Tuesday, 24 February 2026

how the trade unions started the consumer age

 

In the late 19th century, particularly in Britain and the US, we see the birth of what historians often call the "Mass Market." Here is how that transition actually functioned:

This happened when skilled workers got together to form trade unions and used their muscle to demand and fight for better pay and better workng conditions. Industry and 'employers' benefitted as much as the workers because workers became consumers!

From Subsistence to Surplus


Before this era, most working-class income went entirely to "the basics": bread, rent, and fuel. As trade unions gained leverage and productivity increased, real wages rose. For the first time, a "labor aristocracy" of skilled workers had disposable income.

The 1870s-1890s Shift:


Prices for food and imported goods actually dropped (thanks to railways and steamships), meaning that even if a worker's pay stayed the same, their "purchasing power" went up.

The "Saturday Half-Holiday": Winning better conditions wasn't just about money; it was about time. You can't be a consumer if you're in a factory 80 hours a week. The shortened work week created the "leisure industry."

The Drivers of the Consumer Boom

Once these workers had a few extra shillings or dollars, the economy pivoted to meet them. This led to several massive structural changes:

1. The Department Store
Stores like Harrods in London or Macy’s in New York began catering to more than just the ultra-wealthy. They turned shopping into an event. For the skilled worker’s family, buying a manufactured clock or a set of tea china became a badge of respectability.

2. Branding and Packaging
Before this, you bought soap or flour in bulk from a nameless barrel. With the rise of the consumer-worker, companies started branding (think Kellogg’s or Lipton Tea). They realized that if a worker has a choice, they will buy the brand they trust.

3. Spectator Sports and Tourism
This is where the "better conditions" really show up.

Football/Soccer: In the UK, the growth of professional football leagues was funded almost entirely by the gate money of skilled workers who now had Saturday afternoons off.

Seaside Resorts: Places like Blackpool or Coney Island exploded in popularity as the "working-class holiday" became a staple of life.

The "Virtuous Cycle"
This created a feedback loop that would have certainly been a topic of interest in a lecture by someone like Mike Brown.

Increased Demand: Workers buy more manufactured goods.

Mass Production: Factories grow to meet demand, using "economies of scale" to make goods even cheaper.

Job Creation: More factory and retail jobs are created, further expanding the pool of consumers.

A Slight Correction on "The Boom"
While this was the start, it’s worth noting that this "boom" was still somewhat fragile. It mostly applied to the skilled workers (engineers, printers, carpenters). The "unskilled" labour force still lived in precarious poverty. It wasn't until the post-WWI era and the rise of Fordism (paying workers enough to buy the cars they built) that the consumer economy reached its final, high-octane form.

But we've gone round in a circle because the people who are ryunning the show and this includes the current hand picked by Mandeslon LINO (Labour in name only) government. Consumers are losing the ability to buy the extras and are being forced back to basics again.

The odd thing is that China, India, Russia and the BRIC nations seem to have the answer. While the G7 west languishes in an unnecessary decline.

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who created the modern consumer society?

  It was the trade unions who created the consumer society we have today. Let's get history right - it was the unions not the employers ...