-41-
are involved in the figures for the whole that are
given for 1940. In the case of the addition for Austria
of income for those regions was rather lower (and even
today is somewhat lower) than in the old Reich. While the
increase in population amounted to fully 14 percent,
probably only some 10 to 12 percent need be added to the
disbursements and receipts of the Industrial Insurance
Fund (without unemployment insurance). At the same time,
the increase in payments for Austria and the Sudetenland
was probably somewhat greater than the increase in income
from contributions (see Table g).
Attention has already been called to the fact that
the figures for industrial Insurance (wlthout unemployment
insurance) are published only by the calendar year. To
at them to the fiscal year data of the public adminis-
tration and the Reich Institution for Unemployment Insur-
ance, etc., therefore entails inaccuracy, which can, however,
scarcely be avoided. In consequence of the difference in
time of 1/4 year each time, the grants from the Reich and
the Reich Institution which are entered by the Industrial
Insurance Fund as income to not correspond with the figures
which are given by those offices as payments to the Industrial
Insurance Fund. In case of the according up of all the public
disbursements,