good article on the development of our consumption. points to larger themes of developing a national mythology: that hard work and being able to increase material wealth go hand in hand since well, probably even the native americans. goes on to cite the attemtps of the kellogg company to institute a 6 hour day, allowing them to employ more people and allow those already employed to enjoy more time away from work with family, friends and whatever other perversions they might have had.
In a 1927 interview with the magazine Nation’s Business, Secretary of Labor James J. Davis provided some numbers to illustrate a problem that the New York Times called "need saturation." Davis noted that "the textile mills of this country can produce all the cloth needed in six months’ operation each year" and that 14 percent of the American shoe factories could produce a year’s supply of footwear. The magazine went on to suggest, "It may be that the world’s needs ultimately will be produced by three days’ work a week."
Business leaders were less than enthusiastic about the prospect of a society no longer centered on the production of goods. For them, the new "labor-saving" machinery presented not a vision of liberation but a threat to their position at the center of power. John E. Edgerton, president of the National Association of Manufacturers, typified their response when he declared: "I am for everything that will make work happier but against everything that will further subordinate its importance. The emphasis should be put on work-more work and better work." "Nothing," he claimed, "breeds radicalism more than unhappiness unless it is leisure."
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Our modern predicament is a case in point. By 2005 per capita household spending (in inflation-adjusted dollars) was twelve times what it had been in 1929, while per capita spending for durable goods--the big stuff such as cars and appliances--was thirty-two times higher. Meanwhile, by 2000 the average married couple with children was working almost five hundred hours a year more than in 1979. And according to reports by the Federal Reserve Bank in 2004 and 2005, over 40 percent of American families spend more than they earn. The average household carries $18,654 in debt, not including home-mortgage debt, and the ratio of household debt to income is at record levels, having roughly doubled over the last two decades. We are quite literally working ourselves into a frenzy just so we can consume all that our machines can produce.
Yet we could work and spend a lot less and still live quite comfortably. By 1991 the amount of goods and services produced for each hour of labor was double what it had been in 1948. By 2006 that figure had risen another 30 percent. In other words, if as a society we made a collective decision to get by on the amount we produced and consumed seventeen years ago, we could cut back from the standard forty-hour week to 5.3 hours per day-or 2.7 hours if we were willing to return to the 1948 level. We were already the richest country on the planet in 1948 and most of the world has not yet caught up to where we were then.
http://www.orionmagazine.org/index.php/articles/article/2962