Principles of Social Economics: Inductively Considered and Practically Applied |
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Adam Smith aggregate agricultural American amount bushels business depressions capital capitalist cause cents a yard century character cheaper civilization commodities competition consequently consumable wealth consumption cost of production cotton cloth demand and supply depends diminished doctrine duction economic surplus effort employed England equal equivalent exchange fact factory factory methods fall freedom furnish gold hence human increase individual industrial influence interest labor power laborer's laboring classes laissez faire land law of prices less machinery manufacture means ment movement natural forces necessarily necessary nomic obtain paid phenomena Political Economy price of commodities price of labor profit promote proportion protection quantity of labor rate of wages ratio reason reduced relation rent result rise shillings shoes social progress society superior surplus surplus value taxation tends theory thing tion true utility value of money Wat Tyler Wealth of Nations wheat Wicliff