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 1
... quantity of manufactured goods , with the produce of a smaller quantity of labour , than they must have employed had they prepared them themselves . The town affords a market for the surplus produce of the country . The greater the ...
... quantity of manufactured goods , with the produce of a smaller quantity of labour , than they must have employed had they prepared them themselves . The town affords a market for the surplus produce of the country . The greater the ...
Página 2
... quantity of finished work which they sell to the inhabitants of the country regulates the quantity of the materials and provisions which they buy . Their employment and subsistence can augment only in proportion to the The adoption of ...
... quantity of finished work which they sell to the inhabitants of the country regulates the quantity of the materials and provisions which they buy . Their employment and subsistence can augment only in proportion to the The adoption of ...
Página 19
... quantity would be likely to depress it . note . In Belgium ready sale does not induce cheapness . See Rogers's Our author seems to rely too much on the example of America . America had so many points in her favour that she could hardly ...
... quantity would be likely to depress it . note . In Belgium ready sale does not induce cheapness . See Rogers's Our author seems to rely too much on the example of America . America had so many points in her favour that she could hardly ...
Página 22
... quantity of money which they will exchange for ; and wealth and money , in short , are in common lan- guage considered as in every respect synonymous . A rich country is supposed to be a country abounding in money . The first inquiry of ...
... quantity of money which they will exchange for ; and wealth and money , in short , are in common lan- guage considered as in every respect synonymous . A rich country is supposed to be a country abounding in money . The first inquiry of ...
Página 23
... quantity of every commodity suits itself to the effectual demand , but no commodity regulates itself more easily according to this demand than gold and silver , on account of their small bulk . When the quantity of gold and silver ...
... quantity of every commodity suits itself to the effectual demand , but no commodity regulates itself more easily according to this demand than gold and silver , on account of their small bulk . When the quantity of gold and silver ...
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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