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Debt Management and Economic Stabilization

Quarterly Journal of Economics 1954 68(4), 613
I. Introduction, 613. — II. Federal Reserve's control of member bank reserve positions, 613. — III. Treasury-Federal Reserve discord and “accord,” 615. — IV. Recent monetary and debt management proposals, 619. — V. Further suggestions regarding economic stabilization and suitable debt management procedures, 621.

Benefits versus Costs of Price Supports

Quarterly Journal of Economics 1954 68(1), 115
Introduction, 115. — I. Economic benefits and costs, 116; short-time results, 116; longer-time results, 123. — II. Feasibility of financing and operating the programs, 127. — III. Summary and conclusions, 128.

Critical Notes on the Acceleration Principle

Quarterly Journal of Economics 1954 68(2), 253
I. Change of output versus variation of demand, 253; capacity requirements as inducing investment, 254; the change in output as a necessary condition for induced investment, 258; the change in output as a sufficient condition of induced investment, 261. — II. The regularly progressive economy, 262; autonomous investment and equilibrium, 262; mathematical reformulation of the model, 265; generalizations, 269. — III. Concluding reflections on the acceleration principle, 272.

The Shoe Machinery Case and the Problem of the Good Trust

Quarterly Journal of Economics 1954 68(2), 287
Introduction, 287. — I. Violation of the Sherman Act by the United Shoe Machinery Corporation, 287. — II. Different doctrines and methods of dealing with the good trust, 292. — III. Definition and measurement of monopoly power or market control, 295. — IV. Conclusion, 304.

Some Economic Aspects of Fissionable Material

Quarterly Journal of Economics 1954 68(2), 217
I. Introduction, 217. — II. Demand determinates for fissionable material, 218. — III. Supply determinates of fissionable material, 224. — IV. The dynamic problem, 227. — V. Possible solution by period prices, 229. — VI. A political caveat, 231.

Unemployment in Planned and Capitalist Economies

Quarterly Journal of Economics 1954 68(1), 43
I. The problem, 43. — II. Capitalist countries tend to favor the deflationary risk; planned economies lean towards inflation, 44. — III. Deflationary unemployment and its cures, 46; depression in capitalist economies, 46; monetary depression in planned economies, 47; real depression in planned economies, 49. — IV. Inflation and employment in capitalist and planned economies, 51; inflation in capitalist economies, 51; monetary inflation in planned economies, 52; real inflation in planned economies, 53. — V. Conclusions, 59.