PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL ECONOMY
     
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Ñòð. 501. ... built. It is probable, however, that for some time after the tax

Ñòð. 502. ... predominant element in the rent of the house is the ground-rent ;

Ñòð. 503. ... as much as the selfishness of the middle classes to produce the

Ñòð. 504. ... To derive from a capital of lOOOZ. a profit of 100?., the one producer

Ñòð. 505. ... dispense with an equivalent amount of borrowing in stock or exchequer bills.

Ñòð. 506. ... 70 „ „ 63 „ 63-54, or 9


Ñòð. 507. ... one-tenth through the natural progress of wealth, the consumer will

Ñòð. 508. ... food would overtake that in the tithed island, its progress towards


Ñòð. 509. ... be no doubt that this circumstance has had its share in the fall

Ñòð. 510. ... beet-root sugar, while the consumers of it would pay a real tax.

Ñòð. 511. ... under the virtually free importation of agricultural produce, at

Ñòð. 512. ... medium would leave her less money to purchase it with.


Ñòð. 513. ... in making foreign countries contribute something to its revenue ;

Ñòð. 514. ... degree, or in any manner, fall on the producer. One is, when the

Ñòð. 515. ... duties imposed by other countries on its commodities, is to impose

Ñòð. 516. ... and the like, were subject to the same tax. But even then, if paid by

Ñòð. 517. ... not unsuitable to a government to conduct. The post office, there-

Ñòð. 518. ... maintain those rights against infringement : while the remainder

Ñòð. 519. ... that he pays at all. That a tax of one shilhng per pound on tea,

Ñòð. 520. ... applied to the proper purposes) the cost would be repaid, often

Ñòð. 521. ... [The present text of the first two sentences of this paragraph dates from

Ñòð. 522. ... description, nobody is the worse for them. When a thing is bought

Ñòð. 523. ... pp. 309-71. [Sociological Theory of Cayilal, . 2%ij-S.


Ñòð. 524. ... perhaps be practicable to tax the finer qualities of cotton or linen

Ñòð. 525. ... degree during the French war, this is positive proof that the govern-

Ñòð. 526. ... whole of it by the exertions and sacrifices of the generation which

Ñòð. 527. ... If the fortune of a contributor diminishes, his taxes diminish ; if he

Ñòð. 528. ... convenience in that respect is undeniable ; but (besides that the

Ñòð. 529. ... industriah arts to a high degree of advancement, carried on distant

Ñòð. 530. ... Yet mere excess of taxation, even when not aggravated by

Ñòð. 531. ... and the great range and variety of cases which come under the

Ñòð. 532. ... almost everywhere extremely desirable, there being hardly any

Ñòð. 533. ... descendants, that is, such a provision as the parent or ancestor ought

Ñòð. 534. ... from the junior members of a family, there should be no way but to

Ñòð. 535. ... partially promulgated in the present treatise.


Ñòð. 536. ... debt, into the possession of the heir, the family could not be ruined


Ñòð. 537. ... rightful owners Hberty of gift, by creating in the children a legal

Ñòð. 538. ... without dependence, and unity of interest instead of organized

Ñòð. 539. ... â– * [So since 4th ed. (1857). In the original : which it absolutely dis-

Ñòð. 540. ... principle of unhmited responsibihty, were more skilfully and more

Ñòð. 541. ... themselves if practices of this kind are equally easy in the case of

Ñòð. 542. ... the high cost of patents ; but his chief oppression has been the partnership

Ñòð. 543. ... are indispensably necessary for effecting without injustice, or for

Ñòð. 544. ... ship depend in a great degree, if not altogether, upon the success

Ñòð. 545. ... [The original parenthesis (and is indeed little better than a timid

Ñòð. 546. ... corn — things with which he is altogether unacquainted ; wild and

Ñòð. 547. ... If he fail in this, he ought never to be dismissed without a punishment

Ñòð. 548. ... as a simple bankrupt : —


Ñòð. 549. ... of the enactments which were once grounded on those theories still

Ñòð. 550. ... taxes. This is a stretch beyond the point yet reached by any

Ñòð. 551. ... men for the navy. On this last subject I at once admit, that the

Ñòð. 552. ... tax is paid on the entire quantity consumed. To make the public

Ñòð. 553. ... sometimes be economically defensible ; on condition, however, that

Ñòð. 554. ... ideas — rather than with people on the opposite side of the globe.

Ñòð. 555. ... Bentham in his Letters on Usury, which may still be referred to as

Ñòð. 556. ... done by it. What can be more unjust than that a person who cannot

Ñòð. 557. ... or altogether dropped, and the outlay all lost, if, when the original

Ñòð. 558. ... monopoly upon a producer or dealer, or upon a set of producers

Ñòð. 559. ... the end and the means are aUke odious, but which existed in England

Ñòð. 560. ... causes fewer persons to find employment in the trade, or if not,

Ñòð. 561. ... self-acting instrument, but is the result of bargaining between human

Ñòð. 562. ... work for less than certain wages, or for more than a certain number of hours,

Ñòð. 563. ... ments. There cannot be a more decisive example than Spain and

Ñòð. 564. ...

Ñòð. 565. ... 944 BOOK V. CHAPTER XI. § 3


Ñòð. 566. ... government is not able to do it without delays which are fatal to

Ñòð. 567. ... agency, for example, in any of the common operations of industry or

Ñòð. 568. ... valuable of national possessions : it is rendered, not less, but more

Ñòð. 569. ... unlimited and arbitrary jurisdiction. It disposed without scruple of

Ñòð. 570. ... of our task, and direct our attention to cases, in which some of

Ñòð. 571. ... from the consequences of ignorance and want of education in their


Ñòð. 572. ... anything should be done by funds derived from compulsory taxation,

Ñòð. 573. ... they cannot judge for themselves, they have their parents or other

Ñòð. 574. ... jyrSkmong those members of the community whose freedom or

Ñòð. 575. ... delegated agency, and in which the so-called private management

Ñòð. 576. ... distinction between their water-rate and their other local taxes.

Ñòð. 577. ... beneficial the observance of the regulation might be to the class

Ñòð. 578. ... emigrant labourers from the mother country.


Ñòð. 579. ... right that human beings should help one another ; and the more so,

Ñòð. 580. ... leaves people to starve iy another. Secondly, since the state must

Ñòð. 581. ... regard to labour and instruments ? The exportation of labourers

Ñòð. 582. ... which was first suggested, and so ably and perseveringly advocated,

Ñòð. 583. ... progression, by loans to the colonies for the purpose of emigration,

Ñòð. 584. ... which is thus enabled to entrust them to the persons in its judgment


Ñòð. 585. ... because until very lately their professorships have been, as is well

Ñòð. 586. ... the energies now spent by mankind in injuring one another, or in

Ñòð. 587. ... aspects of the subject is presented in a brief compass in Biicher, Entstehung der

Ñòð. 588. ... does the idea that population is constantly tending to press upon the

Ñòð. 589. ... much to be counted in favour Of the competitive system.

Ñòð. 590. ... any one. What is so applicable (including what is laid out in keeping up

Ñòð. 591. ... classification, which illustrates the extent to which Socialist propaganda has


Ñòð. 592. ... to carry on the new order of things qualities both moral and intellectual,

Ñòð. 593. ... Capital, 1887 ; ii. 1893 ; iii. 1894. An English abstract of the 1st vol. by

Ñòð. 594. ... such as the Rejjort of the Royal Commission of 1880-1, and of the Royal Commis-

Ñòð. 595. ... capital, thus anticipating his voluntary economy by a compulsory one ;

Ñòð. 596. ... Board (1909). The most detailed statistical analysis of the facts is to be

Ñòð. 597. ... system) ; Gibbs and GrenfeU. The Bimeteillic Controversy (1886), — a collection

Ñòð. 598. ... based on Cost of Food, Rent, Clothing, Fuel, and Light, in a series of averages

Ñòð. 599. ... CC. — The Tendency of Profits to a Minimtjm {p. 739)


Ñòð. 600. ... vate company was finally recognised and defined by the Companies Act of

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