An Inquiry Into the Various Systems of Political Economy: Their Advantages and Disadvantages : and the Theory Most Favourable to the Increase of National WealthPeter A. Mesier, 1812 - 492 sider |
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Side 47
... consequently augments the resources of the laborious and the treasures of the rich . Modern wealth affords yet another inestimable ad- vantage to civil society ; the more it is generally dif fused , the more it renders obedience light ...
... consequently augments the resources of the laborious and the treasures of the rich . Modern wealth affords yet another inestimable ad- vantage to civil society ; the more it is generally dif fused , the more it renders obedience light ...
Side 48
... consequently lives in a continual hostility against society . Had the science of statistics arrived to that degree of improvement which it is desirable that it should reach , the ratio of the security and power of governments might , by ...
... consequently lives in a continual hostility against society . Had the science of statistics arrived to that degree of improvement which it is desirable that it should reach , the ratio of the security and power of governments might , by ...
Side 51
... consequently , held out a permanent ob- stacle to the general civilization and improvement of mankind . Modern wealth connects all nations ; it binds them by common interests , causes them to forward the same ends by the sentiment of ...
... consequently , held out a permanent ob- stacle to the general civilization and improvement of mankind . Modern wealth connects all nations ; it binds them by common interests , causes them to forward the same ends by the sentiment of ...
Side 54
... in the middle age , that is to say , for more than thirteen centuries , the sources of wealth were dried up throughout the Roman empire , and consequently throughout the whole then known world . It was 54 . ON THE VARIOUS SYSTEMS.
... in the middle age , that is to say , for more than thirteen centuries , the sources of wealth were dried up throughout the Roman empire , and consequently throughout the whole then known world . It was 54 . ON THE VARIOUS SYSTEMS.
Side 55
... consequently throughout the whole then known world . It was only in the twelfth century that these sources were again opened , and Europe was again indebted for wealth to foreign commerce , Venice , Genoa , Pisa , and Florence , though ...
... consequently throughout the whole then known world . It was only in the twelfth century that these sources were again opened , and Europe was again indebted for wealth to foreign commerce , Venice , Genoa , Pisa , and Florence , though ...
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Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
abundance Adam Smith advantages afford agricultural augment Bank of England benefits bills of exchange bour causes chap circulating capital civil classes coin commodities consequently consumed consumption creditors David Hume debts derived diminished doctrine duce Earl of Lauderdale effects employment of capital England equal equivalent Europe exchangeable value expences exported favourable fixed foreign trade French French livres gold and silver greater home-trade improve income increase individuals industry land laws less Lord Lauderdale manufactures and commerce means ments mercantile system merce merchants metallic currency millions Montesquieu national wealth nature opinion paid political economy population private wealth produce of labour productive labour profit of stock proportion prosperity public and private public loans public wealth purchase quantity Quesnay rate of interest rendered revenue riches says scarcity sinking fund source of wealth sumers supposed surplus things tion wages of labour wants Wealth of Nations writers