Essential Business: The Flu, the War, and the Economy

IF 0.4 3区 历史学 Q1 HISTORY Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era Pub Date : 2023-04-04 DOI:10.1017/S1537781423000014
Max Ehrenfreund
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Abstract

Abstract During the First World War, the term “essential business” was used initially in military procurement, and then in disease control when pandemic influenza struck. Essential businesses were exempt from restrictions imposed in the interest of national defense or public health, so debates about essential business concerned the necessity of various goods and services to the consumer. Ultimately, the concept of essential business depended on a shared understanding of the American consumer’s rights and duties as a citizen. On the one hand, consumers furthered the state’s interests by complying with, interpreting, implementing, and enforcing public-health restrictions. On the other, what contemporaries called “the American standard of living” entitled citizens to maintain relatively large expenditures. This relationship between citizenship and consumption explains the economy’s surprising stability in 1918. The flu did not cause a depression because social norms authorized most consumer expenditures as legitimate and appropriate, even during the wartime epidemic. “Essential” work is theorized using the Marxist concept of socially necessary labor, which relates productivity and purchasing power to norms of consumption.
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基本业务:流感、战争和经济
摘要在第一次世界大战期间,“基本业务”一词最初用于军事采购,然后在大流行性流感来袭时用于疾病控制。基本业务不受出于国防或公共卫生利益而实施的限制,因此关于基本业务的辩论涉及消费者购买各种商品和服务的必要性。最终,基本商业的概念取决于对美国消费者作为公民的权利和义务的共同理解。一方面,消费者通过遵守、解释、实施和执行公共卫生限制来促进国家利益。另一方面,同时代人所说的“美国生活水平”使公民有权维持相对较大的支出。公民身份和消费之间的这种关系解释了1918年经济惊人的稳定。流感并没有引起大萧条,因为社会规范授权大多数消费者支出是合法和适当的,即使在战时疫情期间也是如此。“必要”劳动是利用马克思主义的社会必要劳动概念理论化的,该概念将生产力和购买力与消费规范联系起来。
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