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A Note on the Terms of Trade of Nigeria

Review of Economic Studies 1954 22(1), 47
A Note on the Terms of Trade of Nigeria E. K. Hawkins E. K. Hawkins Ibadan, Nigeria Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar The Review of Economic Studies, Volume 22, Issue 1, 1954, Pages 47–56, https://doi.org/10.2307/2296223 Published: 01 January 1954

Expectations, Uncertainty and Inventory Fluctuations

Review of Economic Studies 1954 22(1), 15
Journal Article Expectations, Uncertainty and Inventory Fluctuations Get access E. S. Mills E. S. Mills University College of North Staffordshire Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar The Review of Economic Studies, Volume 22, Issue 1, 1954, Pages 15–22, https://doi.org/10.2307/2296220 Published: 01 January 1954

Federal Reserve Policy and the Structure of Interest Rates on Government Securities

Quarterly Journal of Economics 1954 68(1), 19
Introduction, 19. — I. The theory of interest rate structure, 19. — II. Origin and evolution of the rate structure, 27. — III. Effects of maintenance of the yield pattern, 27. — IV. Significance to credit policy of maintaining the yield structure, 36. — V. Conclusions for policy, 40. — VI. Interest rate structures and compensatory open market operations, 41.

Walras, Leontief, and the Interdependence of Economic Activities

Quarterly Journal of Economics 1954 68(3), 323
I. Introduction, 323. — II. The Walrasian model, 325; the household sector, 325; the entrepreneurial sector, 336; the investment sector, 341; secondary conditions, 344. — III. Criticism of the Walrasian model, 345; the static nature of the model, 345; the purely competitive nature of the model, 347; the omission of important sectors from the model, 349. — IV. The Leontief open system, 349.

Can the United States Contribute Further toward International Solvency?

The Review of Economics and Statistics 1954 36(4), 429
THE United States, through her policy of economic assistance, first in the form of the Marshall Plan and since I952 in the form of Mutual Aid, has helped many friendly countries to recover from the ravages of war without any appreciable reduction in living standards. Had the United States not come to the rescue, a highly developed area like Western Europe would have been forced to adjust herself in one way or another to hard economic circumstances. In the process she would surely have had to suffer a decline in living standards productive of social unrest and possibly of communal strife sufficiently violent to have brought into power in some countries political parties of extreme doctrines and hostile toward the United States. If that danger has been avoided, it is by no means over. Though production in the rest of the world, and in Western Europe in particular, has recovered and advanced beyond its prewar standards, there is still some evidence of a dollar shortage suggestive of a structural disequilibrium which is unlikely to be solved with the mere passage of time. The question naturally arises what further measures might be undertaken by the interested countries to promote the expansion of world trade on a multilateral basis. If we agree that in the immediate future the prospects of a substantial contribution to this end by West European countries are rather poor, our main concern will be to reconsider the efficacy of those policies by which, it is frequently alleged, the United States might further contribute toward its realization. First, however, let us appraise briefly the existing imbalance. From June I95I to June I952 the United States current account had a surplus of $4,I00 million.' From June I952 to June I953 the current account surplus was roughly $68 million. One concludes the United States surplus on current account is tending to disappear completely, a conclusion which has promoted some cautious optimism. But optimism is warranted only if the situation has been brought about without further trade restrictions; in the present situation, that would be largely by an expansion of the value of to the United States in a way which would be unlikely to prove merely temporary. Glancing at the figures we discover that, of the reduction in the surplus from $4,I00 million to the present insignificant figure, the in to the United States accounted for less than $I,400 million. Of this increase in exports to the United States, about $500 million was an in United States government expenditure on purchases by its personnel abroad, and an estimated $250 million was on offshore purchases. Of the reduction in from the United States of close to $2.6 billion, a small part was accounted for by an in the output of coal in Western Europe and by better harvests abroad. The remainder is attributable largely to the effects of a further of import restrictions abroad in late I95 i and in I952. If these import restrictions are considered temporary, then the potential deficit is still very large. It would be larger still if the political situation were other than it is. For then the United States item imports of government services, which provided some $I,900 million in the period I952-53, would be reduced to a fraction of this sum. As a final damper to the optimism, it may be pointed out that should the high level of economic activity in the United States recede, even slightly as in I949, to the United States would fall off rapidly. At any event it must not be assumed that as soon as the surplus in the United States balance This figure results when we include government of services (largely on its military personnel abroad), offshore purchases both for the United States forces stationed abroad and NATO forces, and private remittances, and when we exclude all military-aid (in the form of goods and services).

Unionism and Wage-Income Ratios: 1929-51

The Review of Economics and Statistics 1954 36(1), 67
RECENT contributors 1 to the discussion of the effect of union bargaining power on labor's earnings have given only passing attention to one important facet of this problem: the influence of union pressure on the distributive share of income generated by industry that is paid to labor. While statistics have been gathered and studies made 2 of aggregate distributive shares, little attempt has been made to develop analysis around interand intraindustry comparisons of wage-income structures in the light of union growth. The purpose of this paper is to take one step toward a consideration of statistical data of the last two decades and test the hypothesis that where wage earners are strongly organized in trade unions, one might expect labour to succeed in obtaining a larger share of the product than elsewhere. 3

SHARE CAPITAL IN FOREIGN EXCHANGE ACCOUNTING.

The Accounting Review 1954 29(2), 281-285
Abstract It is an established principle of accountancy that assets and liabilities which are expressed in a currency other than that in which the capital is expressed, are to be converted into the currency of the capital. This principle follows quite naturally from the fundamental proposition that accounting is the art to record the history of a capital in the sense of a fund set aside for a particular business purpose. The rules that all assets and liabilities in foreign currency are to be converted into the currency of the share capital has one exception in the case in which the share capital was for technical reasons, expressed in a currency different from that in which it was intended to be invested. In that case, the balance sheet is to be expressed in the intended currency as soon as this becomes technically possible and the share capital from that date onward, must be converted into the intended currency at the rate of exchange in force at the date on which the conversion became first possible.

SOME ASPECTS OF THE EVOLUTION OF ACCOUNTING FUNCTIONS.

The Accounting Review 1954 29(4), 634-638
Abstract The article focuses on the evolution of accounting functions. During the last hundred years the roles of accounting have undergone changes as startling as the developments in methods and techniques of production. These changes in accounting functions, however, are less obvious to the untrained observer than the giant industrial strides which have made The U.S., the economic envy of the world. Yet the evolution of the two are closely related. The roles which accounting has played at various times have been directly related to the needs of the businessman. It is this thesis which will be explored in the following paragraphs. Unquestionably, many ideas and procedures in accounting have developed fortuitously or have been the result of theorizing which was entirely independent of any pressing requirement of the moment. It is also readily apparent that the pressure of government upon accounting development has been significant. With the current public regulation of many business activities, the administration of economic affairs has transcended the management of the individual enterprise. When this change has taken place, accounting has followed management into the broader area with the development of a social control function of accounts.

A CASE AGAINST THE IDEA OF AN ALL--PURPOSE CONCEPT OF BUSINESS INCOME.

The Accounting Review 1954 29(2), 224-243
Abstract This article has attempted to establish the position that the significance of business income for corporate reporting lies primarily in its usefulness as a measure of corporate performance in diverting a stream of resources from the economy, and that it should be developed primarily to serve this function. It has been shown that concepts of income which will best serve as a tax base, as a factor in rate regulation, as an element of national income estimates, and as a basis for managerial decisions are all dependent upon specialized and divergent factors which are related to a variety of objectives. Each of these uses constitutes a special purpose problem by itself. As was suggested at the beginning of the discussion, an acceptance of this thesis is merely a prelude to the major work of deciding upon the business income concept and the means of measuring income so conceived which will best serve this basic need. The prelude in this case, however, should not be written after the major score is completed. Until an area of agreement is reached as to the purpose to be served by the measurement of business income the discussion of the business income problem proceeds in a vacuum.

THE COMPREHENSION GAP FOR BEGINNING ACCOUNTING STUDENTS.

The Accounting Review 1954 29(1), 138-140
Abstract There are two basic approaches to the teaching of accounting fundamentals. One, using the deductive method of reasoning, introduces first statements in the hope that an understanding of the end product of accounting will capture the students' interest and broaden their comprehension of the subject. It is also hoped that it will permit them to appreciate reasons and the need for the detailed procedures. The other approach, the inductive, begins with the account and works forward in a logical manner through the accounting procedures to statements. Many texts have been written using one or the other of these two approaches but it appears that the statement approach has gained the widest acceptance in the past decade. The reason for its popularity is the belief that it gives students an overall grasp of the subject more quickly. Some may question this conclusion, but all will agree that the goal of an early understanding of the complete picture of the accounting procedures is desirable.