B
Bartolome_Casas
Guest
The U.S. Catholic bishops web site says this:
Family Living Wage – Ever since Rerum Novarum, issued by Pope Leo XIII in 1891, the issue of just wages has been a consistent concern of Catholic Social Teaching. In their 1986 economics pastoral, the bishops of the United States wrote: “The first line of attack against poverty must be to build and sustain a healthy economy that provides employment opportunities at just wages for all adults who are able to work.” (196) CCHD gives priority to business development initiatives that pay a living wage.
old.usccb.org/cchd/grants/pri…s.shtml#family
Here’s an article titled “Slave Wages Condemned by Pope John Paul II.” cjd.org/paper/wages.html
The 1911 Catholic Encyclopedia says this, in part:
Today Catholic teaching on compensation is quite precise as regards the just minimum. It may be summarized in these words of Pope Leo XIII in the famous Encyclical “Rerum Novarum” (15 May, 1891), on the condition of the working classes: “there is a dictate of nature more ancient and more imperious than any bargain between man and man, that the remuneration must be sufficient to support the wage-earner in reasonable and frugal comfort. If through necessity or fear of a worse evil the workman accepts harder conditions, because an employer or contractor will give him no better, he is the victim of fraud and injustice.”…
newadvent.org/cathen/04185a.htm
Family Living Wage – Ever since Rerum Novarum, issued by Pope Leo XIII in 1891, the issue of just wages has been a consistent concern of Catholic Social Teaching. In their 1986 economics pastoral, the bishops of the United States wrote: “The first line of attack against poverty must be to build and sustain a healthy economy that provides employment opportunities at just wages for all adults who are able to work.” (196) CCHD gives priority to business development initiatives that pay a living wage.
old.usccb.org/cchd/grants/pri…s.shtml#family
Here’s an article titled “Slave Wages Condemned by Pope John Paul II.” cjd.org/paper/wages.html
The 1911 Catholic Encyclopedia says this, in part:
Today Catholic teaching on compensation is quite precise as regards the just minimum. It may be summarized in these words of Pope Leo XIII in the famous Encyclical “Rerum Novarum” (15 May, 1891), on the condition of the working classes: “there is a dictate of nature more ancient and more imperious than any bargain between man and man, that the remuneration must be sufficient to support the wage-earner in reasonable and frugal comfort. If through necessity or fear of a worse evil the workman accepts harder conditions, because an employer or contractor will give him no better, he is the victim of fraud and injustice.”…
newadvent.org/cathen/04185a.htm