Essay on the Rate of Wages: With an Examination of the Causes of the Differences in the Condition of the Labouring Population Throughout the World, Volume 1Carey, Lea & Blanchard, 1835 - 255 páginas |
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Página 6
... seen in the rate of wages , or reward of labour . As introductory thereto , it is proposed to examine what are the circumstances which tend to determine the rate of wages . Both of these subjects have been treated by Professor Se- nior ...
... seen in the rate of wages , or reward of labour . As introductory thereto , it is proposed to examine what are the circumstances which tend to determine the rate of wages . Both of these subjects have been treated by Professor Se- nior ...
Página 9
... seen , whether in those in which the people have attained a higher de- gree of influence than they have heretofore possessed , they will do better than has been done for them in times past by their hereditary lawgivers ; and whether or ...
... seen , whether in those in which the people have attained a higher de- gree of influence than they have heretofore possessed , they will do better than has been done for them in times past by their hereditary lawgivers ; and whether or ...
Página 11
... seen a man wasting his means and incurring heavy debts in the prosecution of hazardous enterprises , the benefit of which was doubtful , even should they succeed to the full extent of his anticipations , while his farm was untilled , or ...
... seen a man wasting his means and incurring heavy debts in the prosecution of hazardous enterprises , the benefit of which was doubtful , even should they succeed to the full extent of his anticipations , while his farm was untilled , or ...
Página 13
... seen that a state of peace was that in which they must prosper most , and would have been indis- posed to join in a pursuit that might bring them " glory , " but that would inevitably deprive them of a part of their bread and meat . Had ...
... seen that a state of peace was that in which they must prosper most , and would have been indis- posed to join in a pursuit that might bring them " glory , " but that would inevitably deprive them of a part of their bread and meat . Had ...
Página 14
... seen the end of protective tariffs ; but as nothing can be more evident to the un- enlightened than the advantage to be derived from making their neighbours pay them high prices , so nothing is more easy than to excite popular feeling ...
... seen the end of protective tariffs ; but as nothing can be more evident to the un- enlightened than the advantage to be derived from making their neighbours pay them high prices , so nothing is more easy than to excite popular feeling ...
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Essay on the Rate of Wages: With an Examination of the Causes of ..., Volume 1 Henry Charles Carey Visualização integral - 1835 |
Essay on the Rate of Wages: With an Examination of the Causes of the ... Henry Charles Carey Visualização integral - 1835 |
Essay on the Rate of Wages: With an Examination of the Causes of the ... Henry Charles Carey Visualização integral - 1835 |
Palavras e frases frequentes
abroad absentee advantage agricultural amount annum assessment average wages Britain bushels canals capitalist cause cent commodities consequence consumption corn laws cost cotton cultivation difference duties effect employed employment enable England English equal Europe exist expense exported extent females following extract foreign former France fund greater Hindoo Hindostan important improvement increase of capital India industry Ireland labouring classes land landlord M'Culloch machinery males manufacture ment millions mode nation necessary net wages Netherlands obtain oppression ounces owners paid parish pauper persons political economy poor poor-laws population pounds present produce profit prohibitions proportion proprietor prosperity Prussia quantity rate of profit rate of wages raw produce receive reduced regulations rent revenue rice Rickards rupees Ryot says security of person silver spinners subsistence supposed taxation taxes throstle tion tivator trade United wealth weavers week wheat whole Zemindar
Passagens conhecidas
Página 149 - What a careless, even deportment hath your borrower ! what rosy gills ! what a Beautiful reliance on Providence doth he manifest — taking no more thought than lilies ! What contempt for money — accounting it (yours and mine especially) no better than dross...
Página 149 - Elamites," flock hither, and do naturally fall in with one or other of these primary distinctions. The infinite superiority of the former, which I choose to designate as the great race, is discernible in their figure, port, and a certain instinctive sovereignty. The latter are born degraded.
Página 169 - It must not be; there is no power in Venice Can alter a decree established: 'Twill be recorded for a precedent; And many an error, by the same example, Will rush into the state: it cannot be.
Página 188 - Hindoostanee language, as well as Persian and Arabic, the senior boys could pass a good examination in English grammar, in Hume's History of England, Joyce's Scientific Dialogues, the use of the globes, and the principal facts and moral precepts of the Gospel, most of them writing beautifully in the Persian, and very tolerably in the English character, and excelling most boys I have met with in the accuracy and readiness of their arithmetic.
Página 149 - THE human species, according to the best theory I can form of it, is composed of two distinct races, the men who borrow, and the men who lend. To these two original diversities may be reduced all those impertinent classifications of Gothic and Celtic tribes, white men, black men, red men. All the dwellers upon earth, " Parthians, and Medes, and Elamites,'" flock hither, and do naturally fall in with one or other of these primary distinctions.
Página 76 - Nor is it true that in the mechanic arts they are inferior to the general run of European nations. Where they fall short of us, (which is chiefly in agricultural implements and the mechanics of common life,) they are not, so far as I have understood of Italy and the south of France, surpassed in any great degree by the people of those countries.
Página 150 - Had you any Frenchmen employed under you ?' — ' Yes ; eight, at two francs a day.' ' What had you a day ?' — ' Twelve francs.' ' Supposing you had had eight English carders under you, how much more work could you have done ?' — ' With one Englishman, I could have done more than I did with those eight Frenchmen. It cannot be called work they do : it is only looking at it, and wishing it done.
Página 185 - India, as well in arts and manufactures as in agriculture, that every mechanic and artisan not only conducts the whole process of his arts, from the formation of his tools to the sale of his production; but, where husbandry is so simple a process, turns cultivator for the support of himself and family. He thus divides his time and labour, between the loom and the plough ; thereby multiplying occupations fatal to the improvement of either.
Página 73 - The hand-loom weavers,' says Dr. Kay, speaking of those living in Mancheater, • labour fourteen hours and upwards daily, and earn only from five to seven or eight shillings per week. They consist chiefly of Irish, and are affected by all the causes of moral and physical depression which we have enumerated. Ill-fed, ill'Clothed, half-sheltered, and ignorant — weaving in close, damp cellars, or crowded, ill-ventilated workshops — it only remains that they should become, as is too frequently the...