The Population Debate: The Development of Conflicting Theories Up to 1900Houghton Mifflin, 1967 - 466 sider |
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Side 199
... diminishing returns was formulated in the second decade of the century . This stated as a natural law of production from the soil that , if the volume of production is increased beyond a certain point , the point of diminishing returns ...
... diminishing returns was formulated in the second decade of the century . This stated as a natural law of production from the soil that , if the volume of production is increased beyond a certain point , the point of diminishing returns ...
Side 200
... diminishing returns as the final answer to this question , but some of the writers reviewed earlier in this chapter restated the familiar optimistic assertion that population growth calls forth an equal or greater growth of production ...
... diminishing returns as the final answer to this question , but some of the writers reviewed earlier in this chapter restated the familiar optimistic assertion that population growth calls forth an equal or greater growth of production ...
Side 382
... returns would begin to diminish , although they implied it would be at an early stage of development . Instead it was the recognition of the opposite tendencies toward diminish- ing returns and increasing returns that most directly ...
... returns would begin to diminish , although they implied it would be at an early stage of development . Instead it was the recognition of the opposite tendencies toward diminish- ing returns and increasing returns that most directly ...
Innhold
Fluctuation in Population Thought | 1 |
Early Population Thought | 9 |
The Rise of Population Theory in the Seventeenth | 28 |
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according added addition advance agriculture American appeared become believed Book capital cause century chapter checks civilization classes concept concerning condition consequences considered continued cultivation demand depends diminishing returns distribution earlier early economic economist edition effect England English especially Essay explained expressed factors fertility force further gave given greater growing human Ibid ideas improvement included increase industry influence interest John labor land later lead less limit living London lower Malthus Malthusian means of subsistence natural necessary noted Observations opinion optimistic overpopulation period pessimistic political economy poor population growth position present Principles problem production profits progress proportion published question reason reference regarded relation remained rent returns rise social society soils statement strength subsistence supply tends theory thought tion trade various views wages wealth workers writers wrote