Journal of the Statistical Society of London, Volume 41Statistical Society of London, 1878 Published papers whose appeal lies in their subject-matter rather than their technical statistical contents. Medical, social, educational, legal,demographic and governmental issues are of particular concern. |
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Results 1-5 of 41
Page
... Dividend per Capital Paid - up . and Undivided Annum . Profits Per cnt . £ £ 1012 +442 187,575 1,150 90,150 1,500 235,950 80,700 50,000 563,675 83,350 Total Recapitulation . Reserve on Amount of Capital . which no Dividend is Paid . Per ...
... Dividend per Capital Paid - up . and Undivided Annum . Profits Per cnt . £ £ 1012 +442 187,575 1,150 90,150 1,500 235,950 80,700 50,000 563,675 83,350 Total Recapitulation . Reserve on Amount of Capital . which no Dividend is Paid . Per ...
Page 31
... Dividends of Anglo - foreign and colonial banks 2,184 , 32 canal companies 203 , city loans 531 , 33 discount and finance companies 170 , 39 gas and waterworks 327 , iron and steel companies 138 , 99 land and investment companies 336 ...
... Dividends of Anglo - foreign and colonial banks 2,184 , 32 canal companies 203 , city loans 531 , 33 discount and finance companies 170 , 39 gas and waterworks 327 , iron and steel companies 138 , 99 land and investment companies 336 ...
Page 55
... Dividends , Annuities , and Lottery Prizes , and for regulating the Allowances to be made for the Manage- ment of the National Debt . " " The essence of this clause is that for the privilege of the issue of 14 millions , the bank shall ...
... Dividends , Annuities , and Lottery Prizes , and for regulating the Allowances to be made for the Manage- ment of the National Debt . " " The essence of this clause is that for the privilege of the issue of 14 millions , the bank shall ...
Page 72
... dividends and other payments , a certain degree of movability has been maintained , but throughout , the general increase of these purchased securities holds good . It is obvious also that the various more or less serious attempts of ...
... dividends and other payments , a certain degree of movability has been maintained , but throughout , the general increase of these purchased securities holds good . It is obvious also that the various more or less serious attempts of ...
Page 85
... dividend of 27 per cent . It was the most independent of all banks , and paid a tax on the issue of notes , but the State does not otherwise share in the profits . On the note issue there is now a loss . The Reichsbank first pays a ...
... dividend of 27 per cent . It was the most independent of all banks , and paid a tax on the issue of notes , but the State does not otherwise share in the profits . On the note issue there is now a loss . The Reichsbank first pays a ...
Contents
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Common terms and phrases
abroad America amount Annual annum Austria average Bank of England Baring Brothers Belgium bills Britain British bullion capital causes cent classes coal colonial Comets commercial considerable cotton crops damage December depression districts dividends drought duties earthquake economists English estimated excess of imports exports fact famine figures floods foreign countries France free trade frost Germany Giffen Government securities hailstorm Holland increase India industry interest inundations investments Ireland iron issue Italy January joint stock Journal kilogrammes labour less London manufactures million pounds Mundella nature Newmarch notes Owens College paper Paris period political economy population present produce profits Quarter question railway rain regard Reichsbank Report returns Russia Scotland Sir Robert Peel Society Statistical Statistique storm supply taels tariff tion tons Total trades unions Trans treaty United Kingdom wages whole
Popular passages
Page 191 - ... that although, as a matter of mere diplomacy, it may sometimes answer to hold out the removal of particular prohibitions or high duties, as depending upon corresponding concessions by other states in our favour, it does not follow that we should maintain our restrictions in cases where the desired concessions on their part cannot be obtained ; our restrictions would not be the less prejudicial to our own capital and industry, because other governments persisted in preserving impolitic regulations...
Page 256 - The discovery of gold in California, in 1848, and in Australia, in 1851, suddenly increased the world's supply of gold by an unprecedented amount.
Page 191 - That the maxim of buying in the cheapest market, and selling in the dearest, which regulates every merchant in his individual dealings, is strictly applicable, as the best rule for the trade of the whole nation.
Page 185 - ... obtains a more ample supply of the commodities it wants, for the same labour and capital ; or the same supply, for less labour and capital, leaving the surplus disposable to produce other things. The vulgar theory disregards this benefit, and deems the advantage of commerce to reside in the exports : as if not what a country obtains, but what it parts with, by its foreign trade, was supposed to constitute the gain to it.
Page 335 - Since it is not,' says Vattel, 'the place where a thing is which determines the nature of that thing, but the character of the person to whom it belongs, things belonging to neutral persons which happen to be in an enemy's country, or on board an enemy's ships, are to be distinguished from those which belong to the enemy.
Page 645 - That the study of the economic phenomena of society ought to be systematically combined with that of the other aspects of social existence; (2) That the excessive tendency to abstraction and to unreal simplifications should be checked; (3) That the a priori deductive method should be changed for the historical...
Page 495 - The Locust Plague in the United States : being more particularly a treatise on the Rocky Mountain Locust, or so-called Grasshopper, as it occurs east of the Rocky Mountains, with practical Recommendations for its Destruction.
Page 186 - Such, then, is the direct economical advantage of foreign trade. But there are, besides, indirect effects, which must be counted as benefits of a high order. One is, the tendency of every extension of the market to improve the processes of production.
Page 188 - But your exports, whatever be the tariffs of other countries, or however apparent the ingratitude with which they have treated you— your export trade has been constantly increasing. By the remission of your duties upon the raw material — by inciting your skill and industry by competition with foreign goods, you have defied your competitors in foreign markets, and you have even been enabled to exclude them.