- 54- from the national income, either in the way of expenditures in kind or by requiring the services of officials. But it permits a not unimportant portion to flow back into the current of income as mere transfer of income. As early as 1938 (old Reich only), an amount of fully 8 billion RM was involved. By the augmentation of relief for families since the outbreak of the present war, this transfer of income by the public authorities has acquired a considerably greater significance. In 1939 (Austria and the Sudetenland included) it amounted to a scant 12 billion RM, and in 1940 (for the same territory) it will probably reach the figure of 15 billion RM. If we add these amounts to the difference between the social product ln a broader sense and the public expenditures, we get the portion of the national income available from private enterprise, the greater part of which is consumed, and the smaller portion devoted, to new invest- ments in the sector of private enterprise. In the year 1938 (in the old Reich), it amounted to a scant 58 billion RM. In 1939 (Austria and the Budetenland included), we get 63 blllibn RM. If we consider that an increase of 10 to 15 percent is due to the extension of territory, we arrive at the result that even in 1939 the portion of the German national income available from private enterprise must have been somewhat less than in 1938. For 1940 it is calculated at |