... 3. We hold that the conflict of labor and capital has brought into prominence a vast number of social problems, whose solution requires the united efforts, each in its own sphere, of the church, of the state, and of science. "4. In the study of the... History of Economic Thought.. - Page 518by Lewis Henry Haney - 1911 - 567 pagesFull view - About this book
| American Economic Association - Economic history - 1886 - 476 pages
...has not been attained, is because economists have been too ready to assert themselves as advocates. We believe in a progressive development of economic conditions which must be met by corresponding changes of policy. A prospectus containing this statement and platform was sent to a... | |
| American Economic Association - Economics - 1887 - 476 pages
...has not been attained, is because economists have been too ready to assert themselves as advocates. We believe in a progressive development of economic conditions which must be met by corresponding changes of policy. A prospectus containing this statement and platform was sent to a... | |
| Albion W. Small, Ellsworth Faris, Ernest Watson Burgess - Social sciences - 1916 - 908 pages
...prominence a vast number of social problems, whose solution requires the united efforts, each in his own sphere, of the church, of the state, and of science....met by a corresponding development of legislative policy.1 In his historical review, at the twenty-fifth anniversary of the Association, Professor Ely... | |
| Economics - 1923 - 316 pages
...is evidently the statement that in the "study of the industrial and commercial policy of government we take no partisan attitude. We believe in a progressive...development of economic conditions which must be met by corresponding development of legislative policy." This will recall to the attention of all of us who... | |
| Edwin Robert Anderson Seligman - Economics - 1925 - 418 pages
...brought into prominence a vast number of social problems whose solution requires the united effort, each in its own sphere, of the church, of the state,...a corresponding development of legislative policy. To the foregoing was attached a footnoteThis statement was proposed and accepted as a general indication... | |
| Francis Fisher Browne - American literature - 1886 - 360 pages
...lies in its bearing upon what the American Economic Association in its statement of principles calls " a progressive development of economic conditions,...corresponding development of legislative policy." The first edition of the famous "Essay on Population" appeared in 1*798, and the last revision in 1826.... | |
| William J. Barber - Education - 1993 - 492 pages
..."solution" to "the conflict of capital and labor." Both documents contained a declaration of belief in "a progressive development of economic conditions,...corresponding development of legislative policy." This too bears a German imprint, notwithstanding Ely's insistence that the association had arisen "spontaneously... | |
| Julie A. Nelson - Business & Economics - 1996 - 194 pages
...appreciate the work of former economists, we look, not so much to speculation as to the historical and statistical study of actual conditions of economic...a corresponding development of legislative policy. (Ely 1936: 144) As recounted by historians of this period (Coats 1960; Rader 1966; Furner 1975), this... | |
| Business & Economics - 2000 - 724 pages
...Gladden, EJ James, Alexander Johnston, FB Sanborn, Eugene Schyler, ERA Seligman, Herbert Tuttle. erntnents we take no partisan attitude. We believe in a progressive...Yet even so, it was the object of criticism, and was in 1888 unanimously abolished because all felt that it had done its work. Its function was to serve... | |
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