20
THE STATISTICAL VERIFICATION OF
‘ The fluctuations in the profits of spinning are very
violent. The deviation of the price from the trend of
prices is 14-4 per cent. on the average price, but the
deviation of profits is 154 per cent. or nearly eleven
times as great. (Standard deviation taken.) Reckoned
by another method also, it is ten times as great (average
deviation). It may fairly be said the fluctuations in
profits are ten times as great as fluctuations in prices.’
As regards general profits, I was able to come to such
conclusions as the following :
Speaking for the results of trade as a whole, the
statistics of the Bankers’ Clearing House and of the
railway receipts (or tonnage) have afforded a reliable
test as to the direction of the movements in profits,
and the movement of foreign trade is also a fair but
less important criterion.
‘ The fluctuation in profits has generally been rather
less, in magnitude or range than the fluctuation in
statistics of ‘‘ turnover ”’, such as banking or foreign
trade statistics, which reflect both quantitiesand prices,
and it may be taken roughly at two-thirds to three-
fourths of such short period changes in trade returns.
¢ The influence of a change in price level on profits
as a whole is far less than is frequently supposed by
those who base their views upon observations of the
striking effect of price changes in particular industries.
‘In times of rising prices, increases in profits have
been made over and above the amount that would
arise upon the increased output that such prices induce,
but the additional profit is not usually much greater in
proportion than the rise in price, if the period taken is
not less than a year. There is no evidence as to the
effect of such changes measured over shorter periods
than a year.
¢ Although the increased quantities evoked by
increased prices have followed quickly enough to
keep profits within such limits, the check has not
been permanent, and continually renewed stimulus
by the raising of the price level has resulted in increases
of profits much greater than could have followed the