Applied Economics: The Application of Economic Principles to the Problems of Economic LifeF. S. Crofts & Company, 1934 - 693 sider |
Inni boken
Resultat 1-3 av 76
Side 469
... society . Such being the case , society may and should restrict or abolish this privilege if it is in the social interest to do so . There are no rights which men enjoy that are inalienable , in the sense that society cannot curtail ...
... society . Such being the case , society may and should restrict or abolish this privilege if it is in the social interest to do so . There are no rights which men enjoy that are inalienable , in the sense that society cannot curtail ...
Side 631
... society , which is regarded as the lower phase of communism . In this stage , all the means of production will be in the hands of the democratically governed state . The masses of the workers will now be in control , and industry will ...
... society , which is regarded as the lower phase of communism . In this stage , all the means of production will be in the hands of the democratically governed state . The masses of the workers will now be in control , and industry will ...
Side 644
... society is a class structure , but they conceive of the state , not as a tool of domination , but rather as the coördinating structure which forces the different elements of society to act harmoniously . As a syndicalist , Mussolini had ...
... society is a class structure , but they conceive of the state , not as a tool of domination , but rather as the coördinating structure which forces the different elements of society to act harmoniously . As a syndicalist , Mussolini had ...
Innhold
THE PROMOTION OF EFFICIENCY IN | 51 |
INDUSTRIAL PEACE | 123 |
PROFITSHARING AND JOINT CONTROL IN INDUSTRY | 143 |
Opphavsrett | |
17 andre deler vises ikke
Andre utgaver - Vis alle
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
agricultural American business cycles capital cent chapter Commission commodities companies competition consumers coöperation corporations costs courts demand depression devized disputes dollars earned economic effect efficiency employers employment enterprize established exchange exports farm Federal Reserve Bank Federal Reserve System Federal Trade Commission financing funds gold growth important income increase individual industry inequality inheritance taxes interest Interstate Commerce Commission investment labor land legislation loans machinery manufacture ment methods monopoly operation organization ownership payment period persons plant population possible present price level price system principle problem production profits progressive tax protection public ownership public utilities purchase railroads reduced regulation result revenue secure social socialists society stability standard Stuart Chase sumers supply surplus tariff taxation thru tion trade trade union union United wages wealth welfare workers