SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC THEORY
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great as the price change, i. e. that a 1 per cent. fluctua-
tion in price was accompanied by a 3 per cent. fluctuation
in profit. But in the case of a unit variation in output,
the change in profit was only quite a small fraction over
unity. In these investigations all the coefficients of cor-
relation were very high, and it may be said that I was
merely putting into elaborate figures conclusions that
would be obvious to ordinary reflection. But the real
object was to find the ratio of variation and especially to
disentangle the effects of price changesand outputchanges.
The fact that demand for coal tends to be very inelastic
in the neighbourhood of any normal condition is also de-
ducible from the inquiry. I also showed that increase in
the prosperity of the coal industry may be symptomatic
of increased trade generally, if due to increased output
only. The correlation between railway profits and the
price of coal was negative, but high and significant, i. e. if
the price of coal was markedly increased, then the railway
profits were clearly less in the following year—a lag of
a year giving the most marked correlation. The deviation
of railway profits from the trend was about one-quarter
of the opposite deviation of coal prices. Gas profits had a
similar negative correlation with coal prices, and the de-
viation about two-thirds in amplitude. The monthly
correlation of the buying price of raw textiles in an Eastern
market, and the selling price in London, over seven years,
proved to be almost complete (0-97), so that fluctuations
in a merchant’s total profits were entirely due to volume
of trade. Cotton spinning gave an interesting result.
‘ There is very little regular relationship between the
profits of cotton spinning and either the purchase price
of raw cotton or the sale price of yarn, but the changes
in the difference between the two prices is more indica-
tive of changes in the amount of profits. Of late years
the quantity of raw cotton imported has been some
criterion of the prosperity of the trade. The purchase
price of raw cotton and the sale price of yarn are very
closely related indeed.