The Structure of Manufacturing Production: A Cross-section View |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 61
Page 29
... finished ' . While our immediate distinction in- cludes some capital goods among finished goods , subclassifi- cation makes possible their separation . We have therefore four major groups of manufactured commodities : ( a ) fin- ished ...
... finished ' . While our immediate distinction in- cludes some capital goods among finished goods , subclassifi- cation makes possible their separation . We have therefore four major groups of manufactured commodities : ( a ) fin- ished ...
Page 34
... finished goods group than they do of the finished goods group ; the opposite is true for consumption goods . The sig- nificance of this relationship probably résts in the low un- finished total for consumption goods , and the ...
... finished goods group than they do of the finished goods group ; the opposite is true for consumption goods . The sig- nificance of this relationship probably résts in the low un- finished total for consumption goods , and the ...
Page 69
... finished than unfinished products and when the good is destined for consumption than capital purposes . Still another possible reason for rela- tively high overhead costs for finished goods is that as later production stages are reached ...
... finished than unfinished products and when the good is destined for consumption than capital purposes . Still another possible reason for rela- tively high overhead costs for finished goods is that as later production stages are reached ...
Contents
Some Characteristics of Manufacturing Scope and Method of the Survey 33 | 8 |
Interrelations of Productive Factors | 58 |
The Pattern of Manufacturing Produc | 120 |
Copyright | |
8 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
according activity aggregate analysis approximately associated average Bureau capital investment Census Census of Manufactures cent changes character classification clothing commodities comparison concerns construction materials consumers consumption corporations distribution divisions dollars durable Economic electric elements employed equipment establishments estimates expenses exports fabrication facturing figures finished fixed Foods given greater higher horsepower importance included income increased indicate iron labor leather less machinery machines major manu Manufacturing Industries manufacturing production Massachusetts measures median ment metal million mills miscellaneous Motor Notes number of wage overhead costs particularly payments percentage Percentage of Value period plants presented printing profits Publications publishing ratios refining relating relatively reported requirements rubber salaried employees salaries shoes stage steel structure supplies Table textile thousands tion transient transportation types Ultimate unfinished United value added value of product variation various varying wage earners week