@article{oai:nagoya.repo.nii.ac.jp:00008825, author = {尾崎, 邦博 and OZAKI, Kunihiro}, issue = {2}, journal = {経済科学}, month = {Sep}, note = {Leonard Trelawney Hobhouse is known as a prominent theorist of the New Liberalism. In this paper Hobhouse’s idea of a living wage is explored. According to him, a living wage, which should provide a worker with the means of living a civilized existence, must serve to stimulate and maintain in permanence a socially desirable service. Such a wage, which suffices to call forth any kind of service which society requires, is the just reward for that kind of service, and constitutes the minimum which it is the duty of society to secure for all that are performing services which it requires. It is equally the duty of the individual to perform his function which is useful to society in return. Then, in a well-ordered society, every part would perform its function and every function would be adequately maintained. Thus, the right to a living wage follows from the principle of economic justice, which assigns to every social function its adequate maintenance and support, and renders what is due to each function that is engaged in the performance of useful service. This equation between function and maintenance is the cardinal principle of economic justice.}, pages = {91--103}, title = {L. T. ホブハウスの賃銀論}, volume = {56}, year = {2008} }