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I can't say what Henry Ford would do today, but this is what he did
in 1914. I don't think he would move to China. His
company's interests were aligned with America's interests, and both did
well.
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[Ford] Gives $10,000,000 To 26,000 Employees
Ford to Run Automobile Plant 24 Hours Daily in Profit-Sharing Plan
MINIMUM WAGE $5 A DAY
No Employee to be Discharged Except for Unfaithfulness or Hopeless Inefficiency
Special to The New York Times
January 5, 1914
To give to the employees of the company $10,000,000 of the profits of
the 1914 business, the payments to be made semi-monthly and added to
the pay checks.
To run the factory continuously instead of only eighteen hours a day,
giving employment to several thousand more men by employing three
shifts of eight hours each, instead of only two nine-hour shifts, as at
present.
To establish a minimum wage scale of $5 per day. Even the boy who sweeps up the floors will get that much. (read more)
Before any man in any department of the company who does not seem to be
doing good work shall be discharged, an opportunity will be given to
him to try to make good in every other department. No man shall be
discharged except for proved unfaithfulness or irremediable
inefficiency.
The Ford Company's financial statement of Sept. 20, 1912, showed assets
of $20,815,785.63, and surplus of $14,745,095.57. One year later it
showed assets of $35,033,919.86 and surplus of $28,124,173.68.
Dividends paid out during the year, it is understood, aggregated
$10,000,000. The indicated profits for the year, therefore, were about
$37,597,312. The company's capital stock authorized and outstanding, is
$2,000,000. There is no bond issue.
About 10 per cent of the employees, boys and women, will not be
affected by the profit sharing, but all will have the benefit of the $5
minimum wage. Those among them who are supporting families, however,
will have a share similar to the men of more than 22 years of age.
In all, about 26,000 employees will be affected. Fifteen thousand now
are at work in the Detroit factories. Four thousand more will be added
by the institution of the eight-hour shift. The other seven thousand
employees are scattered all over the world, in the Ford branches. They
will share the same as the Detroit employees.
Personal statements were made by Henry Ford and James Couzens, Treasurer of the company, regarding the move.
"It is our belief," said Mr. Couzens, "that social justice begins at
home. We want those who have helped us to produce this great
institution and are helping to maintain it to share our prosperity. We
want them to have present profits and future prospects. Thrift and good
service and sobriety, all will be enforced and recognized.
"Believing as we do, that a division of our earnings between capital
and labor is unequal, we have sought a plan of relief suitable for our
business. We do not feel sure that it is the best, but we have felt
impelled to make a start, and make it now. We do not agree with those
employers who declare, as did a recent writer in a magazine in excusing
himself for not practicing what he preached, that 'movement toward the
bettering of society must be universal.' We think that one concern can
make a start and create an example for other employers. That is our
chief object."
"If we are obliged," said Mr. Ford, "to lay men off for want of
sufficient work at any season we purpose to so plan our year's work
that the lay-off shall be in the harvest time, July, August, and
September, not in the Winter. We hope in such case to induce our men to
respond to the calls of the farmers for harvest hands, and not to lie
idle and dissipate their savings. We shall make it our business to get
in touch with the farmers and to induce our employees to answer calls
for harvest help.
"No man will be discharged if we can help it, except for unfaithfulness
or inefficiency. No foreman in the Ford Company has the power to
discharge a man. He may send him out of his department if he does not
make good. The man is then sent to our 'clearing house,' covering all
the departments, and is tried repeatedly in other work, until we find
the job he is suited for, provided he is honestly trying to render good
service."
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