... promote our manufactures and extend our trade. So long as we co-operate with nature, we cannot be undersold by others ; while, from the reciprocity of commerce, every increase in the productive powers of labour which should enable us to consume, or,... An Essay on the External Corn Trade - Page 185by Robert Torrens - 1829 - 477 pagesFull view - About this book
| John Ramsay McCulloch - Economics - 1825 - 446 pages
...manufactures and extend our trade. So long as we cooperate with nature, we cannot be undersold by others ; while, from the reciprocity of commerce, every increase in the productive powers of labour which should enable us to consume, or, which is the same thing in a commercial point of view,... | |
| Robert Torrens - Corn laws (Great Britain). - 1826 - 452 pages
...may beneficially invest in manufactures and commerce. For, thus, co-operating with nature, she-cannot be undersold by foreign nations; while, from the reciprocity...and thus opens a perpetually extending field for her exertion* Thus we see, that if the current of events was not forced out of its natural channel, industry... | |
| John Ramsay M'Culloch - Interest - 1870 - 376 pages
...manufactures and extend our trade. So long as we co-operate with nature, we cannot be undersold by others ; while, from the reciprocity of commerce, every increase in the productive powers of labour which should enable us to consume, or, which is the same thing in a commercial point of view,... | |
| Donald Rutherford - Classical school of economics - 1996 - 520 pages
...in the same employments. As long as we cooperate with nature, we cannot be undersold by foreigners; while, from the reciprocity of commerce, every increase in the productive powers of labour, which should enable us to consume, or, which is the same thing, to furnish an equivalent for,... | |
| |