cover image: The National Sample Survey. Number 15. Report on the Sample Survey of Manufacturing Industries: 1951

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The National Sample Survey. Number 15. Report on the Sample Survey of Manufacturing Industries: 1951

1951

The frame for sampling of establishments was prepared on the basis of lists obtained from the registers maintained in the offices of the Chief Inspectors of Factories of the various States. [...] The capital formation in the factory establishment sector has been considered here as the actual process of adding to the stock of physical assets and has been measured by the change in the value of fixed assets and inventories and no account has been taken of the increase of lendings investment in interest-bearing securities or shares and cash. [...] The percentage of the value of output to the value of invested capital in these ten industries was sligktly higher than the correponding percentage in all industries; it was of the same order in the case of ratio of value added to invested capital. [...] In cement and chemicals and drugs industries the value of output per worker was a little higher than the value of invested capital per worker but the value added per worker in the case of the former was nearly three-fifths and in the case of the latter a little less than half of the value of invested capital per worker It is 2SManufacturing Industries 1951 very striking to observe that the value [...] The estimated number of workers and persons other than workers the number of salaried persons per 100 wage earners percentage of workers in each industry to the total number of workers employed in all industries the average number of working days and the man-hours worked by workers in the ten industries are given in Table (5.7).
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Report on the Sample Survey of Manufacturing Industries: 1951
1-118 unknown view

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