Principles of Political Economy: Deduced from the Natural Laws of Social Welfare and Applied to the Present State of Britain |
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Page xxii
Page ture owing to the unnatural existing relations of population and subsistence 233 CHAPTER XI .-- POPULATION AND SUBSISTENCE . — History of the supply of Food to an increasing People . - Early limitation of the numbers and resources ...
Page ture owing to the unnatural existing relations of population and subsistence 233 CHAPTER XI .-- POPULATION AND SUBSISTENCE . — History of the supply of Food to an increasing People . - Early limitation of the numbers and resources ...
Page 57
If , however , we come to the conclusion , that an individual who has within his easy reach the means of comfortable subsistence enjoys as fair a chance of happiness as those who occupy stations in the common opinion of the world more ...
If , however , we come to the conclusion , that an individual who has within his easy reach the means of comfortable subsistence enjoys as fair a chance of happiness as those who occupy stations in the common opinion of the world more ...
Page 309
... with obvious inconsistency , while they deprecate a public provision for the poor on the ground of the insufficiency of the means of subsistence , encourage their support by private charity , which must evidently draw its resources ...
... with obvious inconsistency , while they deprecate a public provision for the poor on the ground of the insufficiency of the means of subsistence , encourage their support by private charity , which must evidently draw its resources ...
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Contents
PRELIMINARY DISCOURSE On the Coincidence of | 1 |
Duty of a Government the securing | 28 |
PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL ECONOMY DEDUCED | 40 |
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advantages afford agriculture amount arts benefit called capital carried cause circumstances comforts commodities condition consequently consumed continually corn cost cultivation demand desire determine direct distribution duties Economy effect employed employment enjoyment entire equally evident evils exchange exclusive existence expense extent fact fall foreign give greater hand happiness human important improvement increase individual industry injury institutions interest kind labour land least less limited maintain manufactures means measure ment monopoly natural necessary numbers object obtain occupation owner parties perhaps period persons political poor poor-law population portion possess possible present principle probably production profit proportion quantity raised reason remain rent result share skill society soil subsistence sufficient supply term things tion trade true wages wealth whole