The Cost of the World War to the American People

1932 ◽  
Vol 19 (1) ◽  
pp. 140
Author(s):  
E. L. Bogart ◽  
John Maurice Clark
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Daiva Tamulevičienė ◽  
Jonas Mackevičius

Appropriate product costing helps not only to estimate the cost of production correctly but also to evaluate the activity results, forecast product prices, make reasonable economic decisions. The article analyses the development of product costing in Lithuania from 1918 to 2019. The following stages of development of product costing were distinguished: 1) between the world wars when Lithuania was independent and during the Second world war (1918–1944); 2) during the years of Soviet occupation (1944–1990); 3) after reinstating the independence of Lithuania (1990–2019). The most important provisions of normative documents related to product costing of every stage were analysed, opinions, statements and suggestions how to improve product costing by different Lithuanian authors were evaluated.


Author(s):  
Graham Cross

Franklin D. Roosevelt was US president in extraordinarily challenging times. The impact of both the Great Depression and World War II make discussion of his approach to foreign relations by historians highly contested and controversial. He was one of the most experienced people to hold office, having served in the Wilson administration as Assistant Secretary of the Navy, completed two terms as Governor of New York, and held a raft of political offices. At heart, he was an internationalist who believed in an engaged and active role for the United States in world. During his first two terms as president, Roosevelt had to temper his international engagement in response to public opinion and politicians wanting to focus on domestic problems and wary of the risks of involvement in conflict. As the world crisis deepened in the 1930s, his engagement revived. He adopted a gradualist approach to educating the American people in the dangers facing their country and led them to eventual participation in war and a greater role in world affairs. There were clearly mistakes in his diplomacy along the way and his leadership often appeared flawed, with an ambiguous legacy founded on political expediency, expanded executive power, vague idealism, and a chronic lack of clarity to prepare Americans for postwar challenges. Nevertheless, his policies to prepare the United States for the coming war saw his country emerge from years of depression to become an economic superpower. Likewise, his mobilization of his country’s enormous resources, support of key allies, and the holding together of a “Grand Alliance” in World War II not only brought victory but saw the United States become a dominant force in the world. Ultimately, Roosevelt’s idealistic vision, tempered with a sound appreciation of national power, would transform the global position of the United States and inaugurate what Henry Luce described as “the American Century.”


1941 ◽  
Vol 46 (3) ◽  
pp. 646
Author(s):  
Kenyon E. Poole ◽  
Leo Grebler ◽  
Wilhelm Winkler
Keyword(s):  

1927 ◽  
Vol 21 (4) ◽  
pp. 668-684 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wallace McClure

The wave of exaggerated nationalism which has pervaded the nations of the earth generally since the World War has been accompanied by seemingly serious efforts on the part of national governments to arrange for the production within their territorial limits of as many as possible of the articles which their peoples consume, often quite heedless of the cost of home as compared with external production. Such disregard of economic laws could scarcely have failed to aggravate the poverty in which the world was inevitably left in the wake of the war. Political leaders have seemed wholly unmindful of the essential truth of economics, namely, that destruction and waste, the accompaniments of war, cannot be indulged in without a lowering of economic standards, that those standards can only be raised by production, and that recovery is accomplished in the measure that production is achieved at the place and by the methods which make possible the largest output of consumable goods in proportion to the labor and raw material involved.


1932 ◽  
Vol 42 (166) ◽  
pp. 288
Author(s):  
H. W. Macrosty ◽  
John Maurice Clark
Keyword(s):  

PEDIATRICS ◽  
1989 ◽  
Vol 83 (1) ◽  
pp. A32-A32
Author(s):  
Student

The telephone is now so imbedded in human behavior that it is hard to imagine what life was like without it . . . It is said that the man in charge [of a campaign during World War I to get Americans to answer the telephone promptly] later remarked "I can state that I am personally responsible for making the American people the only people in the world who will interrupt sex to answer the telephone."


1932 ◽  
Vol 38 (1) ◽  
pp. 120 ◽  
Author(s):  
Victor S. Clark ◽  
John Maurice Clark ◽  
Charles Gide ◽  
William Oualid
Keyword(s):  

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