISH GOVERNMENT AND THE MINERS' GREAT BRITAIN. CONFERENCE BETWEEN T H E DISPUTE INTERNATIONAL, English: MENT AND THE TRIPLE INDUSTRIAL O c t o b e r 2 6 t h 1920. French and English. " 11. 1 1 t h 1920. English. O c t o b e r 22nd 1920. French " 10. English. October A N D SOCIALIST issued October 21st 1920. French " and English. issued October 1 4 t h 1920. French " 1920, T H E B R I T I S H GOVERNMENT AND THE MINERS' FEDERATION OF GREAT BRITAIN. CONFERENCE BETWEEN S I R ROBERT HORNE AND " TRADE 2 5 t h 1920. English. D R I N K TRADES, issued October 1 1 t h 1920. French " ORGANI- English. English. MEETING issued October 4 t h 1920. French " and SINCE THE WAR, English. DURING 1910-1919, issued F e b r u a r y 16th 1921. French THE TEN and YEARS English. — 39 — Series B N° 1. COAL PRODUCTION IN THE RUHR DISTRICT. Enquiry by the International Labour Office, end of May 1920, issued tember 1st 1920. French and English. OF INTERNATIONAL OF RAW MATERIALS Sep- " 2. PAPERS RELATING TO SCHEMES TION FOR THE DISTRIBUTION ORGANISAAND FOOD " 3. T H E CONDITIONS OF LABOUR AND PRODUCTION I N THE UPPER SILESIAN STUFFS, issued October 5th. 1920. French and English. COALFIELD, issued December 10th 1920. " 4. French and English. T H E SOCIALISATION OF COAL MINES I N GERMANT, issued January 25th 1921. French and English. " 5. T H E ESSEN MEMORANDUM ON THE SOCIALISATION OF THE COAL MINES I N GERMANY (6 Nov. 20), issued 28th January 1921. French and English. " 6. WORKS COUNCILS IN GERMANY, issued January 29th 1921, French and English Series C. N° 1. BRITISH LEGISLATION ON UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE, issued October 26th 1920. French and English. " 2. GOVERNMENT ACTION IN DEALING WITH UNEMPLOYMENT IN ITALY, issued October 27th 1920. French and English. " 3. T H E BULGARIAN LAW ON COMPULSORY LA^ouB, issued November 4th 1920. French and English. " 4. T H E ACTION OF THE SWISS GOVERNMENT UNEMPLOYMENT, issued. November English. IN DEALING WITH 13th 1920. French and " T H E ORGANISATION OF UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE AND EMPLOYMENT EXCHANGES IN FRANCE, issued February 21th 1921. French and English. Series D. N° 1. STAFF REGULATIONS ON THE FEENCH RAILWAYS, issued Sep- tember 4th 1920. French and English. Series F. N° 1. CANCER OF THE BLADDER AMONG WORKERS I N ANILINE FACTORIES, issued February 23th 1921. French and English. Series H. N° 1. CONSUMERS' CO-OPERATIVE SOCIETIES IN 1919 (Denmark and Sweden), issued September 8th 1920. French and English. " 2. SEVENTH CONGRESS OF T H E BELGIAN' CO-OPERATIVE issued September 25t;h 1920. French and English. OFFICE, — 40 — S e r i e s K. N° 1. F I R S T INTERNATIONAL AFFILIATED TO T H E CONGRESS OF INTERNATIONAL LAND-WORKERS' UNIONS FEDERATION OF TRADE UNIONS, issued November 1920. French and English. " 2. AGRARIAN CONDITIONS IN SPAIN, issued November 10th 1920. French and English. " 3. SMALL HOLDINGS I N SCOTLAND, issued November 12th 'Ì920. French and English. " '4. THE EIGHT-HOUR DAY IN ITALIAN AGRICULTURE, issued De- cember 10th 1920. French and English. " 5. T H E EIGHT-HOUR DAY IN AGRICULTURE, BEFORE THE FRENCH CHAMBER, OF DEPUTIES, issued February 10th 1921. French and English. K=