Migration and Business CyclesNational Bureau of Economic Research, Incorporated, 1926 - 256 strani |
Druge izdaje - Prikaži vse
Pogosti izrazi in povedi
alien arrivals alien males annual anthracite coal Austria-Hungary average number bituminous coal boom Bureau of Immigration business conditions business cycles Carl Snyder Census cent chapter Chart compared comparison computed computed trend construction Cumulative cyclical fluctuations cyclical movements data in Table December decline decrease depression periods economic conditions employment conditions employment curve ending June 30 estimates evidence factory employment fiscal fluctuations in immigration fluctuations in migration Germany immigration and emigration immigration from Italy imports inclusive increase index of factory indices industrial activity industrial conditions July June 30th male aliens male immigration Massachusetts ment monthly statistics months nonimmigrants number employed number of immigrants number of persons Numerical data occupation Percentage deviations pig iron production quarter ratio relatively seasonal fluctuations seasonal movement SEASONAL TENDENCIES Sept similar standard deviation statistics tendency tion total immigration trade union U. S. Bureau unemployed United Kingdom workers
Priljubljeni odlomki
Stran 40 - old" sources of immigration include the countries of northern and western Europe, namely: Belgium, Denmark, France, Germany, the Netherlands, Norway, Sweden, Switzerland, and the United Kingdom. The "new" sources include the countries of eastern and southern Europe now known as Austria, Hungary, Czechoslovakia, Jugoslavia, Bulgaria, Finland, Greece, Italy, Poland, Portugal, Rumania, Russia, Spain, Turkey in Europe, and certain other small European countries designated as "other Europe,
Stran 44 - Agriculture, forestry, and animal husbandry . . . Extraction of minerals . . Manufacturing and mechanical industries Transportation Trade...
Stran 241 - In brief, whatever may be the basic causes of migration, there is a close relation between the cyclical oscillations of employment and those of immigration and emigration, and a moderately close resemblance in the respective seasonal fluctuations, with considerable reason to believe that this similarity, particularly in the cyclical oscillations, is due to a sensitiveness of migration to employment conditions.
Stran 2 - Volume II. A report giving in full the methods and estimates on which the results shown in Volume I are based. 440 pages, (Second printing) $5.15.
Stran 8 - He answers two queries : (1) To what extent are fluctuations in migration attributable to fluctuations in employment? (2) To what extent, in turn, are fluctuations in migration an ameliorating influence, and to what extent an aggravating factor, in employment and unemployment fluctuations?