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The development and present status of input-output methods in Hungary

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References

  1. Laky, D.: Memorial article of Béla Földes, Frigyes Fellner and Béla Kenéz,Hungarian Statistical Review, 1947, Nr. 7–8, pp. 272 ff. In the appendix with a bibliography of the works ofFellner, pp. 286. ff. (In Hungarian.)

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  2. Similarly, the first national income calculation in Russia was based on the net product taxation, serving as a basis for the first Soviet national income estimate on a Marxian theoretical foundation. Compare with:Versuch einer Berechnung des Volkseinkommens in 50 Gouvernements des Europäischen Russlands in den Jahren 1900–1913, unter der Redaktion vonS. N. Prokopovitz, Moskau, 1918. (In German.)

  3. Fellner, Fr.:The National Income of Postwar Hungary, Budapest, 1930. (In Hungarian) —andKonkoly-Thege, Gy.:Hungary, Economic Statistical Data, 1928–32, Compiled by the Hungarian Central Bureau of Statistics, Budapest, 1933. (In English.)

  4. Matolcsy, M.—Varga, St.:The National Income of Hungary, 1924/25–1934/35, Budapest, 1936., Special Series of the Hungarian Bureau of Economic Research, Nr. 11, (In Hungarian)—and from the same authors:The National Income of Hungary, 1924/25–1936/37, Foreword byLaky, D., London, 1938. (In English.)

  5. This estimate was worked out by the study-group for economic fluctuations in the Hungarian Central Statistical Office under the supervision of the author, with Professor KolomanKádas as scientific adviser.

  6. The National Income of Hungary in 1946/47, edited by the Hungarian Bureau of Economic Research, mimeographed. (In Hungarian.)

  7. Compare with the “White Paper”, No. Cmd. 6623, in which for the year 1944 the ideas ofJ. M. Keynes concerning the national budget concept were first developed and presented in a statistical form with the title:National Income and Expenditure of the United Kingdom, H. M. S. O. London, 1945.

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  9. The 3 Years Plan of Hungary, edited by the Hungarian State Planning Office, Budapest, 1947.

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  18. “The Problems of the Making and the Application of Input-Output Tables”, Material of the Scientific Statistical Conference held in Budapest June 1–5, 1961, Section A, Budapest, 1962. Compare especially with the Foreword byPéter, Gy., President of the Hungarian Central Statistical Office, pp. 11 ff.,—and with the article ofLukács, O.: “The Hungarian Input-Output Tables and Their Statistical Foundations,” pp. 19 ff. (In Hungarian.)

  19. “A Bibliography of Input-Output Literature”, (Closed at the 31st August, 1962), Collected by the Library of the Hungarian National Bank, mimeographed.

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This article is a summary of a lecture delivered by the author in English at the Economic University of Warna (Bulgaria) in November 1962, with Rector Lübomir Stanew in the chair and Professor A. U. Totew (Faculty of Law, Chair of Statistics, University of Sofia) as interpreter. All ideas expressed in this article are strictly personal views of the author and are not connected with official views on this subject.

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Horváth, R. The development and present status of input-output methods in Hungary. Econ Plann 3, 209–220 (1963). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02481404

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