After leaving university, Beveridge initially became a lawyer. He became interested in the
social services and wrote about the subject for the
Morning Post newspaper. His interest in the causes of unemployment began in 1903 when he worked at
Toynbee Hall, a
settlement house in London. There he worked closely with
Sidney Webb and
Beatrice Webb and was influenced by their theories of social reform, becoming active in promoting
old age pensions,
free school meals, and campaigning for a national system of
labour exchanges. In 1908, now considered to be Britain's leading authority on
unemployment insurance, he was introduced by Beatrice Webb to
Winston Churchill, who had recently been promoted to the Cabinet as
President of the Board of Trade. Churchill invited Beveridge to join the Board of Trade, and he organised the implementation of the national system of labour exchanges and
National Insurance to combat unemployment and poverty. During the
First World War he was involved in mobilising and controlling manpower. After the war, he was knighted and made permanent secretary to the
Ministry of Food. In 1919, he left the civil service to become director of the
London School of Economics. Over the next few years he served on several commissions and committees on
social policy. He was so highly influenced by the
Fabian Society socialists – in particular by
Beatrice Webb, with whom he worked on the 1909
Poor Laws report – that he could be considered one of their number. He published academic economic works including his early work on unemployment (1909). The Fabians made him director of the LSE in 1919, a post he retained until 1937. During his time as director, he jousted with
Edwin Cannan and
Lionel Robbins, who were trying to steer the LSE away from its Fabian roots. From 1929 he led the
International scientific committee on price history, contributing a large historical study,
Prices and Wages in England from the Twelfth to the Nineteenth Century (1939). In 1933, he helped set up the
Academic Assistance Council, which helped prominent academics who had been dismissed from their posts on grounds of race, religion or political position to escape Nazi persecution. In 1937, Beveridge was appointed
Master of
University College, Oxford. ==Wartime work==