
audiobook
by J. A. (John Atkinson) Hobson
A thoughtful exploration of industrial poverty, this volume brings together painstaking statistics and a clear moral concern for the lives behind the numbers. Drawing on the pioneering surveys of Charles Booth and other contemporary studies, it offers a systematic look at how national wealth is divided among wage‑earners and what that reveals about the true extent of hardship in a rapidly changing society.
The first chapters focus on defining “the poor” and measuring their condition, using concrete figures to illuminate the gap between national income and the share that reaches the lowest strata of the working class. Subsequent sections evaluate a range of practical remedies—such as housing reforms, wage adjustments, and limited state interventions—presented without dogmatic judgment, inviting readers to weigh their feasibility. By combining rigorous data with compassionate insight, the book aims to spark deeper inquiry into the social responsibilities of an industrial age.
Language
en
Duration
~7 hours (403K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2004-01-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1858–1940
Best known for his sharp critique of imperialism, this British economist wrote with unusual clarity about how wealth, power, and politics shaped everyday life. His work challenged orthodox economics and went on to influence debates far beyond his own time.
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