The previous Deputy experienced some difficulty in relation to the figures for unemployment and unemployment assistance. It is a difficulty which many of us sympathise with because we have experienced it ourselves. It is one of the defects of this organisation of the Department of Industry and Commerce that, whereas the Minister is responsible for unemployment and, naturally, to some extent, can be held responsible for unemployment when policy is discussed, yet the compilation of the statistics governing the extent of unemployment and the nature, variety and depth of it relates to another Department, the Department of Social Welfare. However, I suppose we can hardly go back to the time when the Department of Industry and Commerce was responsible for the compilation of these industrial statistics, particularly as it has been indicated by the Minister that, in the process of shedding some of the functions of this overgrown monstrosity of a Department, he has relegated the statistics branch to the Department of the Taoiseach.
There are many points and aspects of this Estimate which are of great interest to this House and might evoke a fair amount of consideration from the House, but the one of paramount importance to the Department, the Minister and the House as a whole as the guardian of the welfare of the people of the country is the question of employment. I propose to address myself to some extent to this question. That it is of the utmost importance, that its gravity cannot be disputed, is instanced, I think, by the very grave warning issued by the leader of the Labour Party in this House with which, with great haste, I wish to associate myself. I regret that I am not speaking to the Minister himself, but I am sure that the sentiments I express will be conveyed to and understood by him. I wholeheartedly endorse what Deputy Larkin said when he stated that he was
"not going to be associated with any Government or Party or individual who feels that the unemployed are to be the subject of open rebuke, strong criticism and scornful references because they are in the unfortunate position of being denied reasonable opportunities of earning a living under decent conditions."
I have noted with regret and with dislike that there has been a growing volume of adverse references to the unemployed. I thought that mentality was dead, I thought it had been killed by the war and by the activities of those workless people in this country who have gone to the dangers and hazards of employment in England. I thought that mentality which looked upon the unemployed as shirkers, which scathingly referred to the fact of the disinclination, as they thought, of the unemployed to work, had been killed by the war. But for some unknown reason, whether it is to escape the responsibility or whether it is because the solution to the problem escapes those who indulge in this type of remark, there has been a very dangerous tendency to get back to those pre-1932 days when the unemployed were referred to in such terms and, in fact, constituted such a very important aspect not only of our industrial but of our political life in those days as to contribute very considerably, I think, to the return of the Fianna Fáil Government. That mentality should die and should be buried, and buried deeply.
The dimensions of that problem have been referred to by Deputy Larkin. It is of very little interest to those who are unemployed to get the figures given to us by the Minister in relation to industrial production in this country. It is quite true that, according to his figures, industrial production in transportable goods has increased over the period to which his Estimate refers by about 15 per cent. and that as far as industry as a whole can be estimated there is an improvement to the extent of 16 per cent. That is of very little interest to those who are as yet or continue to be unemployed and it is of very little interest to the sections of industry where they have not the benefit of or do not participate in that general improvement, such as the sections mentioned by the Minister, the leather and footwear industries in particular, where there is unemployment and short time and where the symptoms of a crisis appear to be developing, symptoms to which I suggest the Minister should direct his attention.
Though one may take comfort, as the Minister definitely does, from this improvement in our industrial output, one should not, I think, be too over-confident about the matter. We may have reached a period which can shed a certain amount of satisfaction upon us and give some of us a certain amount of smug satisfaction but there are portents to the contrary in other parts of the world which undoubtedly have their reaction on our economy. We cannot in the present world consider ourselves as being in water-tight or economic-tight compartments. Any major development in one section of the capitalist world has its effect all over the area in which capitalism operates. In the United States at the present time economists and thinkers, those who are concerned about these matters, are becoming worried as to whether we are going to witness again a slump of such dimensions in the United States as may have very adverse reactions on all the other sections of capitalist economy throughout the world.
I merely instance this as a method of suggesting that we should be on our guard and take steps in time so to organise or protect ourselves that while we cannot hope to escape the full effects of any adverse decline in American economy, yet we might by judicious reorganisation, by protection and by various other economic agencies and tricks be able to mitigate the effects of what may be a coming slump. If that slump does affect our economy, I suggest that it can affect it in a way that can be of very grave significance to the country as a whole and that it will inevitably result in a swelling of the unemployed. The figure that we reached during the period under review of 84,000 unemployed distributed over the whole area, all types of industry, rural and urban, is indeed a warning of the gravity of the situation. We have yet time perhaps to take some steps in relation to it.
If, in the coming winter, this figure should mount we might witness again those stirring days when, in order to obtain justice, in order to obtain their demands for work, their demands to be given the opportunity of providing bread for their families, the unemployed started their marches on Dublin, their marches on the Dáil and all that type of activity, which I am sure the present Minister and the present Government would be the least likely to enjoy or in any way to take comfort from. They would, I believe—I am sure as far as one section of the Government is concerned anyway—be over-anxious to mitigate that increasing unemployment and the effects of it, not only by the provision or by an increase of social benefits and of relief for the unemployed, but by taking such steps as may enable industry to absorb the unemployed to a greater extent than it appears to do at present. The different factors in relation to that question of the absorption of the unemployed and the development of industry are too many to address oneself to at the present time, but there are a few aspects of it which could be fairly quickly remedied if the Minister were inclined to deal with them, if he were inclined to examine the question or to re-examine it and to take it under further consideration, and probably revise his views, or change his attitude in regard to certain fundamental aspects of this question of industry.
With regard to some of the aspects of this reorganisation of industry, which it seems to be agreed is necessary, I should like to contrast one attitude, which appears to be rather general on the part of the Minister, with the attitude of the Taoiseach in regard to the same matter. The attitude of the Minister appears to me to be reflecting the attitude of those industrialists who think that they and they only have the knowledge, capacity and confidence to run their own industry. I can say that many of them, from my own personal experience, appear to think that. I am referring now in particular to the footwear industry—the boot and shoe industry. Many of them seem to suffer from a very exaggerated conceit of their own competence to organise their factories with, I think, lamentable results. Whether, consciously or unconsciously, the Minister has given that sufficient thought or not, I am not aware, but we have in the Minister's introductory speech his examination of the boot and shoe industry. It can be taken as an example of this question of the examination of the whole industrial position, particularly in regard to those sections of the community which have got into difficulties or are not developing to the extent they could, and are not absorbing labour to the extent that they should, and to that degree are contributing to unemployment. He talks about the difficulties of the industry. It is quite true, as he has stated, that he has not neglected the interests of that important industry; he has consulted with the different elements which participate in that industry, not only with the industrialists but with the trade unions and with the trade union officials who are interested in it. But his main reliance, for the making of an improvement in that industry, is on a committee which, at his suggestion, was set up by the manufacturers to make a comprehensive examination of the industry and to submit proposals for action.
Now, here we have a case where the whole burden of the examination, the creation or the thinking out and the making of proposals for the reorganisation of that important industry rests upon a group of manufacturers, and unless I am mistaken—if I am I should like to be corrected—there is no evidence whatever of the workers being concerned in this re-examination and there is no indication that the appropriate trade unions have been asked for their advice, even though they do some pretty constructive thinking about this matter. As the Minister knows, they are concerned not merely with trying to improve the conditions of the workers whom they represent, with trying to get increased rates or improved conditions for them, but they necessarily have to give their attention to the organisation of the industry as a whole, and they have, I think, equal, if not superior, knowledge to that possessed by the employers as to the detailed organisation of the various factories. As I have said, in contrast to the Minister's attitude, there is the much more pleasing attitude of the Taoiseach, as indicated by his Waterford speech, in the course of which he said :—
"An aspect of the human factor in industry which had not been sufficiently appreciated was the failure to secure the participation of the worker in industry. The workman could not be expected to contribute of his best to productivity and high output unless he had a clear understanding of the problems of industry and unless he could be satisfied that some of the benefits of high productivity and output would accrue to himself. It would be of advantage to the community generally, and to industrialists, if, on a voluntary basis, workers could be induced to take a personal interest in the management of the industry in which they were occupied."
We would all welcome that, but instead of that, unless the Minister takes the initiative, it will be considered that he supports that false idea of the manufacturers that they, and they alone, know how to run or organise a factory: that the workers have no say in that matter, and that the workers are not competent to participate at the present time in this question of increasing productivity and of organising it on a basis which would be more profitable to the manufacturers and more profitable to the workers as well.
That is an important point in relation to employment, though the Minister, indirectly, has paid a very fine tribute to the workers in so far as they must be credited with the increased productivity shown by the over-all figure which he has quoted. If they are responsible, and I believe them to be very largely responsible for achieving the highest standard of output that has been achieved in industry in this country since records were kept, then surely the time has come for the Minister to insist that those who have achieved results of such outstanding importance should participate in the management of the industries in which they are occupied.
On the other side of the picture, there is the fact in relation to that industry that there has grown up, during the war period particularly, a tendency on the part of manufacturers to act in a very anarchistic manner, to misunderstand, or not to understand at all, the dimensions of the market in which they are engaged and, without reference to the general well-being, to improve and increase their productive organisations to an extent which is not warranted by the market at their command. This is abundantly shown by the figures given by the Minister in relation to the footwear industry. The fact that we have been producing of late years a quantity of goods far beyond the capacity of our home market to absorb can lead to but one thing. It can lead only to the bankruptcy of some of these concerns, with consequent disemployment, constant short time on the part of some of these factories.
This is a matter on which we should have some indication of policy from the Department. the matter may yet be too new to the Department or to the Minister to have worked out a policy. It may be a very difficult matter to work out a reasonable policy and it may be one that is fraught with political difficulties, but be that as it may, I think we cannot with any equanimity look upon development where the factories are now so equipped that they could produce the entire complement of footwear required by the citizens of the Republic in much less than the time in which the citizens would consume those products. In other words, it might be estimated that a number of these factories have become unnecessary. With the development of equipment in better financed, better organised or more firmly established factories having a higher industrial potential, they have so taken over a section of the market that they are leaving some of the weaker factories in a position where they will face increasing unemployment on the part of the workers.
This is a matter that probably would require Governmental intervention. If this committee to which the Minister has referred cannot produce a very good form of voluntary co-operation and reorganisation on behalf of the industry itself, it would appear to me that the Government must take some hand in regulating the industry in such a manner as to produce the least hardship on the workers. If that is not done there will be increasing dissatisfaction, there will be the usual wave of unofficial strikes, and there will be a situation in which large numbers of these operatives who have become skilled in their particular sections of the trade will emigrate and they may find that though this will lessen the impact of the crisis on the industry as a whole, when it starts going again after a period of decline they will have the same difficulties as they had at the start in training good operatives who will be willing and capable to run the industry.
From all these angles I urge the Minister to give the greatest possible attention—and I know he has been doing so—on the basis of some planned policy and to take into consideration whether he can overcome his natural, or perhaps unnatural, aptitude towards a laissez faire policy in regard to these matters, as was indicated by some of his introductory remarks. He should realise that what may apply to this industry to-day may apply to some other industry to-morrow, next week or next month.
While the main consideration should be the relation of industry to the home market, there is the possibility of an export market, but in view of the competition from the Continent and England and the huge industrial equipment other countries have, it would be a very difficult matter for us to get an export market of any dimensions. If we are to get that export market, it ought to be got on some specialised line to which all our manufacturers will contribute in some way or another so as to enable a product representative of Ireland, of having some definite connection with Ireland to be exported— something that would command attention in America, on the European Continent, or in England. We might establish a good export market with a specialised line, but that appears to be a very slight factor in mitigating unemployment in industry.
Our efforts should be directed towards increasing the number of employees and reducing the 84,000 now unemployed. If those able to work were absorbed in industry they could buy two pairs of shoes or boots instead of one, and that would definitely react on employment in the boot and shoe industry. In relation to other industries, there would be a similar reaction. That is what renders the question of unemployment so very important to all of us.
We have a great interest in this Industrial Development Authority and we are all anxiously waiting for an opportunity to discuss that matter in full. Already we have had a slight reference to it when a motion was before the Dáil dealing with the development of the industrial resources of the country. We are all waiting an opportunity of giving constructive thoughts on that matter. Constructive thoughts in regard to the abatement of unemployment and the proper organisation of industry are more germane to such a subject as the Industrial Development Authority and had better be reserved for that occasion.
In regard to the unemployed themselves, I have mentioned my concord with Deputy Larkin in reference to statements about the unemployed. The attitude that the unemployed take to these various jobs should be understood. I am sure that it is understood by the Minister because of his connection with and knowledge of the Labour movement. Now, Deputy Larkin related his remarks to the Ballyshannon-Erne scheme and the developments there where the question of the employment of hundreds of workers arises. But a similar question arises in small towns where there are four or five hundred people, or even 1,000 people, where the unemployed are offered work within the meaning of the Act and according to the law, but because of the conditions, difficulties and disadvantages attaching to such offer, the workers refuse to accept. We had a case like that in my own constituency. I addressed a question to the appropriate Minister in reference to certain unemployed who were offered and refused work. I do not want to give details now, but the case may be a typical one, particularly in considering the unemployed register. I do not want to suggest for a moment that I have the slightest sympathy with all the nonsense talked about the unemployed register and I hope the Minister is not deceived by any nonsense talked by the Fianna Fáil Party—for purely political purposes— in reference to the constitution of the unemployed register. I think that is sheer baloney and the problem of the unemployed is too serious to permit of any attempts at diverting attention from it in that fashion.
The case that I referred to was one where on one occasion 70 men and on another six men were paraded by the local employment exchange to go out and offer themselves to a farmer four miles distant from their homes. Deputy Larkin said that whenever a job has a bad name that bad name travels quickly. In small towns the local people will know the reputation of the surrounding farmers as employers. When a job has a bad name, nobody could expect town workers who know the conditions on the farms around to offer themselves to some cantankerous employer who is in perpetual trouble with his workers, who has continuous rows with them, who frequently takes a pitchfork to them and they to him, who is constantly using bad language, who indulges in slave-driving tactics and, furthermore, who persistently refuses to pay his workers until the last moment on Saturday night.
Just the other Saturday, I was driving home from a town where I had a meeting with a couple of colleagues. On the way we gave a lift to a young woman with a boy of about three years of age. She was laden down with parcels. She told us she lived four miles out from the town and there was no bus service of which she could avail. I asked her how it happened that she had to do her shopping at that late hour and she told me it was due solely to the fact that the farmer who employed her husband refused to pay his men until the last moment on Saturday night. She had then to lug the young lad into the local town with her and depend upon the kindness of some motorist to give her a lift home. When a bad name attaches to a job, no one could expect workers, who have a certain prestige and character and manliness, to offer themselves for such work. I think the Act is too harsh. I think there should be some clause dealing with such cases as this. If there were such a clause, it is possible that we might have a better understanding and appreciation of the situation. The unemployed would prefer to go without their unemployment benefit or assistance rather than work for an employer who has a bad reputation.
I know of one specific instance of that. Possibly that instance could be multiplied in other parts of the country. Where a number of unemployed refuse to work, there must be some fundamental reason for that refusal. Their refusal may look bad to those who do not understand the circumstances. In the case of Ballyshannon, where some hundreds are involved, it does look as if it reflects very badly on the unemployed. But it must be remembered that, from the point of view of the unemployed, there are extenuating circumstances for their refusal to accept work when it offers. There must be some sound reason which will impel them to forgo their benefits rather than take certain work. It was proved conclusively during the war that when work offered under satisfactory conditions the unemployed were more than anxious to take such work.
The Minister referred to the widespread prejudice against Irish manufactured goods. That is a matter which may call for attention and it is one upon which we could make some constructive suggestions. In Deputy Lemass's mind there appeared to be some doubt as to whether such an attitude does exist over any wide sections of the community. Having been Minister for Industry and Commerce so long, I presume he could hardly believe now that there could be such a prejudice still in existence. He said that there will be criticism of Irish goods if quality is defective, but that there certainly does not exist prejudice in the true meaning of that term which will deter people from buying Irish goods even when quality is satisfactory. I know a number of instances of my own knowledge and I know how this prejudice is created. I have brought my investigations in this respect to the notice of the Department and I have made constructive suggestions whereby I think this prejudice could be overcome. I wish to amplify that now to some extent. I am referring to a product with a very restricted market. The industry is a small one, but it is an important one since it has a direct bearing upon the transport industry. It is essential that it should continue as an ancillary to the transport industry. This industry manufactures sparking plugs. It is on a comparatively small scale, but, nevertheless, it is getting into difficulties. Its market is falling. The workers have been put on short time and the promoters of the industry fear that, if they have to close down, the workers they have trained in the last 15 years will emigrate. If that happens and conditions afterwards become better, through Governmental or other interference or other economic changes——