If the high price of corn were the effect, and not the cause of rent, price would be proportionally influenced as rents were high or low, and rent would be a component part of price. But that corn which is produced by the greatesl quantity of labour is... The Foreign Review - Page 3941829Full view - About this book
| Oliver J. Thatcher - History - 2004 - 476 pages
...the proportional quantity of labour, and where consequently the progress of rent is slow. If the high price of corn were the effect, and not the cause of rent, price would be proportionately influenced as rents were high or low, and rent would be a component part of price.... | |
| David Ricardo - Business & Economics - 2005 - 372 pages
...the proportional quantity of labor, and where consequently the progress of rent is slow. If the high price of corn were the effect, and not the cause of...corn which is produced by the greatest quantity of labor is the regulator of the price of corn; and rent does not and cannot enter in the least degree... | |
| David Ricardo - Business & Economics - 2006 - 305 pages
...proportional quantity of labor, and where consequently the progress of rent is slow. If the high price of com were the effect, and not the cause of rent, price would be proportionally influenced as rente were high or low, and rent would be a component part of price. But that corn which is produced... | |
| Henry Dunning Macleod - Economics - 1886 - 402 pages
...the worst quality of land upon which labour may be bestowed without paying Rent. Ricardo says — ' That corn which is produced by the greatest quantity...of labour is the regulator of the price of corn.' We say it is exactly the reverse, 'and — That the price of corn indicates the greatest cost which... | |
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