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Date: | Fri Mar 31 17:18:28 2006 |
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----------------- HES POSTING -----------------
The originator of this question about "industries" mentioned the Standard
Industrial Classification. In the US the SIC was only established in the
1930's as a part of the work of the Committee on Governmental Statistics
and Information Services (COGSIS) that had the job of refining and
improving Government statistical work--originally with regard to the New
Deal NRA codes and their implementation. I am sure the National Archives
could provide a great deal in the way of information as the how the SIC was
actually arrived at. Prior to this, during the first World War, Wesley
Mitchell, working for the Prices Section of the War Industries Board, made
a vast study of price indexes for a large number of industries. Again, it
would be interesting to find out how an industry was defined for the
wartime purpose of production planning.
Marshall, of course, was obseving 1890s Britain where there was a high
degree of industrial localization: Cotton in Lankashire, Wool in Yorkshire,
Steel and cutlery in Sheffield, pottery around Stoke on Trent, shipbuilding
and heavy engineering on the Tyne and Clyde. So the idea of well defined
industries might have appeared quite a matter of common sense and not in
need of a great deal of analysis.
Malcolm Rutherford.
University of Victoria
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