An analysis of Adam Smiths' Inquiry into the nature and causes of the wealth of nations, repr., with additions, from the 3rd ed. of J. Joyce's abridgement, revised and ed. by W.P. Emerton, Volumen21880 |
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Página 9
... becomes subject to it , the tax amounts to a prohibition to all gentlemen and substantial burghers from investing their stock in farming operations on any land but their own . The ancient tenths and fifteenths in England seem to have ...
... becomes subject to it , the tax amounts to a prohibition to all gentlemen and substantial burghers from investing their stock in farming operations on any land but their own . The ancient tenths and fifteenths in England seem to have ...
Página 18
... become independent , the great pro- prietors were no longer capable of disturbing the peace of the country . An established government was main- tained there as well as in the city , pp . 415-17 . In commercial countries very old ...
... become independent , the great pro- prietors were no longer capable of disturbing the peace of the country . An established government was main- tained there as well as in the city , pp . 415-17 . In commercial countries very old ...
Página 26
... 20 . It is not by the importation of gold and silver that the discovery of America has enriched Europe . By the 1 See Rogers's note on this passage . abundance of the mines , those metals have become cheaper 26 BOOK IV . OF THE PRINCIPLE.
... 20 . It is not by the importation of gold and silver that the discovery of America has enriched Europe . By the 1 See Rogers's note on this passage . abundance of the mines , those metals have become cheaper 26 BOOK IV . OF THE PRINCIPLE.
Página 27
Jeremiah Joyce Wolseley Partridge Emerton. abundance of the mines , those metals have become cheaper , and have been brought to the level of a much greater number of purchasers . But the cheapness renders those metals rather less fit for ...
Jeremiah Joyce Wolseley Partridge Emerton. abundance of the mines , those metals have become cheaper , and have been brought to the level of a much greater number of purchasers . But the cheapness renders those metals rather less fit for ...
Página 29
... becomes always the emporium , or general market , for the goods of all the different countries whose trade it carries on , p . 26 . II . Every individual who employs his capital in the support of domestic industry endeavours so to ...
... becomes always the emporium , or general market , for the goods of all the different countries whose trade it carries on , p . 26 . II . Every individual who employs his capital in the support of domestic industry endeavours so to ...
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Términos y frases comunes
Adam Smith advantage ÆNEID agriculture America ancient artificers balance of trade bank money Bonamy Price bounty Britain capital cent Church civilised clergy coin College colony trade commerce commodities consumer consumption corn Crown 8vo cultivation debt defrayed duties East India empire employed employment England English equal established Europe expense exportation factures favour foreign trade former France fund gold and silver greater Hertford College importation imposed improvement increase industry interest JAMES THORNTON labour land-tax landlord levied Lord Lord Clive maintain manu manufactures ment mercantile merchants monopoly natural necessary occasion Oxford paid Political Economy Portugal profit prohibition proportion proprietors quantity QUESTIONS AND EXERCISES raise regulated render rent of land restraints revenue Rogers's note Roman ROMAN LAW rude produce seignorage society sovereign Spain Specimen standing army subsistence tenant THOMAS CLAYTON tion Translation Wealth of Nations whole