Gold, Prices, and Wages Under the Greenback Standard

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The University Press, 1908 - Business & Economics - 627 pages

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Page 163 - Maine New Hampshire Vermont Massachusetts . . Rhode Island . . Connecticut New York New Jersey Pennsylvania . . . Delaware Maryland Virginia North Carolina South Carolina . Georgia Florida Alabama Mississippi Louisiana Texas Arkansas Tennessee...
Page 217 - 60's and, though in somewhat less degree, in the '70's, the labor market of the United States was one in which individual bargaining prevailed. Now the individual laborer is a poor bargainer. He is ignorant of the possibilities of his situation, exposed to the competition of others with the same disabilities, more anxious to sell than the employer to buy. Moreover, custom in the form of rooted ideas about what is a "fair wage...
Page 225 - Writers upon money usually state that it performs three functions, serving as a common denominator of value, a medium of exchange, and a standard of deferred payments. To enumerate the functions of money in this fashion, however, is very far from suggesting the importance of the role which money plays in economic life. To understand this role attention must be fixed upon the complex mechanism of prices, rather than upon money itself.
Page 491 - Brown Price, .50 Vol. Ill (in progress). —No. 1. Origin of American State Universities, by Elmer E. Brown Price, .50 No. 2. State Aid to Secondary Schools, by David Rhys Jones Price, .75 ZOOLOGY.— WE Ritter, Editor.
Page 491 - Organization and History of the DO Mills Expedition to the Southern Hemisphere. No. 2. Introductory Account of the DO Mills Expedition. No. 3. Description of the Instruments and Methods of the DO Mills Expedition.
Page 491 - No. 2. Studies in the Si-clause, by Herbert C. Nutting. . '' ".*-" " .60 No. 3. The Whence and Whither of the Modern Science of Lan- . guage, by Benj.
Page 491 - Vol. II (in progress). — No. 1. Notes on Children's Drawings, by Elmer E. Brown Price, .50 Vol. Ill (in progress). —No. 1. Origin of American State Universities, by Elmer E. Brown Price, .50 No.
Page 163 - West Virginia . . Kentucky Ohio Michigan Indiana Illinois Wisconsin Minnesota Iowa Missouri Kansas Nebraska South Dakota . . North Dakota . . Montana Wyoming Colorado New Mexico . . . Arizona Utah Nevada Idaho Washington Oregon California Oklahoma Indian Territory Total ... Acres.
Page 491 - Hiatus in Greek Melic Poetry, by Edward B. Clapp. Price, $0.50 No. 2. Studies in the Si-clause, by Herbert C. Nutting. . . .60 No. 3.

About the author (1908)

Wesley Clair Mitchell was an American economist. Born in Illinois, he studied at the University of Chicago under Thorstein Veblen and taught at Columbia University. As Veblen's student he developed an "institutional" view of the economy based on his belief that financial factors, especially corporate profits, are the driving force in industry. Director of the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) for 25 years, he devoted his life to the study of business cycles. Mitchell is regarded by many as the greatest of the business-cycle analysts. His first major work, Business Cycles (1913), identified various economic processes at work during periods of economic expansion and contraction, and suggested techniques for identifying leads, lags, and turning points. This work, along with Measuring Business Cycles (1946), which he coauthored with Arthur Burns, set the standard for determining business-cycle turning points in U.S. economic history. Most of the business-cycle indicator terminology used today is a direct result of Mitchell's work. Mitchell's last work, What Happens During Business Cycles: A Progress Report (1951), was an early but incomplete effort to construct a dynamic, self-generating theory of business cycles. Marshall's legacy to the profession was enormous. Such is the reputation of the NBER's work on business cycles that even the U.S. Department of Commerce defers to it for the dating of cycle turning points.