| 1842 - 840 стор.
...respect to the other mysterious sentence, it is the very first in the chapter. These are trte words — " No extension of foreign trade will immediately increase...value in a country, although it will very powerfully contrihute to increase the muss of commodities, and therefore tlio sum of enjoyments." We have known... | |
| David Ricardo - 1821 - 566 стор.
...medium only in which prices and profits are estimated would be lowered. CHAPTER VI F. ON FOREIGN TRADE. No extension of foreign trade will immediately increase...commodities, and therefore the sum of enjoyments. As the value of all foreign goods is measured by the quantity of the produce of our land and labour,... | |
| Thomas Robert Malthus - 1821 - 482 стор.
...further progress of wealth had ceased. Mr. Ricardo begins his Chapter on Foreign Trade by stating that " No extension of foreign trade will immediately increase...commodities and therefore the sum of enjoyments." This statement is quite consistent with his peculiar view of value, as. depending solely upon the labour... | |
| Thomas Robert Malthus - 1827 - 322 стор.
...manner, Mr. Ricardo's very startling proposition respecting the effects of foreign trade, namely, that " no extension of foreign trade will immediately increase the amount of value in a country," arises entirely from his using the term value in a different sense from that in which it had been used... | |
| George Robert Gleig - 1830 - 472 стор.
...commodities must be raised again to 2 APPENDIX answer this new rise, which is absurd. FOREIGN TRADE. P. 135. "No extension of foreign trade will immediately increase...the amount of value in a country, although it will tend very powerfully to increase the mass of commodities." " As the value of all foreign goods is measured... | |
| Thomas Robert Malthus - 1836 - 520 стор.
...the value of the national produce. Mr. Ricardo begins his Chapter on Foreign Trade by stating that " No extension of foreign trade will immediately increase...commodities, and therefore the sum of enjoyments." This statement is quite consistent with his peculiar view of value, as depending solely upon the labour... | |
| 1842 - 916 стор.
...respect to the other mysterious sentence, it is the very first in the chapter. These are the words — " No extension of foreign trade will immediately increase...commodities, and therefore the sum of enjoyments." We have known a man become all but comato^e on this passage; apoplexy was looked for. But why? Simply... | |
| Samuel Newington - 1858 - 144 стор.
...that is, money will be dear, and everything else will be cheap." — Wayland, p. 200. Foreign Trade. " No extension of foreign trade will immediately increase...commodities, and therefore the sum of enjoyments." — Ricardo, p. 72. " We manufacture commodities, and with them buy goods abroad, because we can obtain... | |
| David Ricardo, John Ramsay McCulloch - 1886 - 688 стор.
...medium only in which prices and profits are estimated would be lowered. CHAPTER VIL ON FOREIGN TRADE. No extension of foreign trade will immediately increase...commodities, and therefore the sum of enjoyments. As the value of all foreign goods is measured by the quantity of the produce of our land and labour,... | |
| Charles Francis Bastable - 1887 - 198 стор.
...cardinal propositions, which constitute his theory of foreign trade, and which run as follows : — (1.) " No extension of foreign trade will immediately increase...the mass of commodities, and therefore the sum of enjoyments."6 (2.) " The same rule which regulates the relative value of commodities in one country... | |
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