An Essay on the Distribution of Wealth and on the Sources of Taxation |
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Page 79
... slaves of true believers , and allows them to use or sell all others at their pleasure . Some The Greeks used the slaves , with which thei frequent wars supplied them , in all kinds of menia and laborious occupations , and a notion that ...
... slaves of true believers , and allows them to use or sell all others at their pleasure . Some The Greeks used the slaves , with which thei frequent wars supplied them , in all kinds of menia and laborious occupations , and a notion that ...
Page 80
... slaves in Eng- land . 66 No slaves , " exclaimed their auditor , " then what do you do for servants ? " In Greece the labor of cultivation was at first shared between the master and slave . This must always be while properties are small ...
... slaves in Eng- land . 66 No slaves , " exclaimed their auditor , " then what do you do for servants ? " In Greece the labor of cultivation was at first shared between the master and slave . This must always be while properties are small ...
Page 82
... slaves who were very carefully trained as bailiffs , like the Roman villici . All estates , how- ever , could not be like his within a ride of the capi- tal ; the more distant were necessarily confided almost wholly to these managing slaves ...
... slaves who were very carefully trained as bailiffs , like the Roman villici . All estates , how- ever , could not be like his within a ride of the capi- tal ; the more distant were necessarily confided almost wholly to these managing slaves ...
Contents
Page | 38 |
revenue of every class may be increased by an invasion of the revenue | 286 |
Summary of Farmers Rents | 305 |
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accumulation actual additional advance agricultural amount auxiliary capital body Book Boox capital employed capitalists causes Chap circumstances condition cottier rents crease cultivation decrease Destutt de Tracy diminished duce earth effects efficiency of agricultural England estates Europe existence extent gradually Greece Hungary Ibid improvement Increase of Rents increased rents industry influence interests labor rents land landlords laws less Livonia means ment Metayer Rents mode money rents nations necessary non-agricultural classes observed occupied owners paid peasant rents peasantry peculiar Persia Poland political population portion produce rents producing classes productive power progress proportion proprietors quarters of corn raise rents Rajasthan rate of profits raw produce relative fertility relative numbers revenue Ricardo rise of rents Russia Ryot Rents Sect serf rents share shew slaves society soil sovereign subsistence suppose surplus profits tenantry tenants tion tivation Turgot villeins villenage wages wealth whole yield