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The Federal Offset and the American Death Tax System

Quarterly Journal of Economics 1940 54(4 Part 1), 566-598
I. The State-Federal conflict for possession of sources of revenue, 566.— II. Background of the controversy over the estate tax, 567.— III. Revisions of the Federal levy, 1924–1935, 569.— IV. Effects of these upon State and Federal revenues, 573.— Effects upon the form of State taxes, 575.— Effects upon the rates applied under State laws, 577.— V. Effects of the Act of 1926 upon death duties in Pennsylvania, 581.— VI. Effects upon death duties in Massachusetts, 586.— VII. Effects upon the New York system, 590.— VIII. Conclusions, 596.

The Variation in Wage-Ratios

Quarterly Journal of Economics 1940 54(3), 369
Variations in wage-ratios in different areas: conductors and brakemen, 370; typists and stenographers, 370; telephone operators and typists, 370; office work, 370; painters and plumbers, 372; common labor and skilled labor, 373. — Analysis of wage-ratios among railroad workers: engineers, conductors, brakemen, section men, 374. — National differences in these ratios, 375. — Swedish experience, 378. — Engineers and firemen, 378. — American experience, 379. — Length-of-service ratios, 380. — Economic ratios in general, 382.

BUDGETARY AND PROPRIETARY ACCOUNTS OF THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT.

The Accounting Review 1940 15(4), 485-494
The accounting system of the national government is similar in many respects to the systems maintained by various state and municipal governments. One of the primary functions of accounting is to present clearly and promptly all the facts that are essential and necessary to good judgment and efficient administrative action. Municipal accounting is comparable in many ways to commercial accounting, yet the terminology is frequently different, and it is for this reason that municipal and governmental accounting seems rather difficult to the accountant who has not specialized in one of these technical fields. It can be said that Federal accounting presents no more difficulties than commercial accounting. According to the author, the budgetary accounts are separate and distinct from the accounts known as proprietary accounts. Budgetary accounts being in the nature of controlling accounts, whereas proprietary accounts disclose detailed information relative to assets, liabilities, revenues, and expenditures.

The Official and Unofficial Markets for Sterling

Quarterly Journal of Economics 1940 54(4 Part 1), 655-664
The Official and Unofficial Markets for Sterling Get access S. E. Harris S. E. Harris Harvard University Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar The Quarterly Journal of Economics, Volume 54, Issue 4_Part_1, August 1940, Pages 655–664, https://doi.org/10.1093/qje/54.4_Part_1.655 Published: 01 August 1940