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doi: 10.1038/090431a0
THERE is much to be said both for and against the method adopted by the late Dr. Pierson of treating Value in Exchange and Money first, and dealing afterwards with Production and Public Revenue in the volume before us. Certainly some” of the treatment has been narrowed, because much that rightly belongs to production has found a place in the earlier chapters, but the author has dealt admirably with the remaining phases of the subject. Principles of Economics. Vol. ii. By Dr. N. G. Pierson. Translated from the Dutch by A. A. Wotzel. Pp. xxiii + 645. (London: Macmillan and Co., Ltd., 1912.) Price 10s. net.
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