- 52 - of the use of income. Hence its total amount is measured by the expenditures of the public bottles for government payments "intended for consumption" such as educational and welfare work, government transfers of income, such as annuities and relief, and other similar expenditures. A part of the taxes and fees necessary for covering these expenditures is already included in private income, that is, that portion which, under the income tax law in effect, can not be educated as professional outlay, such as taxes from income and property, school fees and the like. The granting of orbit also to the government is already contained in private income as a portion of private savings. The total of this private income is therefore increased in the calculation aof the national income (aside from the net receipts of the public trading capital) by that amount from the other tax and fee revenue which is needed to make up the difference between the public expenditures designated above and the public revenue still concealed in private income or paid. In as earned revenue. Another revenue from taxes and fees is treated as national economic costs and therefore is not con- sidered at all in the total national income. Now if we should connect the total net expenditures of the public budget, which also include that portion of the public expenditures, that are to be called national maintenance costs, |