A Manual of Political Economy for Schools and Colleges |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 24
Page xiv
... of foreign products Profit of foreign trade CHAPTER XIX . Colonial Trade . 247-257 . British and other colonies The colonial system ' • • 238 239 240 241 243 · 244 • 247 248 London MACMILLAN AND CO . DOM MINA INUS TIO ILLV xiv CONTENTS .
... of foreign products Profit of foreign trade CHAPTER XIX . Colonial Trade . 247-257 . British and other colonies The colonial system ' • • 238 239 240 241 243 · 244 • 247 248 London MACMILLAN AND CO . DOM MINA INUS TIO ILLV xiv CONTENTS .
Page xvii
James Edwin Thorold Rogers. 1 Value of the British colonies Advantage of the connexion to.
James Edwin Thorold Rogers. 1 Value of the British colonies Advantage of the connexion to.
Page xix
... colonies no real outlet for emigration Mr. Gibbon Wakefield's scheme . A national scheme of emigration desirable Benefits of colonization to the world True relations of Great Britain to her colonies · · PAGE · 250 252 . 253 . 254 • 255 ...
... colonies no real outlet for emigration Mr. Gibbon Wakefield's scheme . A national scheme of emigration desirable Benefits of colonization to the world True relations of Great Britain to her colonies · · PAGE · 250 252 . 253 . 254 • 255 ...
Page 81
... the sacrifices which the establishment of the empire has cost It was the proximate cause of the American War of us . G Independence . The severance of those colonies from the British RESTRICTIONS ON OCCUPATIONS . 81 Formation of companies •
... the sacrifices which the establishment of the empire has cost It was the proximate cause of the American War of us . G Independence . The severance of those colonies from the British RESTRICTIONS ON OCCUPATIONS . 81 Formation of companies •
Page 82
... colonies in the islands of the Pacific , were arrested by the trade jealousies of the East India Company . Every stranger in their eyes was a rival , every colonist an interloper . They prevented the ac- climatization of Europeans in ...
... colonies in the islands of the Pacific , were arrested by the trade jealousies of the East India Company . Every stranger in their eyes was a rival , every colonist an interloper . They prevented the ac- climatization of Europeans in ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
accumulated Adam Smith adopted advantage agricultural amount artizans Balliol College bank Bank of England borrowers British capital College colonies competition convenient corn corn-laws cost of production course cultivation currency custom demand diminished duty economical effect emigration employed employer employment England English Eton College example exchange exports fact fcap foreign former gold and silver Harrow School imported increase industry invested Irish famine land landowner latter lenders less levied loans machinery manufacture ment moral nation natural Natural Philosophy necessary notes number of persons object occupied ordinary Oriel College Oxford P. G. TAIT paid payment population possessed possible precious metals profit protection purchaser quantity rate of interest rate of profit rate of wages remuneration rent revenue risk society soil subsistence supply tanistry taxation tion tivated trade trades-union United Kingdom wealth
Popular passages
Page 15 - Mathematical and Physical Papers. By Sir W. THOMSON, LL.D., DCL, FRS, Professor of Natural Philosophy, in the University of Glasgow. Collected from different Scientific Periodicals from May, 1841, to the present time.
Page 262 - The subjects of every state ought to contribute towards the support of the government, as nearly as possible, in proportion to their respective abilities; that is, in proportion to the revenue which they respectively enjoy under the protection of the state.
Page 311 - An Elementary Treatise on Quaternions. By PG TAIT, MA, Professor of Natural Philosophy in the University of Edinburgh ; formerly Fellow of St Peter's College, Cambridge. Second Edition. Demy 8vo. 14^.
Page 157 - Every permanent improvement of the soil, every railway and road, every bettering of the general condition of society, every facility given for production, every stimulus supplied to consumption, raises rent. The landowner sleeps, but thrives.
Page 224 - The only case in which, on mere principles of political economy, protecting duties can be defensible, is when they are imposed temporarily (especially in a young and rising nation) in hopes of naturalizing a foreign industry, in itself perfectly suitable to the circumstances of the country.
Page 10 - Professor of English Literature at King's College, London. THERE are two dangers to which the student of English Literature is exposed at the outset of his task ;—his reading is apt to be too narrow or too diffuse. Out of the vast number of authors set before him in books professing to deal with this subject he knows not which to select: he thinks he must read a little of all; he soon abandons so hopeless an attempt; he ends by contenting himself with second-hand information ; and professing to...
Page 312 - ... logical, developing in lucid order principles from facts, and keeping theory always dependent upon observation ; a book that keeps the reason of the student active while he strives to master details difficult but never without interest.
Page 146 - The increase of population has not preceded but followed this occupation and cultivation. It is not the pressure of population on the means of subsistence which has led men to cultivate inferior soils, but the fact that these soils being cultivated in another way, or taken into cultivation, an increased population became possible. How could an increased population have stimulated greater labour in agriculture, when agriculture must have supplied the means on which that increased population could...
Page 275 - The power of transferring a tax from the person who actually pays it to some other person varies with the object taxed. A tax on rents cannot be transferred. A tax on commodities is always transferred to the consumer.
Page 64 - ... as contrasted with another which lives on rice or potatoes ; and this quite apart from the prudence or incautiousness of the people. Two instances will illustrate this rule. The Irish famine of 1846 was due to the sudden disease which affected the potato. It was equally severe in the northern parts of Scotland, and particularly in the Western Highlands; its effects, as we all know, were terrible ; but the same disease affected the same plant in England. That, however, which was distress to the...