An Outline of Political Economy: Designed for Seminaries, and Intended to Explain the Principles of this Important Science, by Familiar Examples, and to Exhibit More Particularly the Great Importance of Agriculture, Mining Industry, Manufactures, and Internal Imporvements to National Wealth and Prosperityauthor, 1828 - 78 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 9
Página 2
... skill , enterprize , and talents of its inhabitants . What else is important to this end ? -The correct and favourable policy of the national government : such a policy as is most conducive to promote the interest and welfare of the ...
... skill , enterprize , and talents of its inhabitants . What else is important to this end ? -The correct and favourable policy of the national government : such a policy as is most conducive to promote the interest and welfare of the ...
Página 7
... skill , industry and enterprise . What is labour ? -Labour is that efficient and active agent , by the operation of which , all kinds of industry and enterpize , whether in agriculture , manufactures , or the fine arts , are brought to ...
... skill , industry and enterprise . What is labour ? -Labour is that efficient and active agent , by the operation of which , all kinds of industry and enterpize , whether in agriculture , manufactures , or the fine arts , are brought to ...
Página 9
... skill in the individual , than as general rules of conduct . Why do incorporated companies , with the command of an extensive capital , conducted by skill and ability , possess decided and important advantages over indi- viduals in the ...
... skill in the individual , than as general rules of conduct . Why do incorporated companies , with the command of an extensive capital , conducted by skill and ability , possess decided and important advantages over indi- viduals in the ...
Página 10
... Skill and Enterprise . What effect is produced by skill and enterprise ? -With labour and capital , skill and enterprise have an important effect and bearing in the production and extension of national wealth . As an extensive capital ...
... Skill and Enterprise . What effect is produced by skill and enterprise ? -With labour and capital , skill and enterprise have an important effect and bearing in the production and extension of national wealth . As an extensive capital ...
Página 11
... skill have done ) to prejudice the minds of the community at large , particularly the farming interest , against agricultural improvements , which have had a favourable effect in the promotion of agriculture , when managed with skill ...
... skill have done ) to prejudice the minds of the community at large , particularly the farming interest , against agricultural improvements , which have had a favourable effect in the promotion of agriculture , when managed with skill ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
An Outline of Political Economy, Designed for Seminaries, and Intended to ... William Jennison Sin vista previa disponible - 2016 |
An Outline of Political Economy: Designed for Seminaries, and Intended to ... William Jennison Sin vista previa disponible - 2015 |
Términos y frases comunes
abundance acre adapted afford amount annual auction duties augmented banks barrels branches Britain calculated canal capital cent chiefly circulating medium circumstances coal coffee commodities corn cotton cultivation culture demand dollars duties effect emigration employment England enjoys Erie canal Europe extent facilities factures favourable fertile flour foreign commerce France fruit grain harbours hemp important advantages income increase of population interior trade internal improvements iron islands Jamaica labour land manu manufac Massachusetts materials of manufactures Middlesex canal miles mixed husbandry Mount Carbon mountains national wealth natural advantages Poland political possesses important pounds sterling principal productive profit promote prosperity purchase raw materials regard to agriculture regard to manufactures regions revenue roads sheep sheep husbandry soil and climate Spain square miles staples subsistence sugar Summary view superior tion tobacco town tures United valuable water privileges vantages variety of soil vine water power West Indies wheat
Pasajes populares
Página 35 - ... the principles of piety, justice, and a sacred regard to truth, love to their country, humanity and universal benevolence, sobriety, industry and frugality, chastity, moderation and temperance, and those other virtues which are the ornament of human society, and the basis upon which a republican constitution is founded...
Página 30 - I" comprises the States of Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, Rhode Island, New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Maryland, Delaware, West Virginia, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida, and the District of Columbia; (c) "Districts II-IV" means all of the States of the United States except those States within District I and District V; (d) "Districts I-IV...
Página 35 - ... to endeavor to lead their pupils, as their ages and capacities will admit, into a clear understanding of the tendency of the above mentioned virtues to preserve and perfect a republican constitution, and secure the blessings of liberty, as well as to promote their future happiness, and also to point out to them the evil tendency of the opposite vices.
Página 68 - Tende, where they are mere masses of rock, wherever there happens to be a little soil, there are a number of olive trees, and a village supported by them. Take away these trees, and the same ground in corn would not support a single family.
Página 48 - The amount of population reregulates the amount of gulates the amount of subpopulation, sistence, in the same way as it regulates the supply of clothing and housing, because with the exception of occasional famines, the quantity of subsistence raised depends on the amount of labour bestowed on it. Population has a natural tend- Population has a tendency to ency to increase faster than increase, but this increase subsistence.
Página 44 - ... discharge the demands upon the Treasury, even at the Places of receiving it. The Revenue would accumulate in the Treasury, only to perish there; while the expedient of substituting Treasury Notes to meet the public engagements, led to an indefinite augmentation of the National Debt. 2. The Treasury has been compelled to augment the amount of the National Debt, both funded and floating, by issues of Treasury Notes to meet the public engagements, at places where it could not command the local currency....
Página 70 - It has happened that the greatest part of a whole plantation of cacao trees have perished in a single night, without any visible cause. Circumstances of this nature, in early times, gave rise to many superstitious notions concerning this tree, and, among others, the appearance of a comet was always considered as fatal to the cacao plantations.
Página 40 - I answer, that the glut of a particular commodity arises from its having outrun the total demand for it in one of two ways: either because it has been produced in excessive abundance, or because the produce of other commodities has fallen short.
Página 58 - ... present consumption, although by a moderate duty the home consumption might exhaust the whole. Previous to the year 1808, it had not been the policy of this country to consider coffee as an article cultivated in the British islands ; and therefore a duty was imposed amounting to about 250 per cent, on the import price of the article. And the Excise restrictions were so severe as to discourage the consumption in every possible way. In 1809 the distresses of the coffee planters being brought under...
Página 38 - The success of one branch of commerce supplies more ample means of purchase, and consequently opens a vent for the products of all the other branches; on the other hand, the stagnation of one channel of manufacture, or of commerce, is felt in all the rest. But it may be asked, if this be so, how does it happen, that there is at times so great a glut of commodities in the market, and so much difficulty in finding a vent for them? Why cannot one of these super-abundant commodities be exchanged for...