"GOOD OLD DAYS."
UNLIKELY TO RETURN. ARCHBISHOP'S WARNING. PROBLEMS TO BE FACED. Sonic of the problems of the present and the future were dealt with by Archbishop A. W. Averill, primate and archbishop of New Zealand in his charge to the Anglican Diocesan Synod to-day. His Grace said that instead of looking back with regret to the standards of the "good old days" before the war, people must reconcile themselves to the fact that they were not likely to see in their day a return to the prosperity of prewar days.
"While we are anxious that the standard of wages and the spending capacity of the community should not be seriously reduced," he said, "yet it is useless to live in a 'fool's paradise' and imagine that the available labour in the world can be absorbed in useful industry in view of . the ever increasing tendency of scientific invention to supplant man power. Until the world can adjust itself to new conditions and realise that there must always be a considerable surplus of available labour under our present industrial system, we must be prepared for the unemployment problem to be more or less always with us. Shorter hours of labour and less working days in the week may afford some relief, but what about the standard of wages? Can the world adjust itself to a profitable and beneficial use of greater leisure, and will the extra leisure contribute to the development of personality or the opposite? This is a problem' for the Church as well as the civic authorities.
"We realise that a man has a right to live and a right to work for a living wage, and that working conditions should not militate against the true and full development of his personality. The time has passed for temporary expedients, and the unemployment question calls for reconstruction and readjustment of the whole question by the best brains ' • I
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Bibliographic details
Auckland Star, Volume LXV, Issue 241, 11 October 1934, Page 5
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319"GOOD OLD DAYS." Auckland Star, Volume LXV, Issue 241, 11 October 1934, Page 5
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