292 THE STATISTICAL VERIFICATION OF
Long Term Investments—what he describes as the record
of the failure of facts to support a theory. The theory in
question is that, during the period when the prices of goods
and services are falling, bonds are betterinvestments than
ordinary shares. He traces the effect of investments and
holdings over the period of seventeen to twenty-two years
and finds that out of twelve tests the investor would have a
much higher investment return from ordinary shares than
from bonds. In every case except one, the advantage is
on the side of ordinary shares, when income and increase
in capital value are added together. His investigation
is well worth following. The broad conclusion that he
arrives at is that, cumulatively, the results tend to show
that well diversified lists of common stocks, selected on
simple and broad principles, respond to some underlying
factor which gives them a margin of advantage over high-
grade bonds for long-term investment. There are many
reasons why this particular investigation has no universal
validity, but it is an interesting example of the verifica-
tion of theory. A similar test quoted by Mr. Hartley
Withers for England, though much more limited, tends
in the direction of confirming it, and Mr. Hartley Withers
concludes that it has been shown that ordinary shares
have advantages which make it impossible to regard
them as necessarily so speculative that we ought to feel
¢ rather ashamed of possessing them ’.1
Contributing subscribers to the National Bureau of
Economic Research, New York, approve the develop-
ment of ¢ an organization devoted to exact and impartial
investigations in the field of economic, social, and indus-
trial science >. The most recent inquiry is entitled Busi-
ness Annals and gives an analysis of business records of
seventeen countries for periods ranging in some instances
as far back as 1790. In many cases these are based on
description, in others on statistics. A conspectus of busi-
ness cycles is possible, giving five conventional values
1 Hints about Investments, Ch. XII.