| John Stuart Mill - Economics - 1866 - 628 pages
...an element in the cost of production of the commodity which yields it : except in the cases, (Yather conceivable than actually existing) in which it results...production of the commodity which it is employed to produce. X. Omitting the occasional elements ; things which admit of indefinite increase, naturally... | |
| National cyclopaedia - 1867 - 612 pages
...Rent is not an element in the cost of production of the commodity which yields it, except in the cases (rather conceivable than actually existing) in which...production of the commodity which it is employed to produce. [REST.] 10. Omitting the occasional elements, things which admit of indefinite increase naturally... | |
| John Stuart Mill - Economics - 1870 - 632 pages
...in agriculture is applied to some other purpose, the rent which it would have yielded is an clement in the cost of production of the commodity which it is employed to produce. X. Omitting the occasional elements ; things which admit of indefinite increase, naturally... | |
| William Stanley Jevons - Economics - 1879 - 434 pages
...the second sentence of the paragraph from which the last quotation was taken. Mill goes on to say : ' But when land capable of yielding rent in agriculture...production of the commodity which it is employed to produce.' Here Mill edges in as an exceptional case that which proves to be the rule, reminding one... | |
| Popular encyclopedia - 1884 - 512 pages
...' is not an element in the cost of production of the commodity which yields it, except in the cases (rather conceivable than actually existing) in which...production of the commodity which it is employed to produce' (Principles of PoL Ecoru, book ¡it ch. vL ..1). PRŒTUS, in fabulous history, twin brother... | |
| John Stuart Mill - Economics - 1885 - 626 pages
...is not an element in the cost of production of the commodity which yields it : except in the cases, ^rather conceivable than actually existing) in which...in the cost of production of the commodity which it ia employed to produce. X. Omitting the occasional elements; things which admit of indefinite increase,... | |
| John Stuart Mill - Economics - 1888 - 628 pages
...elements are, taxes, and any extra cost occasioned by a scarcity value of some of the requisites. IX. Rent is not an element in the cost of production of...production of the commodity which it is employed to produce. X. Omitting the occasional elements ; things which admit of indefinite increase, naturally... | |
| Alfred Marshall - Economics - 1890 - 808 pages
...true that Mill was inconsistent in answering this question in the negative, while he maintained that when land capable of yielding rent in agriculture...production of the commodity which it is employed to produce. Bnt still the proper answer to Jevons' question is in the negative. For there is no connection... | |
| John Stuart Mill - Economics - 1892 - 628 pages
...are, taxes, and any extra cost occasioned by a / scarcity value of some of the requisites. IX. Kent is not an element in the cost of production of the...production of the commodity which it is employed to produce. X. Omitting the occasional elements ; things which admit of indefinite increase, naturally... | |
| John Stuart Mill - Economics - 1894 - 644 pages
...is not an element in the cost of production of the commodity which yields it : except in the cases, (rather conceivable than actually existing) in which...the cost of production of the commodity which it is einployed to produce. X. Omitting the occasional elements; things which admit of indefinite increase,... | |
| |