| Michael Armstrong, Tina Stephens - Business & Economics - 2005 - 500 pages
...years ago when he wrote that: 'The whole of the advantages and disadvantages of different employments and stock must, in the same neighbourhood, be either...perfectly equal or continually tending to equality.' As Elliott (3) has noted: 'Competitive theory predicts that the forces of supply in the market as a... | |
| Glyn Lloyd-Hughes - 2005 - 412 pages
...competition beyond what it naturally would be, occasions another inequality, of an opposite kind, in the whole of the advantages and disadvantages of the different employments of labour and stock. In professions such as law and physic, if an equal proportion of people were educated at the public... | |
| Martin Bronfenbrenner - Business & Economics - 1971 - 506 pages
...labor theory of value; his exposition applies to the rate of profit equally with the wage structure:41 The whole of the advantages and disadvantages of the...employments of labour and stock must, in the same neighborhood, be either perfectly equal or continually tending to equality. If in the same neighborhood,... | |
| Neri Salvadori - Business & Economics - 2006 - 458 pages
...in natural rates are usually common to all sectors. Granted the condition of 'perfect liberty' and the 'whole of the advantages and disadvantages of the different employments of labour and stock' (Wealth, Book I, Chapter X), this implies that at any moment there is a single 'ordinary or average'... | |
| Adam Smith - Business & Economics - 2007 - 513 pages
...well known, the competition reduces. them to the level of other trades. SBCONIILV, This equality in the whole of the advantages and disadvantages of the different employments of labour and ftock, can take place Only in the ordinary, or what may be called the natural Rate of thofe employments.... | |
| Michael Lewis - Economic policy - 2007 - 1476 pages
...employments beyond what it naturally would be, occasions another inequality, of an opposite kind, in ber of lectures in the week, or in the year. What those lectures shall be, mu labor and stock. It has been considered as of so much importance that a proper number of young people... | |
| Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors - Agriculture - 1902 - 800 pages
...which, however obvious it might appear in France, was quite untenable in Scotland. He declares that the whole of the advantages and disadvantages of the different employments of labour and stock must either be practically equal or continually tending towards equality ; but that rent stands on a different... | |
| Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors - Agriculture - 1902 - 788 pages
...which, however obvious it might appear in France, was quite untenable in Scotland. He declares that the whole of the advantages and disadvantages of the different employments of labour and stock must either be practically equal or continually tending towards equality ; but that rent stands on a different... | |
| James Anthony Froude, John Tulloch - Authors - 1868 - 868 pages
...principle, that ' the whole of the advantages and disadvantages of different employments of labour must, in the same neighbourhood, be either perfectly equal or continually tending to equality, in a society where every man was perfectly free tn choose what occupation he thought proper, and to... | |
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