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The Income of Capital

Quarterly Journal of Economics 1912 26(2), 313
I. Recent development of agio theory; time-preference, 313. — A wrong view of psychology of investment, 315. — No exchange of time-values, 316. — II. Modern form of abstinence theory, 318. — No valid generalization possible in regard to abstinence, 318. — Abstinential savings not regulative of rate of return, 319.— Rate due to objective factors, 320. — III. Productivity theory based on restricted view of productive process, 322. — Impossibility of distinguishing a product of capital if entire process is taken into consideration, 323. — IV. Minimum of data necessary to theory of income of capital, 324. — Failure of certain theories to account for necessary data, 325. — Capital resolvable into wages, 326. — Wages determined independently of product of capitalistic industry, 327. — Income of capital a residual, 328. — V. How profit is kept from consumer, 332. — How profit is kept from laborer, 333. — The capitalistic opportunity curve, 334. — Dependence of capitalistic income on limited development of capitalism, 335. — How rate of profit is determined, 337. — Limitations of theoretical method, 338.

The First Decade of the Swiss Federal Railways

Quarterly Journal of Economics 1912 26(2), 341
Discussions of the nationalization of railways in Switzerland, 342. — Arguments advanced in favor of nationalization, 343. — Conditions of employment on the federal railways, 346. — Organization of the management of the federal railways, 347. — Government rate making, 352. — Improvement of the service, 354. — Financial results of government ownership, 356.

The New British Law on Railroad Reports

Quarterly Journal of Economics 1912 26(3), 536
Journal Article The New British Law on Railroad Reports Get access A. M. Sakolzki A. M. Sakolzki New York University Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar The Quarterly Journal of Economics, Volume 26, Issue 3, May 1912, Pages 536–537, https://doi.org/10.2307/1883539 Published: 01 May 1912

Some Problems in Market Distribution

Quarterly Journal of Economics 1912 26(4), 703 open access
Lack of systematic study of market distribution. Emphasis on production explained by economic causes. Importance of a better organization of market distribution, 703. — Complexity of the problem facing the distributer. Consumer's surplus. Bearing on the distributer's problem, 707. — Selling at the market minus, selling at the market, and selling at the market plus, 712. — Social justification of the differentiation of commodities: Importance of trade-marking, 718. — Methods of sale: sale in bulk; sale by sample; sale by description, 721. — Available agencies for selling: middlemen, producers' salesmen, and advertising, direct and general, 723. — Emergence and rise in importance of the middleman. Modern tendency to decrease number of successive middlemen, 725. — Analysis of the functions of the middleman: sharing the risk, transporting the goods, financing the operations, selling or communication of ideas about the goods, and assembling, assorting, and re-shipping. Development of functional middlemen. Advantages of direct selling in some industries. Present day importance of the direct selling in some industries. Present day importance of the middleman, 731. — The producer's salesman as an agency in distribution, 740. — Advertising as an agency in distribution: relation to sale by description; relation to trade-marking; analysis of classes of demand created by advertising, 742. — Social waste in distribution. Practical problem of distributer, 746. — Analysis of market into geographic sections and economic and social strata, 749. — Laboratory study of distribution, 754. — Wide application of such method of study, 758. — Possibility of better organization of distribution, 763.

Ricardo's Criticisms of Adam Smith

Quarterly Journal of Economics 1912 26(4), 549
I. The nature of value, 550. — A. Labor as a measure of value, 555. — B. Corn as a measure of value, 556. — C. Value and riches, 557. — D. “ Real” wages: alterations in the wage-rate, 558. — E. Alterations in the wage-rate in relation to price, 559. — II. The productivity of different kinds of labor, 561. — III. Rent, 563. — A. The rent of land, 563. — B. Comparative value of gold, corn, and labor in rich and poor countries, 568. — IV. Profits, 571. — A. Relation between profits, wages, and capital, 571. — B. Profits and interest, 575. — V. Bounties, 576. — VI. Taxation, 579. — A. The tax fund — gross and net revenue, 579. — B. Incidence of a tax on the produce of land, 580. — C. Incidence of taxes on wages and necessaries, 581. — VII. Colonial and foreign trade, 583. — VIII. Summary and conclusion, 585.

Nordau's Interpretation of History

Quarterly Journal of Economics 1912 26(3), 519
Journal Article Nordau's Interpretation of History 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 26, Issue 3, May 1912, Pages 519–522, https://doi.org/10.2307/1883535 Published: 01 May 1912