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WagesInAgriculture1946-47.pdf-239
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products for county Both the quantity and the value of food products from the farm fur nished as perquisites were reported by the farmers surveyed in the May special survey of perquisites. The value of the product per unit from these data was compared with the independent estimates of the farm price of selected food products supplied for each of the 158-sample counties from unpublished data
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) paid regular workers was about $100 in the Corn Belt and Lairy Region, about $130 in the Range-Livestock Region, and about $170 in the Western Specialty Crop Areas in 1945. If it is assumed that regular workers paid daily rates worked 25 days a month, the monthly equivalent of the daily rate without two or more meals was about $65 in the Cotton Belt and $55 in the General and Self-Sufficing Region
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WagesInAgriculture1946-47.pdf-238
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- 5'2 - services furnished to the worker by the farmer for which a charge or deduction in wages was made are not considered as perquisites. The total wages received by a worker, as shown in this report, are his cash wages plus the value of perquisites he received on the reporting farm during May. Average daily wages, either cash or total, or the aver age daily value of perquisites received
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WagesInAgriculture1946-47.pdf-242
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- 56 - Sampling Method 1. Design of the sample The May 1945 national survey of farm wages and wage rates made by the Bureau of Agricultural Economics involved visits by enumerators to a sample of 20,000 farm operators in 158 counties of the United States. A map shelving these counties, a description of the method of their selection, and a description of the method of selecting the farmers
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WagesInAgriculture1946-47.pdf-244
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week can not be compared with the May special survey of perquisites (because of the differences-in coverage) as well as they can with the corresponding per centages from the May national survey of farm images and wage rates. (See Section 1 of the text for a discussion of the seasonal variation in furrishing perquisites.) For easy reference, these data from the March, May, and September 1945
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WagesInAgriculture1946-47.pdf-245
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crew 717,000 40,000 112,000 458,000 107,000 Crew 461,000 20,000 6,000 237,000 198,000 Related to the farm • operator 262,000 44,000 97,000 92,000 29,000 Not related to the farm operator 2/ 1,680,000 134,000 263,000 881,000 402,000 1/ Excludes sharecroppers and ten*ants working as hired farm laborers ]''ay 20-26, 1945, on their landlords1 units and custom workers employed this week. 2/ Crew
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CRS84798Lpage05
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Presidential Economics: the Making of Economic Policy from Roosevelt to Reagan and Beyond, by Herbert Stein . . . . . oV— vi 10 12 14 16 17 19 20 22 24
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CRS84798Lpage09
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: the State of Economics, by Lester Thurow . . . . 17, Economic Choices: 1984, edited by Alice Rivlin . . . . . . . . . . . . . The Economic Illusion: False Choices Between Prosperity and SOCial JUStiCe, by RObert Kuttner 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 A New Social Contract: the,Economy.and Government After Reagan, by Martin Carnoy, Derek Shearer, and Russell ’ I O C O O O O O O’ 0- O O I O O O O O’ O O
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CRS84798Lpage07
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CRS-iv THE NEW YORK REVIEW OF BOOKS The Supply-Side Revolution, by Paul Craig Roberts Presidential Economics: the Making of Economic Policy from Roosevelt to Reagan and Beyond, by Herbert Stein The Barbaric Counter—Revolution: Cause and Cure, by W. W. Rostow . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . NEW YORK TIMES Presidential Economics: the Making of Economic Policy from Roosevelt to Reagan and Beyond, by Herbert Stein . . . . . . . The Supply-Side Revolution, by Paul Craig Roberts . . . . . . . . POLICY REVIEW The Supply-Side Revolution, by Paul Craig Roberts . . . . . . . . POLITICAL SCIENCE QUARTERLY Reaganomics: a Midterm Report, edited by William Craig Stubblebine and Thomas D. Willett . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . THE PROGRESSIVE A New Social Contract: the Economy and Government after Reagan, by Martin Carnoy, Derek Shearer, and Russell Rumberger . . . . WALL STREET JOURNAL The Supply-Side Revolution, by Paul Craig Roberts . . . . . . . . Beyond Monetarism: Finding the Road to Stable Money, by Marc A. Miles . . .-. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . WALL STREET REVIEW OF BOOKS Controlling Money: the Federal Reserve and Its Critics, by Ralph C. Bryant . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Reaganomics: a Midterm Report, edited by William Craig Stubblebine and Thomas D. Willett . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3. . . WASHINGTON POST - Presidential Economics: the Making of Economic Policy From Roosevelt to Reagan and Beyond, by Herbert Stein . . . . . . . The Supply—Side Revolution, by Paul Craig Roberts . . . . . . . . Tax Incentives and Economic Growth, by Barry Bosworth . . . . . . The Economic Illusion: False Choices Between Prosperity and Social Justice, by Robert Kuttner . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27 31 32 33 35 37 38 39 40 43 46 47 48 50
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CRS84798Lpage11
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Ashenfelter, Orley Berry, John M. . . . Bethell, Tom . . . . Bruchey, Stuart . . . Davidson, Lawrence S. Evans, Michael K. . . Fallows, James . . . Field, William P., Jr. Gilder, George ‘. . . Green, John C. .‘. . Heilbroner, Robert L. Henderson, David R. Hershey, Robert D., Jr Koford, Kenneth J. . Krauss, Melvyn . . . Lekachman, Robert . McCracken, Paul W. . INDEX CRS-vi OF REVIEWERS 19 48 20 46
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CRS84798Lpage13
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Reich, Robert B. . . Rickenbacker, William Samuelson, Robert J. Silk, Leonard . . . Sopiarz, Edward R. . Stein, Herbert . . Train, John . . . . Weidenbaum, Murray L. Wolman, William . . CRS-vii 31 17 12 47 33
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CRS84798Lpage35
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the Republi- 1 ..i party after Ronald Reagan departs; hence the Vice President and Baker (who had come out of the Bush camp) were deter- mined to undermine supply-side economics, which was, of course, widely identified as Kemp’s program. But why didn’t the Presi- dent intervene to support what had also be- come his own program? Roberts suggests that Reagan stayed aloof because, for rea- sons of party unity
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CRS84798Lpage39
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be reduced by $46 billion, or 0.9% of GNP in 1989, partly because other experts in whom I have confidence believe that the cut would be risky. UT HERE, as with the presentation of their basic program, I fault the authors mainly for not asking the right question, which is not simply whether some costs and risks are associated with the proposed cut. The question should be broadened to consid- er some
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