This document was written forty years after Leo XIII's document, "Rerum Novarum" and is also about the concerns not only of the Employee but also the concerns of the Employer. As in the previous quote I shall be elucidating the teaching of Leo XIII that "A fair day's work deserves a fair day's wage".
I shall copy out for your
reading
a few of the relevant passages from "Pacem
in Terris"
18. In the economic sphere, it is evident that a man has the inherent right not only to be given the opportunity to work, but also to be allowed the exercise of personal initiative in the work he does.
19. The conditions in which a man works form a necessary corollary to these rights. They must not be such as to weaken his physical or moral fibre, or militate against the proper development of adolescents to manhood. Women must be accorded such conditions of work as are consistent with their needs and responsibilities as wives and mothers.
20. A further
consequence of man's personal
dignity is
his right to engage in economic activities suited to his degree of
responsibility. The worker is likewise entitled to a wage that is
determined in accordance
with the precepts of justice. This needs stressing. The amount a worker
receives must be sufficient, in proportion to available funds, to allow
him and his family a standard of living consistent with human dignity.
Pope Pius XII expressed it in these terms:
"Nature imposes work upon man as a duty, and man has
the corresponding natural right to demand that the work he does shall
provide
him with the means of livelihood for himself and his children. Such is
nature's categorical imperative for the preservation of man.''
The Right of Meeting and Association
23. Men are by nature social, and consequently they have the right to meet together and to form associations with their fellows. They have the right to confer on such associations the type of organization which they consider best calculated to achieve their objectives. They have also the right to exercise their own initiative and act on their own responsibility within these associations for the attainment of the desired results.
24. As We insisted in Our encyclical Mater et Magistra, the founding of a great many such intermediate groups or societies for the pursuit of aims which it is not within the competence of the individual to achieve efficiently, is a matter of great urgency. Such groups and societies must be considered absolutely essential for the safeguarding of man's personal freedom and dignity, while leaving intact a sense of responsibility.
64. The public
administration must therefore give
considerable
care and thought to the question of social as well as economic
progress,
and to the development of essential services in keeping with the
expansion
of the productive system. Such services include road-building,
transportation,
communications, drinking-water, housing, medical care, ample facilities
for the practice of religion, and aids to recreation. The government
must
also see to the provision of insurance facilities, to obviate any
likelihood
of a citizen's being unable to maintain a decent standard of living in
the event of some misfortune, or greatly in creased family
responsibilities.
The government is also required to show no less
energy
and efficiency in the matter of providing opportunities for suitable
employment,
graded to the capacity of the workers. It must make sure that working
men
are paid a just and equitable wage, and are allowed a sense of
responsibility
in the industrial concerns for which they work. It must facilitate the
formation of intermediate groups, so that the social life of the people
may become more fruitful and less constrained. And finally, it must
ensure
that everyone has the means and opportunity of sharing as far as
possible
in cultural benefits.
102. We advocate
in such cases the policy of
bringing
the work to the workers, wherever possible, rather than bringing
workers
to the scene of the work. In this way many people will be afforded an
opportunity
of increasing their resources without being exposed to the painful
necessity
of uprooting themselves from their own homes, settling in a strange
environment,
and forming new social contacts.
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