Word: tradings
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Members of the Business School faculty and prominent business men will contribute articles. The first number contains papers on "The Future of American Foreign Trade" by Dr. Julius Klein '13, director of the Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce, "Bank Management and the Business Cycle" by Dr. O. M. W. Sprague '9, Professor of Banking and Finance, "Taxation of Capital Gains" by Mr. G. O. May, senior partner of Price, Waterhouse and Company, "Bank Reserves" by Mr. F. H. Curtiss, chairman of the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, and "The Use and Limitations of Psychological Tests" by Dr. Daniel Starch...
...larger part of the magazine is given over to leading articles contributed by business men and members of the Business School staff. They include papers on "The Taxation of Capital Gains" by Mr. G. O. May, senior partner of Price, Waterhouse & Co; "The Future of American Export Trade" by Dr. Julius Klein '13, director of the United States Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce; "Bank Management and the Business Cycle" by O. M. W. Sprague '94, Professor of Banking and Finance in the Business School; "Bank Reserves" by Mr. F. H. Curtiss, chairman of the board and federal reserve agent...
...fooling ourselves. Let us decide what others of these debtors are good in part, but must be given ample time to pay; emphatically, let us figure whether the payment of these debts--which inevitably must mean a great increase in our import and a heavy decrease in our export trade--is going to prove an asset or a liability for American business...
...assistance of the National Dry Goods Asociation, after a pioneer survey of doing business in department stores, has come to the conclusion that a read-justment of operating expenses is necessary to restore net profit to normal in this business. The average net profit realized in the department store trade in 1921 was 1.3 per cent, of net sales, which is considered too small. The bureau also discovered that a rapid rate of stock-turn is fully as important in department stores as in other businesses...
...this. If a nation is a sovereign power in a free and independent state, and if that government is willing and able to fulfill its international obligations by agreeing to restrain from all propaganda and aggression, by guaranteeing safety of life and property to foreigners, by offering guarantees to trade and by acknowledging its public debts,--that nation merits recognition. Therefore its form of government, its internal policies, its system of production, its history, and our own likes and dislikes must not be permitted to dictate the foreign policy of the American people. The consideration of the economic structure...