Abstract The article presents information on material cost of production. Materials to be manufactured must also be purchased, received, stored and delivered to the production centers; none of these expenditures are "manufacturing" costs, regardless of the fact that some manufacturers include them as part of manufacturing expense or burden. The latter practice is, decidedly, an improper incidence of expense. In this manner, the inventories of raw materials and stores would always remain at delivered cost, as Goods in Process account was charged at that cost. The costs of purchasing, receiving and storage would then be charged to Goods in Process, as an additional material cost. The procedure means that the costs of purchasing, receiving and storage, as these occurred each month, would be charged to an account but labeled as "Unapplied Material Burden." These costs, obviously, would be absorbed into Goods in Process each month on the basis of the value of the materials used.
Abstract The proof of surplus accruing to the parent company as presented in the article deals with two types of problems: the parent company owns a controlling interest in a subsidiary company for a portion of a year and the subsidiary owns no stock of the parent, and the parent company owns a controlling interest in a subsidiary company for a portion of a year and the subsidiary company owns a portion of the stock of the parent company for a greater portion of the same year. When the cost method of carrying the investment account is used, the investment account remains unaffected by profits, losses, and dividends of the subsidiary. While increases and decreases in subsidiary net worth as a result of profits and losses are disregarded on the books of the parent, the declaration of a dividend by a subsidiary is recorded on the books of the parent company by a debit to dividends receivable and a credit to dividend income or earned surplus. Receipt of the dividend from the subsidiary results in a debit to cash and a credit to dividends receivable.
The Review of Economics and Statistics195840(2), 116
A T one time the proposition that an increase in the wage rate would call forth a smaller number of hours of work from an individual laborer was evidently accepted by economists without qualification. For example, Professor Pigou in I920, arguing that the imposition of a tax on a laborer (the opposite of a wage increase) would result in his working more hours, wrote: Since a part of his income is taken away, the last unit of income that is left to him will be desired more urgently than the last unit of income that would have been left to him if there had been no taxation. But the last unit of energy that he devotes to work will not affect him differently from what it did. Consequently, there will be a tendency for him to work a little harder than he would have done otherwise. 1 Again in I928, Professor Pigou put the same arguments more specifically. Then, since income is taken away from the taxpayers, the marginal utility of money to them is raised, but the marginal disutility of work is unchanged. And Professor Pigou continued with a statement on the attainment of an equilibrium position: Hence, unless they are somehow impeded, they will increase the amount of work done, and so of income obtained, up to the point at which the marginal utility of income and the marginal disutility of work done to secure it again become equal-which is obviously the optimum. 2 (Italics in original.) Similarly Professor Knight in I92i argued that if men act rationally, . they will at a higher rate divide their time between wageearning and non-industrial uses in such a way as to earn more money, indeed, but to work fewer hours. 3 (Italics in original.) Both Professor Pigou and Professor Knight based their conclusions on an assumption of diminishing marginal utility of income. The unanimity of expert opinion was broken by Professor Robbins in I930.4 Phrasing his argument in terms of the effort (as distinguished from the money) prices of the goods constituting real income, Professor Robbins pointed out that it is the elasticity of the demand for income with respect to effort that determines the responsiveness of the individual's hours of work to changes in wage rates. If this elasticity is greater than unity, a decrease in wage rates (or the imposition of a tax) will result in fewer hours of labor. If the elasticity is less than unity a decline in wage rates or an increase in taxes will result in more hours of labor.5 Thus Professors Pigou and Knight had implicitly assumed that the elasticity of demand for income in terms of effort is less than unity. Professor Robbins agreed that the deductions of the earlier authors justify the downward slope of a curve representing demand for income in terms of effort prices, but he contended that nothing in their arguments shows that the elasticity of such a curve is necessarily less than unity.6 Professor Paish presented much the same viewpoint as did Professor Robbins, but Professor Paish based his analysis on the demand for leisure, which he treated as a good.7 If income is decreased as a result of an increase in taxation, argued Professor Paish, the result may be either to increase or to decrease a person's demand for leisure. Assuming a flat rate tax increase or a decrease in hourly wages, both aggregate income and marginal income decline. The decline in aggregate income will cause a person to demand fewer hours of leisure. The decrease in marginal income, however, will have the opposite effect; it reduces the cost of addi-