| David Ricardo - 1821 - 560 strani
...which they can avail themselves, and dearth to them is attended with almost all the evils of famine. v In the natural advance of society, the wages of labour...the demand for them will increase at a slower rate.\ If, for instance, wages were regulated by a yearly increase of capital, at the rate of 2 per cent.,... | |
| John BROADHURST - 1842 - 330 strani
...effect of taxing raw produce in his own chapter on profits, where the reader will remember he says, " In the natural " advance of society, the wages of...will " have a tendency to fall, as far as they are regu" lated by supply and demand ; for the supply " of labourers will continue to increase at the same... | |
| David Ricardo, John Ramsay McCulloch - 1886 - 688 strani
...which they can avail themselves, and dearth to them is attended with almost all the evils of famine. In the natural advance of society, the wages of labour...the demand for them will increase at a slower rate. If, for instance, wages were regulated by a yearly increase of capital, at the rate of 2 per cent.,... | |
| David Ricardo - 1895 - 166 strani
...which they can avail themselves, and dearth to them is attended with almost all the evils of famine. In the natural advance of society, the wages of labour...the demand for them will increase at a slower rate. If, for instance, wages were regulated by a yearly increase of capital, at the rate of 2 per cent.,... | |
| Edwin Cannan - 1903 - 458 strani
...increases ' the necessaries consumed by the labourer ' will be constantly rising in price,' but also ' in the natural advance of society the wages of labour...to fall, as far as they are regulated by supply and demand.'4 He might therefore, if he had understood the word tendency in the sense afterwards sometimes... | |
| Marie Willem Frederik Treub - 1903 - 464 strani
...Derhalve is het loonminimum de natuurlijke i ' ' T *n iii ' ° ••! il -•\ over den vnlhanlabourers will continue to increase at the same rate, whilst...the demand for them will increase at a slower rate .... (The labourer) will receive more money wages, (with the progress of wealth and population), it... | |
| Morris Albert Copeland - 1924 - 584 strani
...agriculture. "In the natural advance of society, the [real] wages of labour [also] have a tendency to fall, so far as they are regulated by supply and demand ; for...the demand for them will increase at a slower rate," since the decline of profits checks the accumulation of capital. Rent on the contrary tends to rise.... | |
| John Herman Randall (Jr.) - 1926 - 672 strani
...have a tendency to fall, as far as they are regulated by supply and demand; for the supply of laborers will continue to increase at the same rate, whilst...the demand for them will increase at a slower rate. . . . The condition of the laborer will generally decline, and that of the landlord will always be... | |
| John Bowditch, Clement Ramsland - 1961 - 210 strani
...which they can avail themselves and dearth to them is attended with almost all the evils of famine. In the natural advance of society, the wages of labour...the demand for them will increase at a slower rate. ... I say that, under these circumstances, wages would fall if they were regulated only by the supply... | |
| R. D. Collison Black - 1986 - 268 strani
...this appears to conflict with the 'new view'. A few pages on in the chapter we meet this analysis: In the natural advance of society, the wages of labour...the demand for them will increase at a slower rate. If, for instance, wages were regulated by a yearly increase of capital, at the rate of 2 per cent,... | |
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