Hourly wages for blue-collar workers rose
They actually went up
No.
true
No, The answer is true on A+
It set wages and negotiated with labor unions.
They actually went up
Farmers had no electricity or running water. They were paid very low wages. They depended on their crops. PS hope that helps! :)
Abdur Razzaq Shahid has written: 'Wages and employment in manufacturing industries' -- subject(s): Employees, Manufacturing industries, Supply and demand, Wages
i dont know
don't know that's why i looked it up and u didn't give me the answer
$50 per week
the supply to other industries falls.
Most women remained at home to look after the children. Others worked in ammunition factories.
I don't know but in 1944 it became £2.85
The difference between the Payment of Wages Act and the Minimum Wages Act is in what these acts enforce. The Payment of Wages Act ensures when payments should be made, how they should be made, and limits deductions. The Minimum Wages Act ensures that workers in certain industries are paid at least a certain predetermined amount.
OPA was the Office of Price Control. It was a US agency that exercised authority to control wages and set maximum prices in the US during World War II.
H. M. Douty has written: 'Cost-of-living escalator clauses and inflation' -- subject(s): Cost-of-living adjustments, Wages, Inflation (Finance) 'Wages in rubber manufacturing industry, August 1942' -- subject(s): Tires, Wages, Rubber industry and trade, Rubber industry workers 'The wage bargain and the labor market' -- subject(s): Wages, Employee fringe benefits, Labor supply 'Wage structures and administration' -- subject(s): Wages 'Trends in labor compensation in the United States, 1946-1966' -- subject(s): Wages 'Wages in manufacturing industries in wartime' -- subject(s): Wages, Manufacturing industries