ABSTRACT

First published in 1909 and reissued in 1910, J. A. Hobson’s The Industrial System provides a complex analysis of distribution and consumption. Offering a critique of contemporary capitalism whilst accepting the superiority of the free market, the book includes an exploration of areas such as cost and surplus, supply and demand and the labour movement. This is an important work by one of the most important economic thinkers of the twentieth century, which will be of particular interest to modern economic historians.

chapter I|10 pages

1A Business

chapter III|17 pages

Spending and Saving

chapter IV|27 pages

Costs and Surplus

chapter V|38 pages

Wages, Interest, and Rent

chapter VI|15 pages

Ability

chapter VII|9 pages

Distribution of the Surplus by Pulls

chapter VIII|10 pages

Prices and the Ratio of Exchange

chapter IX|14 pages

The Mechanism of Markets

chapter X|14 pages

The Law of Supply and Demand

chapter XI|8 pages

The Size of Businesses

chapter XII|16 pages

Trusts and Monopolies

chapter XIII|11 pages

The Labour Movement

chapter XIV|29 pages

Socialism and The Social Income

chapter XV|12 pages

Taxation of Imports

chapter XVI|19 pages

Money and Finance

chapter XVII|6 pages

Insurance

chapter XVIII|28 pages

Unemployment

chapter XIX|23 pages

The Human Interpretation of Industry