income. It is therefore customary in financial and statis- tical discussions to take into consideration only the public trading capital in general with its net yield. Under the "other trading capital", which primarily embraces the holdings of the Reich in industrial andbanking undertakings, as well as the forests and public lands belonging to the Reich, the productive outlays in connection with the in- vestments for the Four- Year Plan were greater in the fiscal years 1938 and 1939 than the ocrresponding revenues. So there is here a debit item for net yield in both years. Also in the case of the other general means of cover ing, in the Reich budget expenditures stand opposite gains entered as gross profits; they are different in nature from the expenditures of the civil administrative authorities. Like the expenditures in connection with the trading capital, these disbursements have to a certain extent an internal connection with the items of income, so that in a practical way they are likewise set off against them, in order that the real administrative expenditures of the Reich may be worked out. In the fiscal year 1938 there was here an item ! of expenditure of 27.3 million RM; in the fiscal year 1939 the corresponding sum amounted to 198 million RM (see Table 4), z . , If we take away from the civil expenditures of the Reich aotually made in the fiscal year 1938 and 1939 the amounts mentioned, for the tax transfers put on the books as outlays, |