Memoir on the Expediency and Practicability, of Improving Or Creating Home Markets for the Sale of Agricultural Productions and Raw MaterialsJ. R. A. Skerrett, 1827 - 48 páginas |
No interior do livro
Resultados 1-5 de 7
Página 3
... believed , and that it cannot be removed and over- come by any encouragements or bounties , which it is in the power of the state or societies to pay directly to those concerned in its culti- vation . An efficient demand must be ...
... believed , and that it cannot be removed and over- come by any encouragements or bounties , which it is in the power of the state or societies to pay directly to those concerned in its culti- vation . An efficient demand must be ...
Página 14
... believed to be evident , that , in every point of view , she has been immensely bene- fited by it . Her silk manufactory presents another item of surprising advan- tage ; raised entirely by a like policy to that observed in relation to ...
... believed to be evident , that , in every point of view , she has been immensely bene- fited by it . Her silk manufactory presents another item of surprising advan- tage ; raised entirely by a like policy to that observed in relation to ...
Página 16
... believed to be ne- cessary , or desirable that they should be . Manufactures , if they can find protection , will be carried on , and supplied with hands , who will come to us already taught , from the countries from which we have ...
... believed to be ne- cessary , or desirable that they should be . Manufactures , if they can find protection , will be carried on , and supplied with hands , who will come to us already taught , from the countries from which we have ...
Página 17
... believed that hands could easily be obtained , without dif- ficulty or prejudice to any other branch of business . They would , like all other apprentices , the most of them be unlearned , it is admit- ed . We did not feel the loss of ...
... believed that hands could easily be obtained , without dif- ficulty or prejudice to any other branch of business . They would , like all other apprentices , the most of them be unlearned , it is admit- ed . We did not feel the loss of ...
Página 22
... believed to be imposed upon that body as a duty , to protect and promote the rights and interests of their own country , and each , and every class , section and individual , against the aggressions and cupidity of foreigners , and to ...
... believed to be imposed upon that body as a duty , to protect and promote the rights and interests of their own country , and each , and every class , section and individual , against the aggressions and cupidity of foreigners , and to ...
Outras edições - Ver tudo
A Memoir on the Expediency and Practicability of Improving Or Creating Home ... George Tibbits Visualização integral - 1825 |
Memoir on the Expediency and Practicability, of Improving Or Creating Home ... George Tibbits Visualização integral - 1827 |
Palavras e frases frequentes
adopted agricultural productions amount April 25 arti arts bbls become board of agriculture bounties branch of business bread-stuffs and provisions British capital and labour cents per lb citizens coarse cotton cloths commenced competition congress consume consumption coun cultivation demand dollars duties on imported employed encouragement England English equal established exchange factures farmers farming interest favour Flanders flax flour foreign articles foreign countries foreign manufactures give hauling hemp home manufacture home market Idem imposed increase India landed interest mand manu manufac manufactured articles manufactures and trade means measures nations nearly necessary neral Nova Scotia object opinion population pounds sterling present produce profit prohibited promote proper proportion protecting duties protection of manufactures quantity raised raw materials revenue sheep shipping interest sold South Carolina stock of artizans supply tallow tariff taxes tection thereby THOMAS COOPER tion tivating tobacco vessels wool woollen
Passagens conhecidas
Página 48 - Whereas it is necessary for the support of government, for the discharge of the debts of the United States, and the encouragement and protection of manufactures, that duties be laid on goods, wares, and merchandises imported: Be it enacted, etc.
Página 42 - States retained the power of making regulations of trade, they had the power to cherish such institutions. By adopting the present Constitution, they have thrown the exercise of this power into other hands ; they must have done this with an expectation that those interests would not be neglected here.
Página 42 - While these states retained the power of making regulations of trade, they had the power to cherish such institutions. By adopting the present, constitution, they have thrown the exercise of this power into other hands ; they must have done this with an expectation...
Página 39 - Britain at this day, can furnish more profound thinkers on philosophical subjects, more acute and accurate experimenters^ more real philosophers, thrice told, than all Europe could furnish a century ago. I wish that were the case here; but it is not so.
Página 39 - ... surplus capital, however raised and accumulated. The safest, because it requires no navies exclusively for its protection — the least dangerous, because it furnishes no excitement to the prevailing madness of commercial wars — the least expensive, for the same reason that it is the safest and the least dangerous — the least immoral, because it furnishes no temptation to the breach or evasion of the laws, to the multiplication of oaths and perjuries, and to the consequent prostration of...
Página 39 - ... employed in it, by all the ties of habit and of interest, to their own country ; while foreign trade tends to denationalize the affections of those whose property is dispersed in foreign countries, whose interests are connected with foreign interests, whose capital is but partially invested at the place of their domicil, and who can remove with comparative facility from one country to another. The wise man observed of old, that 'where the treasure is, there will the heart be also ;' and time...
Página 38 - By means of debts incurred for foreign manufactures, we are almost again become colonists — we are too much under the influence, indirectly, of British merchants and British agents. We are not an independent people.— Manufactures among us would tend to correct this, and give a stronger tone of nationality at home.
Página 32 - The Committee on Agriculture, to whom was referred the resolution of the House of Representatives, instructing them to inquire if an increase of the duty now established by law, on any article of foreign growth or manufacture, will be for the interest of the agriculturist, and if there be any such article, to name the...
Página 47 - If we consult the history of the ancient world, we shall see that they have thought proper, for a long time past, to give great encouragement to the establishment of manufactures, by laying such partial duties on the importation of foreign goods as to give the home manufactures a considerable advantage in the price when brought to market. It is also well known to...
Página 38 - Our agriculturists want a home market. Manufactures would supply it. Agriculture, at great distances from sea-ports, languishes for want of this. Great Britain exhibits an instance of unexampled power and wealth by means of an agriculture, greatly dependent on a system of manufactures — and her agriculture, thus situated, is the best in the world, though still capable of great improvement.