199 INDEX Comparative differences in costs, 3, 23, and Ch. 4, passim ; relation to increas- ing returns, 83. Cost, used in various senses, 3, 12, 161. Cotton goods, effectiveness of production in United States and Japan, 174. Credit, sensitiveness to gold flows, 200, 330. Favorable terms of trade, 30, 117. See also Barter terms of trade. Federal Reserve System, relation of credit expansion to specie movements, 206, 213; operation of, during the war, 316; after 1913, 330. fisher, I., 364. Flax industry, as illustration of principle of comparative advantage, 186. flight of capital, 321, 391. Flour, effectiveness of production in Great Britain and United States, 170. Mux, A. W., 167, 170. Foerster, R. F., 295 n. Foreign exchange rates. See Contents, Ch. 18; effect of speculation on, 215, and Ch. 18, passim ; effect of pooling on, 216; between gold-standard countries, Ch. 18, passim; fluctuations under dislocated exchanges, see Contents, Chs. 26, and 27 ; impact theory of, 344 ; is there a ‘“‘normal’” under dislocated exchanges, 348; cause or effect of merchandise movements, 371. Foreign investments, relation of, to international payments, 266. France, effectiveness of labor in, sce Contents, Ch. 15; monetary system of, 210; sensitiveness of monetary sys- tem to specie flow, 211; Franco-Ger- man indemnity, Ch. 22. tranco-German indemnity, Ch. 22. Free trade, does not lead to equalization of wages between countries, Preface, 38. Freight charges. See Shipping charges and Transportation. Demand, elasticity of, 31; effect of changes in demand on barter terms of trade, 30, 101, 305; reciprocal inter- national and reciprocal domestic de- mands, 54, 56, 92; significance of curve, 117; effect of changes in de- mand on barter terms of trade under inconvertible paper, 363. Depreciation charge, in relation to inter- est charge, 69. Dewey, 289 n. Differences in labor costs, Ch. 15, passim. Differences in wages, 44, Ch. 6, passim, 66. Diminishing returns, 77, and Ch. 8, passim. Disadvantage, inferior, 23. Discount rates, relation to deposits, 201 ; relation to managed currency, 383. Dislocated exchanges, defined, 338: barter terms of trade under, 355; international trade under, see Contents, Part III; fluctuations in foreign exchanges under, see Contents, Chs. 26 and 27; speculation in, Ch. 28; bounty on exports under, 385. Domestic goods, 35, 40. Domestic prices, 34, and Ch. 5, passim ; relation to money wages, 40. : Domestic supply price, 12. Duties on imports. See Import duties. German chemical industry, in relation to non-competing groups, 57. Germany, non-competing groups in, 57 ; effectiveness of labor in, see Contents, Ch. 15; Franco-German indemnity, Ch. 22; how affected by receipt of indemnity, 268; bounty on exports after the Great War, 388. Gifts, in relation to barter terms of trade, 121. Gold exchange standard, 380. Sold movements. See Specie. Graham, F. D., 393, 400. Great Britain, comparison of British and Indian wages, 18; use of capital in 18th and 19th centuries, 71; increas- ing returns in 19th century, Ch. 8; how shipping charges enter into her international trade statistics, 136; British, Indian. and Continental wages Effectiveness of labor. See Labor. Elasticity of demand, 31. England. See Great Britain. Equal differences in costs, 3, 19, and Ch. 3, passim. Exchange dumping, 385, 391. Exchange rates. See Foreign exchanges. Experiment, analogy of some economic experiences to, 233. External economies, 84; in United States, 85. g “Favorable” balance of trade, 111; how affected by loans and interest payments, 127, 131; significance of, 112, 216; little understood by public, 315, 320. See also Balance of trade.