An Essay on the Distribution of Wealth and on the Sources of Taxation. By the Rev. Richard Jones ..., Volumen1J. Murray, 1831 - 329 páginas |
Dentro del libro
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Página xix
... yielding any safe permanent general prin- ciples and men have been inclined to shrink from the task of even examining opinions , which they have thought doomed only to startle without con- vincing , and then to disappear , and give ...
... yielding any safe permanent general prin- ciples and men have been inclined to shrink from the task of even examining opinions , which they have thought doomed only to startle without con- vincing , and then to disappear , and give ...
Página xxiii
... yield truth , even on this intricate subject , but because those who have been the most prominent in circulating error , have really turned aside from the task of going through such an examination at all : have confined the observations ...
... yield truth , even on this intricate subject , but because those who have been the most prominent in circulating error , have really turned aside from the task of going through such an examination at all : have confined the observations ...
Página xxix
... yield the successive additions made to the existing stock of accumulated wealth . We come then to the causes which determine the proportion which the annual revenue allotted to its owners bears to the mass of accumulated wealth employed ...
... yield the successive additions made to the existing stock of accumulated wealth . We come then to the causes which determine the proportion which the annual revenue allotted to its owners bears to the mass of accumulated wealth employed ...
Página xxx
... yield- ing no revenue to the state , and that their receivers are unconsciously gifted with a power of throwing back on other classes the impositions nominally laid upon them . Tracing society then once more through its many forms and ...
... yield- ing no revenue to the state , and that their receivers are unconsciously gifted with a power of throwing back on other classes the impositions nominally laid upon them . Tracing society then once more through its many forms and ...
Página xxxvi
... yields readily in the upper classes , to the accu- mulating force of various motives for restraint , which necessarily multiply and gather more joint strength , with the growth of those artificial wants the fruit of wealth aud ...
... yields readily in the upper classes , to the accu- mulating force of various motives for restraint , which necessarily multiply and gather more joint strength , with the growth of those artificial wants the fruit of wealth aud ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
An Essay on the Distribution of Wealth and on the Sources of Taxation Richard Jones Vista completa - 1831 |
An Essay on the Distribution of Wealth and on the Sources of Taxation Richard Jones Vista completa - 1831 |
An Essay on the Distribution of Wealth: And on the Sources of Taxation ... Richard Jones Sin vista previa disponible - 2015 |
Términos y frases comunes
accumulation actual additional advance agricultural amount auxiliary capital body Book capital employed capitalists causes Chap circumstances condition cottier rents crease cultivation decrease Destutt de Tracy diminished division duce earth Edition effects efficiency of agricultural England estates Europe existence extent farmer's rents gradually Greece Hungary improvement increased rents industry influence interests labor rents land landlords laws less Livonia means ment Metayer Rents mode money rents nations necessary non-agricultural classes observed occupied Origin owners peasant rents peasantry peculiar Persia Poland political population portion prevail produce rents producing classes productive power progress proportion proprietors quarters of corn raise rents rate of profits raw produce relative fertility relative numbers revenue Ricardo rise of rents Russia Ryot Rents Sect Serf Rents share shew slaves society soil sovereign subsistence suppose surplus profits tenantry tenants tion tivation Turgot villeins wages wealth whole
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Página 210 - ... no demand for any additional quantity of corn ; the capital and labour employed on No. 3 will be devoted to the production of other commodities desirable to the community, and can have no effect in raising rent, unless the raw material from which they are made cannot be obtained without employing capital less advantageously on the land, in which case No. 3 must again be cultivated.