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What was a direct impact of the Industrial Revolution on traditional workers?

AIncreased demand for skilled artisans

BEstablishment of worker cooperatives for mutual support

CDevelopment of new trade guilds to regulate factory work

DDecline of cottage industries and unemployment

Answer:

D. Decline of cottage industries and unemployment

Read Explanation:

EVOLUTION OF CO-OPERATION

  • Origin of the Co-operative Movement

Birthplace: England

  • Known as the Mecca, Cradle, and Birthplace of the Co-operative Movement

Specific origins of:

  • Consumer Co-operative Movement

  • Housing Co-operatives

  • Agricultural Co-operatives

History

  • Co-operative Movement is closely tied to the Industrial Revolution (1760–1840).

  • "Hungry Forties" (1840) marked severe hardship due to industrial disruptions

Impact of the Industrial Revolution on the Cooperative Movement

Impact of the Industrial Revolution on the Co-operative Movement

Economic & Social Changes

  • The Industrial Revolution led to the decline of cottage industries, causing widespread unemployment among traditional craftsmen and workers.

  • It brought both prosperity and misery to Great Britain:-

  • Economic growth for factory owners and capitalists

  • Severe hardship and joblessness for many workers

Class Division

  • Resulted in unequal distribution of wealth

Led to the formation of two major economic classes:

  • Working Class – laborers with poor wages and living conditions

  • Capitalist Class (Industrialists) – wealthy factory owners and entrepreneurs

  • Corn Laws and Consumer Struggles

  • The British Government enacted the "Corn Laws", which imposed high tariffs on imported grain

  • This caused a sharp increase in prices of essential consumer commodities

  • Made basic food items unaffordable for the working class

Intellectual and Social Response

  • In response to these growing inequalities and social problems:

  • Economists, political thinkers, and social reformers began seeking solutions

  • Several reform movements emerged to address these injustices

  • Quote by C.R. Fay: “Co-operation is the product of socio-economic conditions created by the Industrial Revolution.”

  • Movement began in the second half of the 18th century

Friendly Societies & the Friendly Societies Act

  • Friendly Societies Act, 1793

  • Passed by the British Parliament in 1793

  • Aimed to recognize and regulate charitable organizations that offered mutual aid and basic necessities to the poor

These societies:

  • Were formed by philanthropists

  • Purchased food items like bread and potatoes in bulk

  • Supplied them at cost price to poor people

  • Focused on charitable help, not economic reform

Key Features

  • These were early charitable and mutual aid societies

  • The core idea was: “Only to cure poverty, not to prevent poverty”

Impact on Co-operative Thought

  • Over time, people shifted from relying on charity to exploring self-help and mutual help

  • This shift laid the foundation for the Co-operative Movement

Trade Union Movement

  • Emerged as a response to poor working conditions during the Industrial Revolution

Aimed at collective bargaining to secure:

  • Better wages

  • Improved working hours

  • Safer working conditions

  • Early Trade Union Example : In 1824, Charles Howarth and others started the Rochdale Weavers’ Union

Rochdale Friendly Co-operative Society (1830)

  • A predecessor to the well-known Rochdale Equitable Pioneers Society

  • Membership: 60 flannel weavers

  • Represented the transition from Friendly Societies to full-fledged co-operatives


Related Questions:

With reference to cooperative societies, consider the following statements:

  1. A cooperative Society is a volantary. association of persons.
  2. Cooperative Societies are not driven by economic interests
  3. Cooperatives in all states in India are Soley formed under the Co-operative Societies Act, 1912.
  4. To form a cooperative society at least ten Persons are required.
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