The Premises of Free Trade ExaminedJ. Wilson and son, 1881 - 36 páginas |
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Página 11
... Nations . " The limits of space forbid the quotation of his whole chapter , which contains a great deal of rhetorical repetition ; but nothing shall be passed over which demands reply . In his first paragraph he calls protected ...
... Nations . " The limits of space forbid the quotation of his whole chapter , which contains a great deal of rhetorical repetition ; but nothing shall be passed over which demands reply . In his first paragraph he calls protected ...
Página 15
... nation which , by his own supposition , is not fully occupied , with an individual who , by his own supposition , is fully occupied . Let us correct this by supposing the individual to have employment only four days out of six . He will ...
... nation which , by his own supposition , is not fully occupied , with an individual who , by his own supposition , is fully occupied . Let us correct this by supposing the individual to have employment only four days out of six . He will ...
Página 16
... nation makes with labor otherwise idle and with capital which would otherwise be lying unemployed , or which perhaps would never have come into existence , costs the nation nothing . By producing the article it would otherwise import ...
... nation makes with labor otherwise idle and with capital which would otherwise be lying unemployed , or which perhaps would never have come into existence , costs the nation nothing . By producing the article it would otherwise import ...
Página 18
... nations of continental Europe . Had legislators been aware that industry is limited by capital , they would have seen that , the aggregate capital of the country not having been increased , any por- tion of it which they by their laws ...
... nations of continental Europe . Had legislators been aware that industry is limited by capital , they would have seen that , the aggregate capital of the country not having been increased , any por- tion of it which they by their laws ...
Página 28
... nation is , as before supposed , producing an- nually commodities worth $ 6,000,000,000 , and it has normally in stock $ 1,000,000,000 , being commodities in the hands of producers or dealers and advanced upon by banks or moneyed men ...
... nation is , as before supposed , producing an- nually commodities worth $ 6,000,000,000 , and it has normally in stock $ 1,000,000,000 , being commodities in the hands of producers or dealers and advanced upon by banks or moneyed men ...
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absurd Adam Smith advantage aggregate annual product argues argument Bastiat bricklayers British bushels of wheat capi coal conclusion consume consumption deductive Deductive reasoning demand for commodities demand for labor diminished diminution doctrine Dublin duction economist employ England English entitled Some Leading equal error exchangeable value existence fact fallacy field of employment fixed capital floating capital foreign trade francs free-trade French products French silks funds hats income increase interests Ireland Irish J. S. Mill John Stuart Mill landlords logic manufactured products mechanical and manufacturing ment MORRILL Tariff nation never can exceed obtain ourselves paragraph political economy portion premises Professor Cairnes Professor Cairnes's profits promote abundance proposition protectionist protective law quantity railroads raw produce real wages says society Sophisms steamship stock of commodities sufficiently supply suppose supposition surplus stock syllogism tariff things tion unem unemployed capital United venerable blunders whole wine