The Coal Situation and the Coal Parliament: A Rejoinder Get access John E. Orchard John E. Orchard Columbia University Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar The Quarterly Journal of Economics, Volume 39, Issue 4, August 1925, Pages 644–651, https://doi.org/10.2307/1883270 Published: 01 August 1925
I. Disorganization of the coal industry: Proposal of a permanent coal commission or parliament, 198. — II. Analysis of chaotic condition of American coal industry. Irregular operation of mines, 201. — Fluctuations in output due to seasonal demand, 201; to strikes, 202. — Effect of irregular operation on labor, on costs of production, on price, 203.—III. Regular operation in European mines. Absence of seasonal fluctuations, 204. — Graphic presentation of average monthly output of United States, Great Britain, and Germany, 206. — Effect of size of reserves on regularity of mine operation in United States, 207; in Europe, 209. — Difficulty of preventing overexpansion in United States, 211. — The Virginian Railway case, 211. — Control of seasonal fluctuations by syndicates in Germany, 213; through exports in Great Britain, 216; in the United States, 218. — IV. A permanent coal parliament, 222. — Its organization, 223. — German coal parliament, 224. — Permanent organization of needle trades, 225. — Creation of parliament by coal industry, 226. — Inclusion of middleman, 227. — Inclusion of consumer, 228. — Nation-wide scope, 229. — Basis of organization, 231. — Enforcement of decisions, 233. — Functions, 233. — Coal institute, 234. — V. Some remedies to be applied. Halting of overdevelopment, 235. — Closing of surplus mines, 236. — Shifting of surplus miners, 236. — Increasing of exports, 237. — Coal exchanges, 237. — Storage of coal, 238. — Unemployment insurance, 239. — Conclusion, 240.
Consumers' Surplus in International Trade. A Supplementary Note Get access Allyn A. Young Allyn A. Young Harvard University Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar The Quarterly Journal of Economics, Volume 39, Issue 3, May 1925, Pages 498–499, https://doi.org/10.2307/1882443 Published: 01 May 1925
Values reporting themselves as relative prices, costs, to bear on values, must be relative costs, and must be reduced to money terms, 52. — Efforts and waitings, therefore, articulate with prices only when translated into money costs, 54. — The employer vs. employee point of view, 55. — The assumption that, in general, wages and interest are proportional with effort and waiting sacrifices, 55. — Cairnes's interpretation, with wages and interest conceived as derivative from product prices, and with labor as the antithesis of the remuneration of it, 55. — Employer vs. employee cost, 56. — Relation of effort and waitings costs to employer money costs, 56. — Mill, 56. — Taussig and Marshall, 57. — Ricardo, 59. — Ricardo and Cairnes, 59. — The constitution of the groups — by definition, 63. — The groupings not by vocations but by remunerations, 65. — In what sense can the intra-group relationships be competitive? 66. — Cairnes's and Taussig's reports of the groupings, 67. — Dates of group fixation vs. dates of group competition, 70. — The groupings further examined, 71. — Social stratification the point of emphasis, not competition or the lack of it, 73. — Inherited opportunity never more than part explanation of income groupings, or of ratios of income to sacrifice, 74. — Complete fluidity of labor also would leave the groupings no less inadequate, 76. — The three requisites for a tenable labor theory of values still unmet, 80.
Journal Article Two Books on Agriculture Get access John Ise John Ise University of Kansas Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar The Quarterly Journal of Economics, Volume 39, Issue 4, August 1925, Pages 635–643, https://doi.org/10.2307/1883269 Published: 01 August 1925
Definition of displacement of skill, 112. — The factors determining the amount of displacement, 112. — Rapidity of introduction of the machine, 113. — The mobility of labor within the trade, 117. — Effect of the machine in increasing demand for the product, 121. — The labor-displacing power of the machine, 126. — Extent to which the skill of the handworker is useful in the machine process, 127. — Variety of combination of factors, 132.
I. Standards of consumption; recurring and non-recurring wants, 581. — II. Want intensities as fractional and time-dependent. The quantitative measurement of wants in the market, 588. — III. The determination of market demand schedules. The significance of the demand price index, 592. — IV. Summary of results. The scope of marginal-utility analysis; the maximization of satisfactions, 603.
Journal Article Edgeworth's Papers Relating to Political Economy Get access Irving Fisher Irving Fisher Yale University Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar The Quarterly Journal of Economics, Volume 40, Issue 1, November 1925, Pages 167–171, https://doi.org/10.2307/1885820 Published: 01 November 1925
Journal Article The Meaning of Economic Equality Get access T. N. Carver T. N. Carver Harvard University Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar The Quarterly Journal of Economics, Volume 39, Issue 3, May 1925, Pages 473–475, https://doi.org/10.2307/1882438 Published: 01 May 1925
Journal Article Recent Books on Mathematical and Statistical Method Get access W. L. Crum W. L. Crum Harvard University Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar The Quarterly Journal of Economics, Volume 39, Issue 2, February 1925, Pages 313–319, https://doi.org/10.2307/1884877 Published: 01 February 1925