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A new international standard of national accounts is being
implemented worldwide under the auspices of the United Nations. The
New National Accounts is an authoritative introduction to this new
system and provides a comprehensive explanation, with illustrative
data, of the accounts and accounting concepts that all countries
will use in the future. The book assumes no previous knowledge of
either economics or national accounting. Beginning with an overview
of the entire structure of the new system of accounts, both for
flow transactions and their derived balancing items and also for
stocks of economic assets and liabilities, Dudley Jackson explains
the system's main balancing item - gross value added - and its
relation to gross domestic product, to final expenditures, to
primary incomes and to transfer payments. The book concludes by
explaining the accumulation accounts and the resulting 'wealth of
the nation' as recorded in the new system's balance sheets. The New
National Accounts will be essential reading for both students and
practitioners concerned with macroeconomics, economic policy,
national accounting and comparative studies of the economic
performance of advanced and developing countries.
First published in 1998, this book introduces a new concept of
profitability, called the 'efficiency rate of profit', which is
defined as the ratio between the unit net margin and the unit
capital requirement and shows how the efficiency rate of profit may
be used in the assessment of mechanization and economies of scale.
The book also shows how the efficiency rate of profit relates to
the financial opportunity cost of investment, thus resolving the
long-standing controversy over 'interest as a cost'. Using
real-world plant-level data, the book explains fully the process of
mechanization, how increasing returns to scale works at the plant
level through power rule relating plant or equipment cost to
capacity and how and why it is more cost effective to combine
mechanization with expanding the scale of production in one
combined 'package' of efficiency improvement.
First published in 1998, this book introduces a new concept of
profitability, called the 'efficiency rate of profit', which is
defined as the ratio between the unit net margin and the unit
capital requirement and shows how the efficiency rate of profit may
be used in the assessment of mechanization and economies of scale.
The book also shows how the efficiency rate of profit relates to
the financial opportunity cost of investment, thus resolving the
long-standing controversy over 'interest as a cost'. Using
real-world plant-level data, the book explains fully the process of
mechanization, how increasing returns to scale works at the plant
level through power rule relating plant or equipment cost to
capacity and how and why it is more cost effective to combine
mechanization with expanding the scale of production in one
combined 'package' of efficiency improvement.
This accessible book provides a rigorous explanation of the
concepts and theory of technological change and learning in
production. Dudley Jackson offers a thorough integration of theory
and data to show how technological change and learning increase
profitability. The impact of technological change and learning on
the rate of profit are comprehensively explained with extensive use
of 'real world' plant - and industry-level statistics. Data on the
manufacturing industry in the United States is used to explain and
exemplify neutral technological change, or increased multifactor
productivity. Non-neutral capital-using/labour-saving technological
change is then examined using data on the switch from steam to
diesel locomotives in the railroad industry. The impact of
technological change on unit cost and quality is examined in two
case studies: automation in the pulp plant of a paper mill; and the
refining of petroleum to produce gasoline of a higher octane
rating. The theoretical background to, and derivation and use of,
the learning curve is explained using data on the building of
Liberty ships in individual shipyards during the Second World War.
Finally the time constant progress function is introduced to show
how learning increases profitability. This book will be of immense
interest to students of microeconomics, strategic and production
management, industrial organization and the economics of innovation
and technology.
This is a reproduction of a book published before 1923. This book
may have occasional imperfections such as missing or blurred pages,
poor pictures, errant marks, etc. that were either part of the
original artifact, or were introduced by the scanning process. We
believe this work is culturally important, and despite the
imperfections, have elected to bring it back into print as part of
our continuing commitment to the preservation of printed works
worldwide. We appreciate your understanding of the imperfections in
the preservation process, and hope you enjoy this valuable book.
++++ The below data was compiled from various identification fields
in the bibliographic record of this title. This data is provided as
an additional tool in helping to ensure edition identification:
++++ Nugae Lyricae, In 3 Parts Edward Dudley Jackson
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