© 2006 Kheel Center for Labor-Management Documentation and
Archives, Cornell University Library
DESCRIPTIVE SUMMARY
Title:
Anglo-American Council on Productivity.
Pamphlets,
1948-1952.
Collection Number:
5334
Creator:
Anglo-American Council on Productivity.
Quantity:
1 linear ft.
Forms of Material:
Pamphlets.
Repository:
Kheel Center for Labor-Management
Documentation and Archives, Martin P. Catherwood Library, Cornell University.
Abstract:
Pamphlets created by the Anglo-American
Council on Productivity.
ORGANIZATIONAL HISTORY
The Anglo-American Council on Productivity was formed in the Autumn of
1948 on the initiative of Sir Stafford Cripps, the Chancellor of the Exchequer
in Eritian, and Mr. Paul Hoffman, the Economic Cooperation Administrator in the
U.S.A. It was composed of representatives of management and labor both in the
United Kingdom and in the United States of America. In the United Kingdom
section the constituent bodies were the Federation of British Industries, the
British Employers' Confederation and the Trades Union Congress.
The purpose of the Council was to promote economic well-being by a
free exchange of knowledge in the realm of industrial organisation, method and
technique and thereby to assist British industry to raise the level of its
productivity. The principal means adopted to achieve this end was to send to
America industrial Teams, the members of which were drawn in equal numbers from
the supervisory, the technical, and the workshop levels. The business of the
Teams was to study American production methods, to report their observations
and findings and to make recommendations.
Each team went out as an independent body and was solely responsible
for its report. Team visits were completed in 1952. The work of following up on
the reports was transferred to the British Productivity Council, and the
Anglo-American Council was dissolved as of June 30, 1952.
SUBJECTS
Names:
Anglo-American Council on
Productivity.
Subjects:
Industrial relations -- Great
Britain.
Industrial relations -- United
States.
Great Britain -- Economic policy.
United States -- Economic policy.
Form and Genre Terms:
Pamphlets.