 | David Ricardo - Classical school of economics - 1821 - 560 pages
...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. It is undoubtedly true, that the fall in the relative price of raw produce, in consequence of the improvement... | |
 | Abraham John Valpy - Great Britain - 1826 - 596 pages
...raising rent unless the raw material from which (hey are mado cannot be obtained without employing capital less advantageously on the land, in which case No. 3 must again be cultivated. — Jticardo. p. 69. But improvements in agriculture are of two kinds ; those which increase liic productive... | |
 | Abraham John Valpy - Great Britain - 1826 - 600 pages
...material from which they are made cannot be obtained without employing capital li-ss advantage-, ously on the land, in which case No. 3 must •again be cultivated. — Bicardo. p. 69. But improvements in agriculture are of two kinds : (hose which increase the productive... | |
 | Thomas Perronet Thompson - Economics - 1829 - 100 pages
...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. — Ricardo, p. 69. Bat improvements in agriculture Their effect on rent is of a nature directly contrary... | |
 | Richard Jones - Human geography - 1831 - 470 pages
...devoted to the production of other commodities " desirable to the community, and can have no eifect " in raising rent, unless the raw material from which...no more, we need not trouble ourselves to enquire. • • * Passages, in not* A. It is a case, which it will be admitted on all hands BooK i ;. is never... | |
 | Henry Charles Carey - Economics - 1837 - 380 pages
...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."* Rent is deemed to arise so entirely from the difficulty of obtainingfood, that if, by any improvement... | |
 | Robert Torrens - Corn laws (Great Britain) - 1844 - 612 pages
...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. " It is undoubtedly true that the fall in the relative price of raw produce, in consequence of the... | |
 | David Ricardo, John Ramsay McCulloch - Economics - 1886 - 696 pages
...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. It is undoubtedly true, that the fall in the relative price of raw produce, in consequence of the improvement... | |
 | David Ricardo - Economics - 1895 - 152 pages
...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. It is undoubtedly true, that the fall in the relative price of raw produce, in consequence of the improvement... | |
 | Oliver Joseph Thatcher - Encyclopedias and dictionaries - 1907 - 618 pages
...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. It is undoubtedly true, that the fall in the relative price of raw produce, in consequence of the improvement... | |
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