FALL RIVER, MASSACHUSETTS OCTOBER, 1919

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Research Report Number 22
November, 1919

Copyright 1919

National Industrial Conference Board
15 Beacon Street
Boston, Mass.


CONTENTS

PAGE
Foreword vii
Purpose of the Investigation 1
Method 1
Fall River and Its People 2
Cost of Living in October, 1919 3
Food 3
Shelter 6
Clothing 6
Fuel, Heat and Light 8
Sundries 9
The Complete Budget 11
Increase in the Cost of Living Since 1914 13
Food 13
Shelter 13
Clothing 14
Fuel, Heat and Light 14
Sundries 15
The Complete Budget 15
Conclusion 17

LIST OF TABLES

PAGE
Table 1: Minimum Food Budget for a Week for a Man, Wife and Three Children under Fourteen Years of Age, Fall River, Massachusetts, October, 1919 4
Table 2: More Liberal Weekly Food Budget for a Man, Wife and Three Children under Fourteen Years of Age in Fall River, Massachusetts, October, 1919 5
Table 3: Cost of a Liberal Allowance of Clothing for a Year for a Man, Wife and Three Children under Fourteen Years of Age in Fall River, Massachusetts, at Prices Prevailing in October, 1919 7
Table 4: Average Cost of Sundries in Fall River, Massachusetts, October, 1919 11
Table 5: Average Cost of Living for a Man, Wife and Three Children under Fourteen Years of Age in Fall River, Massachusetts, October, 1919 12
Table 6: Average Increase between October, 1914, and October, 1919, in the Cost of Living for a Man, Wife and Three Children under Fourteen Years of Age in Fall River, Massachusetts 15
Table 7: Comparison of Distribution of Expenditures for the Separate Budget Items in Fall River, Massachusetts, in 1914 and 1919, with the Average Distribution in the Country as a Whole in 1914 16

Foreword

THE accompanying study of the cost of living among wage-earners in Fall River, Massachusetts, aims to establish the cost of maintaining a wage-earner's family at a minimum but reasonable standard of living in this textile manufacturing center; also the cost of maintaining such a family at a somewhat better standard.

The Board has already made several broad surveys of changes in the cost of living in American wage-earning communities since the outbreak of the World War in July, 1914. These cover the entire country and are designed to bring out the extent of change during the periods studied, not the actual cost of living. The results of the present investigation in Fall River, made independently of these broader surveys, throw an interesting sidelight on the wider studies and also permit of a valuable check on them.

It is intended to make similar intensive studies from time to time in other representative industrial communities.


                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

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