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Efficiency movement

The efficiency movement was a major movement in the United States, Britain and other industrial nations in the early 20th century that sought to identify and eliminate waste in all areas of the economy and society, and to develop and implement best practices.[1] The concept covered mechanical, economic, social, and personal improvement.[2] The quest for efficiency promised effective, dynamic management rewarded by growth.[3]

As a result of the influence of an early proponent, it is more often known as Taylorism.

United States edit

The efficiency movement played a central role in the Progressive Era in the United States, where it flourished 1890–1932.[4] Adherents argued that all aspects of the economy, society and government were riddled with waste and inefficiency. Everything would be better if experts identified the problems and fixed them. The result was strong support for building research universities and schools of business and engineering, municipal research agencies, as well as reform of hospitals and medical schools, and the practice of farming.[5] Perhaps the best known leaders were engineers Frederick Winslow Taylor (1856–1915), who used a stopwatch to identify the smallest inefficiencies, and Frank Bunker Gilbreth Sr. (1868–1924) who proclaimed there was always "one best way" to fix a problem.

Leaders including Herbert Croly, Charles R. van Hise, and Richard Ely sought to improve governmental performance by training experts in public service comparable to those in Germany, notably at the Universities of Wisconsin and Pennsylvania. Schools of business administration set up management programs oriented toward efficiency.[6]

Municipal and state efficiency edit

Many cities set up "efficiency bureaus" to identify waste and apply the best practices. For example, Chicago created an Efficiency Division (1910–16) within the city government's Civil Service Commission, and private citizens organized the Chicago Bureau of Public Efficiency (1910–32). The former pioneered the study of "personal efficiency," measuring employees' performance through new scientific merit systems and efficiency movement [7]

State governments were active as well. For example, Massachusetts set up its "Commission on Economy and Efficiency" in 1912. It made hundreds of recommendations.[8]

Philanthropy edit

Leading philanthropists such as Andrew Carnegie[9] and John D. Rockefeller actively promoted the efficiency movement. In his many philanthropic pursuits, Rockefeller believed in supporting efficiency. He said,

To help an inefficient, ill-located, unnecessary school is a waste ...it is highly probable that enough money has been squandered on unwise educational projects to have built up a national system of higher education adequate to our needs, if the money had been properly directed to that end.[10]

Conservation edit

The conservation movement regarding national resources came to prominence during the Progressive Era. According to historian Samuel P. Hays, the conservation movement was based on the "gospel of the efficiency".[11]

The Massachusetts Commission on Economy and Efficiency reflected the new concern with conservation. It said in 1912:

The only proper basis for the protection of game birds, wild fowl and, indeed, all animals is an economic one, and must be based upon carefully constructed and properly enforced laws for the conservation of all species for the benefit of future generations of our citizens, rather than based on local opinion. …This expenditure for the protection of fish and game is clearly a wise economy, tending to prevent the annihilation of birds and other animals valuable to mankind which might otherwise become extinct. It may be said that Massachusetts and her sister States have suffered irreparable loss by carelessly allowing, for generations past, indiscriminate waste of animal life.[8]

President Roosevelt was the nation's foremost conservationist, putting the issue high on the national agenda by emphasizing the need to eliminate wasteful uses of limited natural resources. He worked with all the major figures of the movement, especially his chief advisor on the matter, Gifford Pinchot. Roosevelt was deeply committed to conserving natural resources, and is considered to be the nation's first conservation President.[12]

 
1908 US editorial cartoon on Theodore Roosevelt and conservation

In 1908, Roosevelt sponsored the Conference of Governors held in the White House, with a focus on natural resources and their most efficient use. Roosevelt delivered the opening address: "Conservation as a National Duty".

In contrast, environmentalist John Muir promulgated a very different view of conservation, rejecting the efficiency motivation. Muir instead preached that nature was sacred and humans are intruders who should look but not develop. Working through the Sierra Club he founded, Muir tried to minimize commercial use of water resources and forests.[13] While Muir wanted nature preserved for the sake of pure beauty, Roosevelt subscribed to Pinchot's formulation, "to make the forest produce the largest amount of whatever crop or service will be most useful, and keep on producing it for generation after generation of men and trees."[14]

National politics edit

In U.S. national politics, the most prominent figure was Herbert Hoover, a trained engineer who played down politics and believed dispassionate, nonpolitical experts could solve the nation's great problems, such as ending poverty.[15]

After 1929, Democrats blamed the Great Depression on Hoover and helped to somewhat discredit the movement. [citation needed]

Antitrust edit

Boston lawyer Louis Brandeis (1856–1941) argued bigness conflicted with efficiency and added a new political dimension to the Efficiency Movement. For instance, while fighting against legalized price fixing, Brandeis launched an effort to influence congressional policymaking with the help of his friend Norman Hapgood, who was then the editor of Harper's Weekly. He coordinated the publication of a series of articles (Competition Kills, Efficiency and the One-Price Article, and How Europe deals with the one-price goods), which were also distributed by the lobbying group American Fair Trade League to legislators, Supreme Court justices, governors, and twenty national magazines.[16] For his works, he was asked to speak before a congressional committee considering the price-fixing bill he drafted. Here, he stated that "big business is not more efficient than little business" and that "it is a mistake to suppose that the department stores can do business cheaper than the little dealer."[16] Brandeis ideas on which business is most efficient conflicted with Croly's positions, which favored efficiency driven by a kind of consolidation gained through large-scale economic operations.[17]

As early as 1895 Brandeis had warned of the harm that giant corporations could do to competitors, customers, and their own workers. The growth of industrialization was creating mammoth companies which he felt threatened the well-being of millions of Americans.[18] In The Curse of Bigness he argued, "Efficiency means greater production with less effort and at less cost, through the elimination of unnecessary waste, human and material. How else can we hope to attain our social ideals?"[19] He also argued against an appeal to Congress by the state-regulated railroad industry in 1910 seeking an increase in rates. Brandeis explained that instead of passing along increased costs to the consumer, the railroads should pursue efficiency by reducing their overhead and streamlining their operations, initiatives that were unprecedented during the time.[20]

Bedaux system edit

 
Charles E. Bedaux: The Bedaux Unit Principle of Industrial Measurement, Journal of Applied Psychology, 1921. PDF, click to read.

The Bedaux system, developed by Franco-American management consultant Charles Bedaux (1886–1944) built on the work of F. W. Taylor and Charles E. Knoeppel.[21][22]

Its distinctive advancement beyond these earlier thinkers was the Bedaux Unit or B, a universal measure for all manual work.[23][22]

The Bedaux System was influential in the United States in the 1920s and Europe in the 1930s and 1940s, especially in Britain.[24][25]

From the 1920s to the 1950s there were about one thousand companies in 21 countries worldwide that were run on the Bedaux System, including giants such as Swift's, Eastman Kodak, B.F. Goodrich, DuPont, Fiat, ICI and General Electric.[26][25][27][28][29]

Relation to other movements edit

Later movements had echoes of the Efficiency Movement and were more directly inspired by Taylor and Taylorism. Technocracy, for instance, and others flourished in the 1930s and 1940s.

Postmodern opponents of nuclear energy in the 1970s broadened their attack to try to discredit movements that saw salvation for human society in technical expertise alone, or which held that scientists or engineers had any special expertise to offer in the political realm.

Coming into usage in 1990, the Western term lean manufacturing (lean enterprise, lean production, or simply "lean") refers to a business idea that considered the expenditure of resources for anything other than the creation of value for the end customer to be wasteful, and thus a target for elimination. Today the Lean concept is broadening to include a greater range of strategic goals, not just cost-cutting and efficiency.[citation needed]

Britain edit

In engineering, the concept of efficiency was developed in Britain in the mid-18th century by John Smeaton (1724–1792). Called the "father of civil engineering", he studied water wheels and steam engines.[30] In the late 19th century there was much talk about improving the efficiency of the administration and economic performance of the British Empire.[31]

National Efficiency was an attempt to discredit the old-fashioned habits, customs and institutions that put the British at a handicap in competition with the world, especially with Germany,[32] which was seen as the epitome of efficiency.[33] In the early 20th century, "National Efficiency" became a powerful demand — a movement supported by prominent figures across the political spectrum who disparaged sentimental humanitarianism and identified waste as a mistake that could no longer be tolerated. The movement took place in two waves; the first wave from 1899 to 1905 was made urgent by the inefficiencies and failures in the Second Boer War (1899–1902). Spectator magazine reported in 1902 there was "a universal outcry for efficiency in all departments of society, in all aspects of life".[34] The two most important themes were technocratic efficiency and managerial efficiency. As White (1899) argued vigorously, the empire needed to be put on a business footing and administered to get better results. The looming threat of Germany, which was widely seen as a much more efficient nation, added urgency after 1902. Politically National Efficiency brought together modernizing Conservatives and Unionists, Liberals who wanted to modernize their party, and Fabians such as George Bernard Shaw and H. G. Wells, along with Beatrice and Sidney Webb, who had outgrown socialism and saw the utopia of a scientifically up-to-date society supervised by experts such as themselves. Churchill in 1908 formed an alliance with the Webbs, announcing the goal of a "National Minimum", covering hours, working conditions, and wages – it was a safety net below which the individual would not be allowed to fall.[35][36]

Representative legislation included the Education Act 1902, which emphasized the role of experts in the schools system. Higher education was an important initiative, typified by the growth of the London School of Economics, and the foundation of Imperial College.[37]

There was a pause in the movement between 1904 and 1909, when interest resumed. The most prominent new leaders included Liberals Winston Churchill and David Lloyd George, whose influence brought a bundle of reform legislation that introduced the welfare state to Britain.

Much of the popular and elite support for National Efficiency grew out of concern for Britain's military position, especially with respect to Germany. The Royal Navy underwent a dramatic modernization, most famously in the introduction of the Dreadnought, which in 1906 revolutionized naval warfare overnight.[citation needed]

Germany edit

In Germany the efficiency movement was called "rationalization" and it was a powerful social and economic force before 1933. In part it looked explicitly at American models, especially Fordism.[38] The Bedaux system was widely adopted in the rubber and tire industry, despite strong resistance in the socialist labor movement to the Bedaux system. Continental AG, the leading rubber company in Germany, adopted the system and profited heavily from it, thus surviving the Great Depression relatively undamaged and improving its competitive capabilities. However most German businessmen preferred the home-grown REFA system which focused on the standardization of working conditions, tools, and machinery.[39]

"Rationalization" meant higher productivity and greater efficiency, promising science would bring prosperity. More generally it promised a new level of modernity and was applied to economic production and consumption as well as public administration. Various versions of rationalization were promoted by industrialists and Social Democrats, by engineers and architects, by educators and academics, by middle class feminists and social workers, by government officials and politicians of many parties. It was ridiculed by the extremists in the Communist movement. As ideology and practice, rationalization challenged and transformed not only machines, factories, and vast business enterprises but also the lives of middle-class and working-class Germans.[40]

Soviet Union edit

Ideas of Science Management was very popular in the Soviet Union. One of the leading theorists and practitioners of the Scientific Management in Soviet Russia was Alexei Gastev. The Central Institute of Labour (Tsentralnyi Institut Truda, or TsIT), founded by Gastev in 1921 with Vladimir Lenin's support, was a veritable citadel of socialist Taylorism. Fascinated by Taylorism and Fordism, Gastev has led a popular movement for the “scientific organization of labor” (Nauchnaya Organizatsiya Truda, or NOT). Because of its emphasis on the cognitive components of labor, some scholars consider Gastev's NOT to represent a Marxian variant of cybernetics. As with the concept of 'Organoprojection' (1919) by Pavel Florensky, underlying Nikolai Bernstein and Gastev's approach, lay a powerful man-machine metaphor.

Japan edit

W. Edwards Deming (1900–1993) brought the efficiency movement to Japan after World War II, teaching top management how to improve design (and thus service), product quality, testing and sales (the last through global markets), especially using statistical methods. Deming then brought his methods back to the U.S. in the form of quality control called continuous improvement process.[41]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Daniel T. Rodgers, Atlantic Crossings: Social Politics in a Progressive Age (2000)
  2. ^ Samuel Haber, Efficiency and Uplift: Scientific Management in the Progressive Era, 1890–1920 (1964)
  3. ^ Jennifer K. Alexander, The Mantra of Efficiency: From Waterwheel to Social Control (2008)
  4. ^ Haber (1964)
  5. ^ Spillman, W. J. (1915). "The Efficiency Movement in Its Relation to Agriculture". The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science. 59: 65–76. ISSN 0002-7162.
  6. ^ Stuart Morris, "The Wisconsin Idea and Business Progressivism," Journal of American Studies, April 1970, Vol. 4#1 pp. 39–60
  7. ^ Mordecai Lee, Bureaus of Efficiency: Reforming Local Government in the Progressive Era, (Marquette University Press, 2008) ISBN 978-0-87462-081-8
  8. ^ a b Commission on Economy and Efficiency, Annual report of the Commission on Economy and Efficiency (Boston, 1913), p 76 online
  9. ^ Abigail A. Van Slyck, Free to All: Carnegie Libraries & American Culture, 1890–1920 (1998) p. 1
  10. ^ John D. Rockefeller, Random Reminiscences of Men and Events (1933)
  11. ^ Samuel P. Hays, Conservation and the Gospel of Efficiency: The Progressive Conservation Movement 1890–1920 (1959).
  12. ^ W. Todd Benson, President Theodore Roosevelt's Conservation Legacy (2003)
  13. ^ Roderick Nash, Wilderness and the American Mind (3rd ed. 1982), pp. 122–40
  14. ^ Gifford Pinchot, Breaking New Ground (1947) p. 32.
  15. ^ William J. Barber, From new era to New Deal: Herbert Hoover, the economists, and American economic policy, 1921–1933 (1989) p. 5
  16. ^ a b McCraw, Thomas (2009). Prophets of Regulation. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. pp. 103–104. ISBN 978-0674716087.
  17. ^ Levy, David (1985). Herbert Croly of the New Republic: The Life and Thought of an American Progressive. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. pp. 157–158. ISBN 978-0691047256.
  18. ^ Melvin I. Urofsky, Louis D. Brandeis: a life (2009) pp. 300–26
  19. ^ Louis Brandeis, The curse of bigness: miscellaneous papers of Louis D. Brandeis edited by Osmond Kessler Fraenkel and Clarence Martin Lewis, (1965) p. 51
  20. ^ Heath, Joseph (2002). The Efficient Society: Why Canada Is As Close To Utopia As It Gets. Toronto: Penguin Canada. ISBN 978-0140292480.
  21. ^ Edward Francis Leopold Brech, Productivity in Perspective, 1914-1974 (Bristol: Thoemmes Press, 2002).
  22. ^ a b Michael R. Weatherburn, 'Scientific Management at Work: the Bedaux System, Management Consulting, and Worker Efficiency in British Industry, 1914-48' (Imperial College PhD thesis, 2014).
  23. ^ Craig R. Littler, Development of the Labour Process in Capitalist Societies: a Comparative Study of the Transformation of Work Organization in Britain, Japan and the USA (London: Heinemann, 1982) entry on Google Books
  24. ^ Steven Kreis, 'Charles E. Bedaux' in American National Biography online
  25. ^ Patricia Tisdall, Agents of Change: The Development and Practice of Management Consultancy (London: Heinemann, 1982).
  26. ^ Matthias Kipping, 'Consultancies, Institutions and the Diffusion of Taylorism in Britain, Germany and France, 1920s to 1950s', Business History (1997) PDF from Taylor & Francis online
  27. ^ Michael Ferguson, The Rise of Management Consulting in Britain (Aldershot: Ashgate, 2002)
  28. ^ 'Christopher D. McKenna, The World's Newest Profession: Management Consulting in the Twentieth Century (Cambridge: CUP, 2010). Cambridge University Press
  29. ^ Alexander (2008) ch. 1
  30. ^ Arnold White, Efficiency and empire (1901).
  31. ^ W.H. Dawson, The German Workman: a Study in National Efficiency (1906) online
  32. ^ G. R. Searle, The Quest for National Efficiency, 1899–1914: A Study in Politics and Political Thought (Oxford UP, 1971)
  33. ^ G. R. Searle, "The Politics of National Efficiency and of War, 1900–1918" in Chris Wrigley, ed., A Companion to Early 20th-Century Britain (Blackwell, 2003) p. 56
  34. ^ James T. Kloppenberg, Uncertain Victory: Social Democracy and Progressivism in European and American Thought, 1870–1920 (1988) p 475
  35. ^ Henry Pelling, Winston Churchill (1989) p. 104
  36. ^ Searle (1971)
  37. ^ Mary Nolan, "Housework Made Easy: the Taylorized Housewife in Weimar Germany's Rationalized Economy," Feminist Studies. Volume: 16. Issue: 3. pp 549+
  38. ^ Paul Erker, "Das Bedaux-System: Neue Aspekte der Historischen Rationalisierungsforschung,["The Bedaux system: new aspects of research on the history of rationalization"], Zeitschrift für Unternehmensgeschichte, 1996, Vol. 41#2 pp 139–158
  39. ^ Nolan (1975)
  40. ^ Andrea Gabor, The Man Who Discovered Quality: How W. Edwards Deming Brought the Quality Revolution to America (1992).

Bibliography edit

  • Alexander, Jennifer K. The Mantra of Efficiency: From Waterwheel to Social Control, (2008), international perspective excerpt and text search
  • Bruce, Kyle, and Chris Nyland. "Scientific Management, Institutionalism, and Business Stabilization: 1903–1923," Journal of Economic Issues Vol. 35, No. 4 (Dec., 2001), pp. 955–978 in JSTOR
  • Chandler, Alfred D. Jr. The Visible Hand: The Managerial Revolution in American Business (1977)
  • Fry, Brian R. Mastering Public Administration: From Max Weber to Dwight Waldo (1989) online edition
  • Hays, Samuel P. Conservation and the Gospel of Efficiency: The Progressive Conservation Movement 1890–1920 (1959).
  • Haber, Samuel. Efficiency and Uplift: Scientific Management in the Progressive Era, 1890–1920 (1964)
  • Hawley, Ellis W. "Herbert Hoover, the Commerce Secretariat, and the vision of the 'Associative State'." Journal of American History, (1974) 61: 116–140. in JSTOR
  • Jensen, Richard. "Democracy, Republicanism and Efficiency: The Values of American Politics, 1885–1930," in Byron Shafer and Anthony Badger, eds, Contesting Democracy: Substance and Structure in American Political History, 1775–2000 (U of Kansas Press, 2001) pp 149–180; online version
  • Jordan, John M. Machine-Age Ideology: Social Engineering and American Liberalism, 1911–1939 (1994).
  • Kanigel, Robert. The One Best Way: Frederick Winslow Taylor and the Enigma of Efficiency. (Penguin, 1997).
  • Knoedler; Janet T. "Veblen and Technical Efficiency," Journal of Economic Issues, Vol. 31, 1997
  • Knoll, Michael: From Kidd to Dewey: The Origin and Meaning of Social Efficiency. Journal of Curriculum Studies 41 (June 2009), No. 3, pp. 361–391.
  • Lamoreaux, Naomi and Daniel M. G. Raft eds. Coordination and Information: Historical Perspectives on the Organization of Enterprise University of Chicago Press, 1995
  • Lee, Mordecai. Bureaus of Efficiency: Reforming Local Government in the Progressive Era (Marquette University Press, 2008) ISBN 978-0-87462-081-8
  • Merkle, Judith A. Management and Ideology: The Legacy of the International Scientific Management Movement (1980)
  • Nelson, Daniel. Frederick W. Taylor and the Rise of Scientific Management (1980).
  • Nelson, Daniel. Managers and Workers: Origins of the Twentieth-Century Factory System in the United States, 1880–1920 2d ed. (1995).
  • Noble, David F. America by Design (1979).
  • Nolan, Mary. Visions of Modernity: American Business and the Modernization of Germany (1995)
  • Nolan, Mary. "Housework Made Easy: the Taylorized Housewife in Weimar Germany's Rationalized Economy," Feminist Studies. (1975) Volume: 16. Issue: 3. pp 549+
  • Searle, G. R. The quest for national efficiency: a study in British politics and political thought, 1899–1914 (1971)
  • Stillman II, Richard J. Creating the American State: The Moral Reformers and the Modern Administrative World They Made (1998) online edition

Primary sources edit

  • Dewey, Melville. "Efficiency Society" Encyclopedia Americana (1918)online vol 9 p 720
  • Emerson, Harrington, "Efficiency Engineering" Encyclopedia Americana (1918) online vol 9 pp 714–20
  • Taylor, Frederick Winslow Principles of Scientific Management (1913) online edition
  • Taylor, Frederick Winslow. Scientific Management: Early Sociology of Management and Organizations (2003), reprints Shop Management (1903), The Principles of Scientific Management (1911) and Testimony Before the Special House Committee (1912).
  • White, Arnold. Efficiency and empire (1901) online edition, influential study regarding the British Empire

efficiency, movement, efficiency, movement, major, movement, united, states, britain, other, industrial, nations, early, 20th, century, that, sought, identify, eliminate, waste, areas, economy, society, develop, implement, best, practices, concept, covered, me. The efficiency movement was a major movement in the United States Britain and other industrial nations in the early 20th century that sought to identify and eliminate waste in all areas of the economy and society and to develop and implement best practices 1 The concept covered mechanical economic social and personal improvement 2 The quest for efficiency promised effective dynamic management rewarded by growth 3 As a result of the influence of an early proponent it is more often known as Taylorism Contents 1 United States 1 1 Municipal and state efficiency 1 2 Philanthropy 1 3 Conservation 1 4 National politics 1 5 Antitrust 1 6 Bedaux system 1 7 Relation to other movements 2 Britain 3 Germany 4 Soviet Union 5 Japan 6 Notes 7 Bibliography 7 1 Primary sourcesUnited States editThe efficiency movement played a central role in the Progressive Era in the United States where it flourished 1890 1932 4 Adherents argued that all aspects of the economy society and government were riddled with waste and inefficiency Everything would be better if experts identified the problems and fixed them The result was strong support for building research universities and schools of business and engineering municipal research agencies as well as reform of hospitals and medical schools and the practice of farming 5 Perhaps the best known leaders were engineers Frederick Winslow Taylor 1856 1915 who used a stopwatch to identify the smallest inefficiencies and Frank Bunker Gilbreth Sr 1868 1924 who proclaimed there was always one best way to fix a problem Leaders including Herbert Croly Charles R van Hise and Richard Ely sought to improve governmental performance by training experts in public service comparable to those in Germany notably at the Universities of Wisconsin and Pennsylvania Schools of business administration set up management programs oriented toward efficiency 6 Municipal and state efficiency edit Many cities set up efficiency bureaus to identify waste and apply the best practices For example Chicago created an Efficiency Division 1910 16 within the city government s Civil Service Commission and private citizens organized the Chicago Bureau of Public Efficiency 1910 32 The former pioneered the study of personal efficiency measuring employees performance through new scientific merit systems and efficiency movement 7 State governments were active as well For example Massachusetts set up its Commission on Economy and Efficiency in 1912 It made hundreds of recommendations 8 Philanthropy edit Leading philanthropists such as Andrew Carnegie 9 and John D Rockefeller actively promoted the efficiency movement In his many philanthropic pursuits Rockefeller believed in supporting efficiency He said To help an inefficient ill located unnecessary school is a waste it is highly probable that enough money has been squandered on unwise educational projects to have built up a national system of higher education adequate to our needs if the money had been properly directed to that end 10 Conservation edit The conservation movement regarding national resources came to prominence during the Progressive Era According to historian Samuel P Hays the conservation movement was based on the gospel of the efficiency 11 The Massachusetts Commission on Economy and Efficiency reflected the new concern with conservation It said in 1912 The only proper basis for the protection of game birds wild fowl and indeed all animals is an economic one and must be based upon carefully constructed and properly enforced laws for the conservation of all species for the benefit of future generations of our citizens rather than based on local opinion This expenditure for the protection of fish and game is clearly a wise economy tending to prevent the annihilation of birds and other animals valuable to mankind which might otherwise become extinct It may be said that Massachusetts and her sister States have suffered irreparable loss by carelessly allowing for generations past indiscriminate waste of animal life 8 President Roosevelt was the nation s foremost conservationist putting the issue high on the national agenda by emphasizing the need to eliminate wasteful uses of limited natural resources He worked with all the major figures of the movement especially his chief advisor on the matter Gifford Pinchot Roosevelt was deeply committed to conserving natural resources and is considered to be the nation s first conservation President 12 nbsp 1908 US editorial cartoon on Theodore Roosevelt and conservationIn 1908 Roosevelt sponsored the Conference of Governors held in the White House with a focus on natural resources and their most efficient use Roosevelt delivered the opening address Conservation as a National Duty In contrast environmentalist John Muir promulgated a very different view of conservation rejecting the efficiency motivation Muir instead preached that nature was sacred and humans are intruders who should look but not develop Working through the Sierra Club he founded Muir tried to minimize commercial use of water resources and forests 13 While Muir wanted nature preserved for the sake of pure beauty Roosevelt subscribed to Pinchot s formulation to make the forest produce the largest amount of whatever crop or service will be most useful and keep on producing it for generation after generation of men and trees 14 National politics edit In U S national politics the most prominent figure was Herbert Hoover a trained engineer who played down politics and believed dispassionate nonpolitical experts could solve the nation s great problems such as ending poverty 15 After 1929 Democrats blamed the Great Depression on Hoover and helped to somewhat discredit the movement citation needed Antitrust edit Boston lawyer Louis Brandeis 1856 1941 argued bigness conflicted with efficiency and added a new political dimension to the Efficiency Movement For instance while fighting against legalized price fixing Brandeis launched an effort to influence congressional policymaking with the help of his friend Norman Hapgood who was then the editor of Harper s Weekly He coordinated the publication of a series of articles Competition Kills Efficiency and the One Price Article and How Europe deals with the one price goods which were also distributed by the lobbying group American Fair Trade League to legislators Supreme Court justices governors and twenty national magazines 16 For his works he was asked to speak before a congressional committee considering the price fixing bill he drafted Here he stated that big business is not more efficient than little business and that it is a mistake to suppose that the department stores can do business cheaper than the little dealer 16 Brandeis ideas on which business is most efficient conflicted with Croly s positions which favored efficiency driven by a kind of consolidation gained through large scale economic operations 17 As early as 1895 Brandeis had warned of the harm that giant corporations could do to competitors customers and their own workers The growth of industrialization was creating mammoth companies which he felt threatened the well being of millions of Americans 18 In The Curse of Bigness he argued Efficiency means greater production with less effort and at less cost through the elimination of unnecessary waste human and material How else can we hope to attain our social ideals 19 He also argued against an appeal to Congress by the state regulated railroad industry in 1910 seeking an increase in rates Brandeis explained that instead of passing along increased costs to the consumer the railroads should pursue efficiency by reducing their overhead and streamlining their operations initiatives that were unprecedented during the time 20 Bedaux system edit nbsp Charles E Bedaux The Bedaux Unit Principle of Industrial Measurement Journal of Applied Psychology 1921 PDF click to read The Bedaux system developed by Franco American management consultant Charles Bedaux 1886 1944 built on the work of F W Taylor and Charles E Knoeppel 21 22 Its distinctive advancement beyond these earlier thinkers was the Bedaux Unit or B a universal measure for all manual work 23 22 The Bedaux System was influential in the United States in the 1920s and Europe in the 1930s and 1940s especially in Britain 24 25 From the 1920s to the 1950s there were about one thousand companies in 21 countries worldwide that were run on the Bedaux System including giants such as Swift s Eastman Kodak B F Goodrich DuPont Fiat ICI and General Electric 26 25 27 28 29 Relation to other movements edit Later movements had echoes of the Efficiency Movement and were more directly inspired by Taylor and Taylorism Technocracy for instance and others flourished in the 1930s and 1940s Postmodern opponents of nuclear energy in the 1970s broadened their attack to try to discredit movements that saw salvation for human society in technical expertise alone or which held that scientists or engineers had any special expertise to offer in the political realm Coming into usage in 1990 the Western term lean manufacturing lean enterprise lean production or simply lean refers to a business idea that considered the expenditure of resources for anything other than the creation of value for the end customer to be wasteful and thus a target for elimination Today the Lean concept is broadening to include a greater range of strategic goals not just cost cutting and efficiency citation needed Britain editIn engineering the concept of efficiency was developed in Britain in the mid 18th century by John Smeaton 1724 1792 Called the father of civil engineering he studied water wheels and steam engines 30 In the late 19th century there was much talk about improving the efficiency of the administration and economic performance of the British Empire 31 National Efficiency was an attempt to discredit the old fashioned habits customs and institutions that put the British at a handicap in competition with the world especially with Germany 32 which was seen as the epitome of efficiency 33 In the early 20th century National Efficiency became a powerful demand a movement supported by prominent figures across the political spectrum who disparaged sentimental humanitarianism and identified waste as a mistake that could no longer be tolerated The movement took place in two waves the first wave from 1899 to 1905 was made urgent by the inefficiencies and failures in the Second Boer War 1899 1902 Spectator magazine reported in 1902 there was a universal outcry for efficiency in all departments of society in all aspects of life 34 The two most important themes were technocratic efficiency and managerial efficiency As White 1899 argued vigorously the empire needed to be put on a business footing and administered to get better results The looming threat of Germany which was widely seen as a much more efficient nation added urgency after 1902 Politically National Efficiency brought together modernizing Conservatives and Unionists Liberals who wanted to modernize their party and Fabians such as George Bernard Shaw and H G Wells along with Beatrice and Sidney Webb who had outgrown socialism and saw the utopia of a scientifically up to date society supervised by experts such as themselves Churchill in 1908 formed an alliance with the Webbs announcing the goal of a National Minimum covering hours working conditions and wages it was a safety net below which the individual would not be allowed to fall 35 36 Representative legislation included the Education Act 1902 which emphasized the role of experts in the schools system Higher education was an important initiative typified by the growth of the London School of Economics and the foundation of Imperial College 37 There was a pause in the movement between 1904 and 1909 when interest resumed The most prominent new leaders included Liberals Winston Churchill and David Lloyd George whose influence brought a bundle of reform legislation that introduced the welfare state to Britain Much of the popular and elite support for National Efficiency grew out of concern for Britain s military position especially with respect to Germany The Royal Navy underwent a dramatic modernization most famously in the introduction of the Dreadnought which in 1906 revolutionized naval warfare overnight citation needed Germany editIn Germany the efficiency movement was called rationalization and it was a powerful social and economic force before 1933 In part it looked explicitly at American models especially Fordism 38 The Bedaux system was widely adopted in the rubber and tire industry despite strong resistance in the socialist labor movement to the Bedaux system Continental AG the leading rubber company in Germany adopted the system and profited heavily from it thus surviving the Great Depression relatively undamaged and improving its competitive capabilities However most German businessmen preferred the home grown REFA system which focused on the standardization of working conditions tools and machinery 39 Rationalization meant higher productivity and greater efficiency promising science would bring prosperity More generally it promised a new level of modernity and was applied to economic production and consumption as well as public administration Various versions of rationalization were promoted by industrialists and Social Democrats by engineers and architects by educators and academics by middle class feminists and social workers by government officials and politicians of many parties It was ridiculed by the extremists in the Communist movement As ideology and practice rationalization challenged and transformed not only machines factories and vast business enterprises but also the lives of middle class and working class Germans 40 Soviet Union editIdeas of Science Management was very popular in the Soviet Union One of the leading theorists and practitioners of the Scientific Management in Soviet Russia was Alexei Gastev The Central Institute of Labour Tsentralnyi Institut Truda or TsIT founded by Gastev in 1921 with Vladimir Lenin s support was a veritable citadel of socialist Taylorism Fascinated by Taylorism and Fordism Gastev has led a popular movement for the scientific organization of labor Nauchnaya Organizatsiya Truda or NOT Because of its emphasis on the cognitive components of labor some scholars consider Gastev s NOT to represent a Marxian variant of cybernetics As with the concept of Organoprojection 1919 by Pavel Florensky underlying Nikolai Bernstein and Gastev s approach lay a powerful man machine metaphor Japan editW Edwards Deming 1900 1993 brought the efficiency movement to Japan after World War II teaching top management how to improve design and thus service product quality testing and sales the last through global markets especially using statistical methods Deming then brought his methods back to the U S in the form of quality control called continuous improvement process 41 Notes edit Daniel T Rodgers Atlantic Crossings Social Politics in a Progressive Age 2000 Samuel Haber Efficiency and Uplift Scientific Management in the Progressive Era 1890 1920 1964 Jennifer K Alexander The Mantra of Efficiency From Waterwheel to Social Control 2008 Haber 1964 Spillman W J 1915 The Efficiency Movement in Its Relation to Agriculture The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 59 65 76 ISSN 0002 7162 Stuart Morris The Wisconsin Idea and Business Progressivism Journal of American Studies April 1970 Vol 4 1 pp 39 60 Mordecai Lee Bureaus of Efficiency Reforming Local Government in the Progressive Era Marquette University Press 2008 ISBN 978 0 87462 081 8 a b Commission on Economy and Efficiency Annual report of the Commission on Economy and Efficiency Boston 1913 p 76 online Abigail A Van Slyck Free to All Carnegie Libraries amp American Culture 1890 1920 1998 p 1 John D Rockefeller Random Reminiscences of Men and Events 1933 Samuel P Hays Conservation and the Gospel of Efficiency The Progressive Conservation Movement 1890 1920 1959 W Todd Benson President Theodore Roosevelt s Conservation Legacy 2003 Roderick Nash Wilderness and the American Mind 3rd ed 1982 pp 122 40 Gifford Pinchot Breaking New Ground 1947 p 32 William J Barber From new era to New Deal Herbert Hoover the economists and American economic policy 1921 1933 1989 p 5 a b McCraw Thomas 2009 Prophets of Regulation Cambridge MA Harvard University Press pp 103 104 ISBN 978 0674716087 Levy David 1985 Herbert Croly of the New Republic The Life and Thought of an American Progressive Princeton NJ Princeton University Press pp 157 158 ISBN 978 0691047256 Melvin I Urofsky Louis D Brandeis a life 2009 pp 300 26 Louis Brandeis The curse of bigness miscellaneous papers of Louis D Brandeis edited by Osmond Kessler Fraenkel and Clarence Martin Lewis 1965 p 51 Heath Joseph 2002 The Efficient Society Why Canada Is As Close To Utopia As It Gets Toronto Penguin Canada ISBN 978 0140292480 Edward Francis Leopold Brech Productivity in Perspective 1914 1974 Bristol Thoemmes Press 2002 a b Michael R Weatherburn Scientific Management at Work the Bedaux System Management Consulting and Worker Efficiency in British Industry 1914 48 Imperial College PhD thesis 2014 Craig R Littler Development of the Labour Process in Capitalist Societies a Comparative Study of the Transformation of Work Organization in Britain Japan and the USA London Heinemann 1982 entry on Google Books Steven Kreis Charles E Bedaux in American National Biography online a b Steven Kreis The Diffusion of Scientific Management the Bedaux Company in America and Britain 1926 1945 in A Mental Revolution Scientific Management Since Taylor 1992 Link PDF Patricia Tisdall Agents of Change The Development and Practice of Management Consultancy London Heinemann 1982 Matthias Kipping Consultancies Institutions and the Diffusion of Taylorism in Britain Germany and France 1920s to 1950s Business History 1997 PDF from Taylor amp Francis online Michael Ferguson The Rise of Management Consulting in Britain Aldershot Ashgate 2002 Christopher D McKenna The World s Newest Profession Management Consulting in the Twentieth Century Cambridge CUP 2010 Cambridge University Press Alexander 2008 ch 1 Arnold White Efficiency and empire 1901 W H Dawson The German Workman a Study in National Efficiency 1906 online G R Searle The Quest for National Efficiency 1899 1914 A Study in Politics and Political Thought Oxford UP 1971 G R Searle The Politics of National Efficiency and of War 1900 1918 in Chris Wrigley ed A Companion to Early 20th Century Britain Blackwell 2003 p 56 James T Kloppenberg Uncertain Victory Social Democracy and Progressivism in European and American Thought 1870 1920 1988 p 475 Henry Pelling Winston Churchill 1989 p 104 Searle 1971 Mary Nolan Housework Made Easy the Taylorized Housewife in Weimar Germany s Rationalized Economy Feminist Studies Volume 16 Issue 3 pp 549 Paul Erker Das Bedaux System Neue Aspekte der Historischen Rationalisierungsforschung The Bedaux system new aspects of research on the history of rationalization Zeitschrift fur Unternehmensgeschichte 1996 Vol 41 2 pp 139 158 Nolan 1975 Andrea Gabor The Man Who Discovered Quality How W Edwards Deming Brought the Quality Revolution to America 1992 Bibliography editAlexander Jennifer K The Mantra of Efficiency From Waterwheel to Social Control 2008 international perspective excerpt and text search Bruce Kyle and Chris Nyland Scientific Management Institutionalism and Business Stabilization 1903 1923 Journal of Economic Issues Vol 35 No 4 Dec 2001 pp 955 978 in JSTOR Chandler Alfred D Jr The Visible Hand The Managerial Revolution in American Business 1977 Fry Brian R Mastering Public Administration From Max Weber to Dwight Waldo 1989 online edition Hays Samuel P Conservation and the Gospel of Efficiency The Progressive Conservation Movement 1890 1920 1959 Haber Samuel Efficiency and Uplift Scientific Management in the Progressive Era 1890 1920 1964 Hawley Ellis W Herbert Hoover the Commerce Secretariat and the vision of the Associative State Journal of American History 1974 61 116 140 in JSTOR Jensen Richard Democracy Republicanism and Efficiency The Values of American Politics 1885 1930 in Byron Shafer and Anthony Badger eds Contesting Democracy Substance and Structure in American Political History 1775 2000 U of Kansas Press 2001 pp 149 180 online version Jordan John M Machine Age Ideology Social Engineering and American Liberalism 1911 1939 1994 Kanigel Robert The One Best Way Frederick Winslow Taylor and the Enigma of Efficiency Penguin 1997 Knoedler Janet T Veblen and Technical Efficiency Journal of Economic Issues Vol 31 1997 Knoll Michael From Kidd to Dewey The Origin and Meaning of Social Efficiency Journal of Curriculum Studies 41 June 2009 No 3 pp 361 391 Lamoreaux Naomi and Daniel M G Raft eds Coordination and Information Historical Perspectives on the Organization of Enterprise University of Chicago Press 1995 Lee Mordecai Bureaus of Efficiency Reforming Local Government in the Progressive Era Marquette University Press 2008 ISBN 978 0 87462 081 8 Merkle Judith A Management and Ideology The Legacy of the International Scientific Management Movement 1980 Nelson Daniel Frederick W Taylor and the Rise of Scientific Management 1980 Nelson Daniel Managers and Workers Origins of the Twentieth Century Factory System in the United States 1880 1920 2d ed 1995 Noble David F America by Design 1979 Nolan Mary Visions of Modernity American Business and the Modernization of Germany 1995 Nolan Mary Housework Made Easy the Taylorized Housewife in Weimar Germany s Rationalized Economy Feminist Studies 1975 Volume 16 Issue 3 pp 549 Searle G R The quest for national efficiency a study in British politics and political thought 1899 1914 1971 Stillman II Richard J Creating the American State The Moral Reformers and the Modern Administrative World They Made 1998 online editionPrimary sources edit Dewey Melville Efficiency Society Encyclopedia Americana 1918 online vol 9 p 720 Emerson Harrington Efficiency Engineering Encyclopedia Americana 1918 online vol 9 pp 714 20 Taylor Frederick Winslow Principles of Scientific Management 1913 online edition Taylor Frederick Winslow Scientific Management Early Sociology of Management and Organizations 2003 reprints Shop Management 1903 The Principles of Scientific Management 1911 and Testimony Before the Special House Committee 1912 White Arnold Efficiency and empire 1901 online edition influential study regarding the British Empire Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Efficiency movement amp oldid 1205989596, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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