BRITISH EXAMPLE.
Collective Bargaining Scheme Impresses Americans. CONDITIONS IN INDUSTRY. (Received 10 a.m.) WASHINGTON, September 2. A group of American experts, after a survey of British labour conditions, reported to President Roosevelt that collective bargaining was an essential part of British industrial relations, due to the almost universal acceptance and support of it by employers and labour alike.
The experts made no specific recommendations for applying the British procedure to industrial relations of the United States, but President Roosevelt commended the report to the public as evidence of the value of co-operative endeavours among groups "closely identified with labour and employer relationships as they exist here."
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Bibliographic details
Auckland Star, Volume LXIX, Issue 208, 3 September 1938, Page 9
Word Count
106BRITISH EXAMPLE. Auckland Star, Volume LXIX, Issue 208, 3 September 1938, Page 9
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Acknowledgements
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