Foreign News: Good Show

The Ministry of Labour last week announced that 12,000,000 man-hours had been lost in 1,281 work stoppages in 1942, an increase from 8,800,000 man-hours lost in 1,241 stoppages in 1941. This seemed serious, but by no means scandalous, to a Great Britain immensely more industrialized and speeded up in its fourth year of war. Britons, in fact, have long expressed surprise that many a U.S. citizen and much of the U.S. press blow their tops at the number of U.S. strikes.*

Britons pointed out that the 12.000,000 lost man-hours represented just one-fiftieth of 1% of total man-hours worked, or one half-hour's work lost per worker during the year. Said a Labour Ministry spokesman: "Though this proportion is infinitesimally small, it is still looked on most seriously as it is equivalent to 5,000 workers working full time. While making no optimistic forecasts for a reduction in 1943, the present publicity is part of a campaign started by the Ministry to reduce losses as far as possible."

Generally, Britons thought that a loss of one-fiftieth of 1% of the long, grinding hours they work to lick the Axis is a pretty good show.

* At last week's end, the U.S. War Labor Board announced that preliminary estimates for both war and nonwar industries indicated a total of 3,000 work stoppages, involving a loss of 4,565,000 man-days. On the basis of an 8-hr, day, U.S. man-hour losses would therefore be about 36,520,000. With the U.S. population roughly three times greater, U.S. man-hour losses due to strikes closely approximated Great Britain's.

Quotes of the Day »

Get & Share
FARHAD AFSHAR, head of the Coordination of Islamic Organizations in Switzerland, after Swiss voters passed a referendum imposing a national ban on the construction of minarets, the prayer towers of mosques
For use in rail of Articles page or Section Fronts pages. Duplicate and change name as necesssary to distinguish.

Time.com on Digg

POWERED BY digg

Quotes of the Day »

Get & Share
FARHAD AFSHAR, head of the Coordination of Islamic Organizations in Switzerland, after Swiss voters passed a referendum imposing a national ban on the construction of minarets, the prayer towers of mosques

Stay Connected with TIME.com