To make high-quality research more accessible and easier to explore.

Fields:
41 results ✕ Clear filters

IV.--The Elasticity of Substitution and the Elasticity of Demand for One Factor of Production

Review of Economic Studies 1934 1(2), 152
Journal Article Notes on the Elasticity of Substitution: IV.—The Elasticity of Substitution and the Elasticity of Demand for One Factor of Production Get access J. E. Meade J. E. Meade Hertford College, Oxford Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar The Review of Economic Studies, Volume 1, Issue 2, February 1934, Pages 152–153, https://doi.org/10.2307/2967624 Published: 01 February 1934

III.--The Elasticity of Substitution and the Incidence of an Imperial Inhabited House Duty

Review of Economic Studies 1934 1(2), 149
Notes on the Elasticity of Substitution: III.—The Elasticity of Substitution and the Incidence of an Imperial Inhabited House Duty Get access J. E. Meade J. E. Meade Hertford College, Oxford Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar The Review of Economic Studies, Volume 1, Issue 2, February 1934, Pages 149–152, https://doi.org/10.2307/2967623 Published: 01 February 1934

The Influence of Marginal Buyers on Monopolistic Competition: Comments

Quarterly Journal of Economics 1934 49(1), 135-137
Journal Article The Influence of Marginal Buyers on Monopolistic Competition: Comments Get access Edward Chamberlin Edward Chamberlin Harvard University Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar The Quarterly Journal of Economics, Volume 49, Issue 1, November 1934, Pages 135–137, https://doi.org/10.1093/qje/49.1.135 Published: 01 November 1934

The Application of the Pure Theory of Population Change to the Theory and Capital

Quarterly Journal of Economics 1934 48(4), 645
Böhm-Bawerk's concept of capital essentially that of a fund which supports factors of production during the period of production. — The "lake and stream" analogy, 647. — A better analogy is that of a population: capital, input, output, and the average period of production corresponding to population, births, deaths, and the average length of life, 650. — An analysis of pure population theory for a stationary state, 655; for a geometrically progressive state, 657. — Input as primarily the flow of services from all factors of production, 659. — Output as primarily the flow of services to consumers, 662. — An average period of production defined, which does not go back to any "primary" factors of production, 664. — Its length is between ten and twenty years, 665. — The existence of a period of production increases the probability of price disturbances, 666. — The concept objectively vague in a system of changing prices, but not so when considered as a subjective determinant of economic behavior, 666.

Alfred Marshall's Role in Price Maintenance in Great Britain

Quarterly Journal of Economics 1934 48(2), 348
Journal Article Alfred Marshall's Role in Price Maintenance in Great Britain Get access E. T. Grether E. T. Grether University of California Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar The Quarterly Journal of Economics, Volume 48, Issue 2, February 1934, Pages 348–352, https://doi.org/10.2307/1885613 Published: 01 February 1934

Resale Price Maintenance in Great Britain

Quarterly Journal of Economics 1934 48(4), 620
I. The legal basis of price maintenance in Great Britain, 620; government reports of 1920 and 1931, 622. — II. Movement toward group action, 623; general purpose of associations, 624; forms of organization, 625. — III. Methods of enforcing prices; collecting evidence, warning, etc., 625; the Stop List, 626; the problem of non-members, 626; relations with third parties who have purchased indirectly, 627. — IV. The relative effectiveness of price control; the problem of the coöperative societies, 628; the resistances within private enterprise; numbers of members of trade, 630; complexity of trade channels, 630; nature of product, 631; strength of opposing interests, 633. — V. Fundamental tendencies; rigidity and stability of price system, 635; emphasis on merchandising services, 639; growth in and limitation of, numbers of dealers, 639; the demand for intertrade coöperation, 640; effects upon types of dealers, 641. — VI. Application to the United States, 643.

I

Review of Economic Studies 1934 2(1), 66
Notes on the Determinateness of the Utility Function: I Get access E. H. Phelps Brown E. H. Phelps Brown Oxford Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar The Review of Economic Studies, Volume 2, Issue 1, October 1934, Pages 66–69, https://doi.org/10.2307/2967552 Published: 01 October 1934