The
National Industrial Recovery Act designed to promote economic recovery
and reform, encourage collective bargaining for
unions, establish maximum work hours and minimum
wages, and forbid child labor
NIRA was signed into law by President Franklin Delano Roosevelt on June 16, 1933. Title I of the Act
was devoted to industrial recovery. It authorized
the establishment of industrial codes of fair
competition, guaranteed trade union rights,
permitted the regulation of working standards,
and regulated the price of certain petroleum
products and their transportation. Title II of
the Act established the Public Works
Administration (PWA). The Act was implemented by
the National Recovery Administration (NRA) and
the Public Works Administration.
The NIRA
sanctioned, supported, and, in some cases,
enforced an alliance of industries. Antitrust
laws were suspended, and companies were required
to write industry-wide "codes of fair
competition" that effectively fixed prices
and wages, established production quotas, and
imposed restrictions on entry of other companies
into the alliances. The act further called for
industrial self-regulation and declared that
codes of fair competition -- for the protection
of consumers, competitors, and employers -- were
to be drafted for the various industries of the
country and were to be subject to public
hearings. Employees were given the right to
organize and bargain collectively and could not
be required, as a condition of employment, to
either join or refrain from joining a labor
organization. Those businesses that
"voluntarily" abided by the codes
established by their respective industries were
allowed to display the poster at left, and
consumers were encouraged to only do business
with establishments that displayed their industry
compliance.
Sixteen specific pieces of
legislation came out of the NIRA in 1933,
including: Emergency Banking Act, Civilian
Conservation Corps, Federal Emergency Relief Act,
Emergency Farm Mortgage Act, Home Owner's Loan
Act, Agricultural Adjustment Act, Tennessee
Valley Authority, and abandonment of the gold
standard.
Title I of the NIRA was ruled
unconstitutional by the U.S. Supreme Court on May
27, 1935, as a result of A.L.A. Schechter
Poultry Corp. v. United States. The case
began when Schechter was cited for disobeying
requirements of the "Code of Fair
Competition for the Live Poultry of the
Metropolitan Area in and about the City of New
York" by failing to observe provisions for
fixing minimum wages and maximum hours for
employees, allowing customers to select
individual chickens, selling unfit chickens,
dealing with slaughterhouses and dealers not
licensed under code, and making false reports. In
its ruling, the Court said that the NIRA
provisions mandating industry-wide codes was not
a valid exercise of federal power, that the Act
gave the President too much control, and that
Congress did not have the authority to tell
states how much their minimum wages and maximum
work hours could be. Although the Supreme Court's
ruling effectively disbanded the NRA, it had
already by then been deemed responsible for four
million people finding work.
Our Documents http://www.ourdocuments.gov/doc.php?flash=true&doc=66
United States History http://www.u-s-history.com/pages/h1663.html
President Franklin Delano Roosevelt
Questions or comments about
this page?
|