Preliminary Economic Studies of the War

EDITED BY DAVID KINLEY

President of the University of Illinois
Member of Committee of Research of the Endowment

1. Early Economic Effects of the War upon Canada.
By Adam Shortt, formerly Commissioner of the Canadian
Civil Service, now Chairman, Board of Historical
Publications, Canada.

2. Early Effects of the European War upon the Finance,
Commerce and Industry of Chile. By L. S. Rowe,
Professor of Political Science, University of
Pennsylvania.

3. War Administration of the Railways in the United
States and Great Britain. By Frank H. Dixon,
Professor of Economics, Dartmouth College, and Julius H.
Parmelee, Statistician, Bureau of Railway Economics.

4. Economic Effects of the World War upon Women and
Children in Great Britain. By Irene Osgood Andrews,
Assistant Secretary of the American Association for
Labor Legislation.

5. Direct Costs of the Present War. By Ernest L.
Bogart, Professor of Economics, University of Illinois.

6. Effects of the War upon Insurance with Special
Reference to the Substitution of Insurance for
Pensions. By William F. Gephart, Professor of
Economics, Washington University, St. Louis.

7. The Financial History of Great Britain, 1914-1918.
By Frank L. McVey, President,
University of Kentucky.

8. British War Administration. By John A. Fairlie,
Professor of Political Science, University of Illinois.

9. Influence of the Great War upon Shipping.
By J. Russell Smith, Professor of Industry,
University of Pennsylvania.

10. War Thrift.
By Thomas Nixon Carver, Professor of Political Economy,
Harvard University.

11. Effects of the Great War upon Agriculture in the
United States and Great Britain.
By Benjamin H. Hibbard, Professor of Agricultural Economics,
University of Wisconsin.

12. Disabled Soldiers and Sailors—Pensions and Training.
By Edward T. Devine, Professor of Social Economy,
Columbia University.

13. Government Control of the Liquor Business in Great Britain
and the United States
.
By Thomas Nixon Carver, Professor of Political Economy,
Harvard University.

14. British Labor Conditions and Legislation during the War.
By Matthew B. Hammond, Professor of Economics,
Ohio State University.

15. Effects of the War upon Money, Credit and Banking
in France and the United States.

By B. M. Anderson, Jr., Ph.D.

16. Negro Migration during the War.
By Emmett J. Scott, Secretary-Treasurer,
Howard University, Washington, D. C.

17. Early Effects of the War upon the Finance,
Commerce and Industry of Peru.

By L. S. Rowe, Professor of Political Science,
University of Pennsylvania.

18. Government Control and Operation of Industry in Great
Britain and the United States during the World War.

By Charles Whiting Baker, C. E., Consulting Engineer.

19. Prices and Price Control in Great Britain and
the United States during the World War.

By Simon Litman, Professor of Economics,
University of Illinois.

[1] 20. Cooperative Movement in Russia.
By E. M. Kayden.

[2] 21. The Germans in South America: A Contribution to
the Economic History of the World War.

By C. H. Haring, Associate Professor of History,
Yale University.

[3] 22. Effects of the War on Pauperism, Crime
and Programs of Social Welfare.

By Edith Abbott, Lecturer in Sociology,
University of Chicago.

[4] 23. (Abandoned.)

24. Direct and Indirect Costs of the Great World War.
By Ernest L. Bogart, Professor of Economics,
University of Illinois.
(Revised edition of Study No. 5.)

25. Government War Contracts.
By John F. Crowell,

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