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INDEX
Taxes on Land [I 87I]-contd. UNITED STATItS. "Excess of ex-
ports partly balancfid 1>y ex-
ance of army for home defence, PTlditure of American citizens
270-27 I.
Ratifffla/e of probate and succession al:Jroad and interest on foreign
duties; suggested special tax on capital employed, i. 340. •
successions, 272-274. -- injuries of protection in, to
Little hope of the State ever ob-
taining any larger portion of in- certain indUstries, i. 369.
creased values of land, though it -- population of, and approxi-
would indirectly benefit land- mate rate of. excess of births
holders were it so, 275-276. over deaths, ii. 353.
- population of, doubling
THRIFT and the diffusion of wealth, itself every twenty-five years,
errors of comparisons of, ii. 59. ii. ZI, 25.
TONNAGE of British shipping, in- -- protection in, and its prob-
crease of, 1840-80, i. 336. able decay, ii. 185.
TRADE depressions, periodicity Use 0/ Import and Export Sta-
of, i. 98. tistics [1882], i. 282-381.
-- depression and foreign com-
petition, i. 423- Introductory: want of statistical
knowledge amo~st our better
--of Ireland with Great Britain; classes, as shown lD instanen of
serious r.esults for Ireland if error in .. Nineteenth Century"
separation came into existence, and" Quarterly Review," 282-
28;,. .
i·445· ·Remarks on Import and export
-- foreign, of United King- figures: instances of export. anel
dom only a small portion of imports between France anel
its total trade, i. II o. England erroneously interpreted,
TRUSTS, probable extension of owing to Franco-German war
being overlooked, 285-286.
[18nJ, i. 120. -- instance of parts of a census
return and of emigration sta·
tistics, which are absolutely
UNEARNED increment and press· trustworthy, but others, such u
ure of rates, i. 261. occupations, etc., from which
UNITED KINGDOM and Empire, errors must be eliminated, 287'
288.
income. and wealth of the __ reference to and analysis of
people, ii. 366. Mr. Bourne's paper on "Official
-- loss of population to, by Tradeand Navigation Statistics, ..
emigration since 1820, ii. 23. on the means of checking accu-
-,.... present economic con- racy of statistical data in com-
merce, :z89-293.
• ditions and outlook for, ii. __ illustrations from the Unite<l
4 0 5. . States, Austria, and France of
UNl'~ED- STATES, coal and iron differences of official and real
values, 294-29/>.
industries oft their effects on -- other causes of difficulty:
the United Kingdom, i. II 6. difference of methods by which
-_. - as a colonizing power in re- data are obtained; periodical Wl-
lation to the British Empire, riations in price; disturbing in-
ii. 237. . fluence of ,real economic eYents,
wars, famines, etc.; and intrinsic
--' distribution o! .,Eopulation character of foreign trade of dif-
in, and economic irfJtuences of ferent countries, wbether oftran·
its rapid increase, ii. 29. sit only or not, OJ export of manu·

