Political Economy for Beginners |
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Page xiv
... income - tax - Taxes on commodities should be as far as possible confined to luxuries - The inci- dence of all taxes levied on land falls on the owner of the land - The land - tax - Tithes - Poor - rates - The incidence of poor - rates ...
... income - tax - Taxes on commodities should be as far as possible confined to luxuries - The inci- dence of all taxes levied on land falls on the owner of the land - The land - tax - Tithes - Poor - rates - The incidence of poor - rates ...
Page 2
... income of a rich man is said to be so many thousand pounds ; the national revenue and the national expenditure are said to be so many million pounds . ' These and hundreds of similar facts caused the true nature of money to be ...
... income of a rich man is said to be so many thousand pounds ; the national revenue and the national expenditure are said to be so many million pounds . ' These and hundreds of similar facts caused the true nature of money to be ...
Page 29
... income from the capital which the diminished demand has caused him to withdraw from his own busi- ness , it may be assumed that he would invest this capital in some other industry .. This capital is not the same as that which his former ...
... income from the capital which the diminished demand has caused him to withdraw from his own busi- ness , it may be assumed that he would invest this capital in some other industry .. This capital is not the same as that which his former ...
Page 41
... Exchequer increases or reduces the income tax . It would therefore seem that in avoiding the economic defect of weakening the pru- dential restraints on population , practical communism runs into the 2-5 INTROD . ] EXCHANGE OF WEALTH . 41.
... Exchequer increases or reduces the income tax . It would therefore seem that in avoiding the economic defect of weakening the pru- dential restraints on population , practical communism runs into the 2-5 INTROD . ] EXCHANGE OF WEALTH . 41.
Page 145
... income yielded by 2 per cent . on our capital ; as we can- not get more than this here we will invest in some foreign enterprise , in an Indian tea - garden , an American railway , or a Peruvian mine . " A large amount of capital is con ...
... income yielded by 2 per cent . on our capital ; as we can- not get more than this here we will invest in some foreign enterprise , in an Indian tea - garden , an American railway , or a Peruvian mine . " A large amount of capital is con ...
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advantage agricultural produce amount Bank Charter Act Bank of England bills of exchange Cambridge capital and labour capitalist causes cent cheques circulating capital circumstances classes cloth coal College commodities competition consequently consumed corn corn laws cost of production cotton Crown 8vo decrease demand division of labour economic economic rent effect employed employers employment English example exchange value exports Extra fcap farm farmer foreign France gold and silver illustration imports income income-tax increased industry instance labour and capital land landlord levied London manufactured margin of cultivation modities obtain Owens College paid poor rate population price of agricultural production of wealth Professor profits of capital purchase quantity rate of interest rate of profit rate of wages regulated rent School Second Edition Shew supply supposed taxation tenant tion trade value of gold value of money wages and profits wages of labour wages-fund wheat workmen
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Page 10 - Prelector of St. John's College, Cambridge. AN ELEMENTARY TREATISE ON MECHANICS. For the Use of the Junior Classes at the University and the Higher Classes in Schools.
Page 28 - EUROPEAN HISTORY. Narrated in a Series of Historical Selections from the Best Authorities. Edited and arranged by EM SEWELL and CM YONGE. First Series, 1003 — 1154. Third Edition. Crown 8vo. 6s. Second Series, 1088 — 1228. Crown 8vo. 6s. Third Edition. " We know of scarcely anything which is so likely to raise to a higher level the average standard of English education.
Page 11 - AN ELEMENTARY TREATISE ON THE DYNAMICS OF THE SYSTEM OF RIGID BODIES. With Numerous Examples. By EDWARD JOHN ROUTH, MA, late Fellow and Assistant Tutor of St.
Page 39 - And the multitude of them that believed were of one heart and of one soul : neither said any of them that ought of the things which he possessed was his own ; but they had all things common.
Page 24 - Book VI. is fitted for higher Classes, and as an Introduction to English Literature. "They are far above any others that have appeared both in form and substance. . . . The editor of the present series has rightly seen that reading books must ' aim chiefly at giving to the pupils the power of accurate, and, if possible, apt and skilful expression; at cultivating in them a good literary taste, and at arousing a desire of further reading.
Page 26 - Stands alone as the one general history of the country, for the sake of which all others, if young and old are wise, will be speedily and surely set aside.
Page 2 - HORACE— THE WORKS OF HORACE, rendered into English Prose, with Introductions, Running Analysis, and Notes, by J.
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Page 16 - As a standard general text-book it deserves to take a leading place." — SPECTATOR. " We unhesitatingly pronounce it the best of all our elementary treatises on Chemistry.