An Essay on the Distribution of Wealth and on the Sources of Taxation |
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Page 14
... suppose them to occupy one - hundredth part of the cultivated surface of the habitable globe . If we consider principally the numbers of the human race whose fate they influence , or the extent of the regions of which the social ...
... suppose them to occupy one - hundredth part of the cultivated surface of the habitable globe . If we consider principally the numbers of the human race whose fate they influence , or the extent of the regions of which the social ...
Page 229
... suppose the agricultural capital employed in such a country doubled , and the agricultural labor doubled ; that instead of one million of laborers , two millions are employed , and that the produce , profits and rents are all doubled ...
... suppose the agricultural capital employed in such a country doubled , and the agricultural labor doubled ; that instead of one million of laborers , two millions are employed , and that the produce , profits and rents are all doubled ...
Page 271
... suppose England and France to require each 100,000,000 for circulation , and each to possess Decrease of that sum . If the English found means to substitute agricultural paper for 50 of the 100,000,000 , then 50,000,000 of bullion would ...
... suppose England and France to require each 100,000,000 for circulation , and each to possess Decrease of that sum . If the English found means to substitute agricultural paper for 50 of the 100,000,000 , then 50,000,000 of bullion would ...
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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Common terms and phrases
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