3. in promoting forethought and self-control 4. Their effect on population § 1. Nature of the metayer system, and its varieties 2. Its advantages and inconveniences § 1. Irish cottiers should be converted into peasant proprietors 398 2. Inapplicability of this advice to present circumstances.. § 1. Wages depend on the demand and supply of labour-in - which are in some cases legal in others the effect of particular customs CHAPTER XII. Of Popular Remedies for Low Wages. § 1. A legal or customary minimum of wages, with a guarantee 2. would require as a condition, legal measures for repres- 433 438 440 CHAPTER XIV. Of the Differences of Wages in § 1. Differences of wages arising from different degrees of attractiveness in different employments 2. Differences arising from natural monopolies 3. Effect on wages of a class of subsidized competitors 4. - of the competition of persons with independent means 5. Wages of women, why lower than those of men 7. Cases in which wages are fixed by custom . 484 5. Profits do not depend on prices, nor on purchase and sale 497 6. The advances of the capitalist consist ultimately in wages 2. No land can pay rent except land of such quality or situa- 3. The rent of land consists of the excess of its return above or to the capital employed in the least advantageous 5. Is payment for capital sunk in the soil, rent, or profit? 5. The laws of Value, how modified in their application to 531 CHAPTER II. Of Demand and Supply, in their relation to Value. Page 3. Commodities which are absolutely limited in quantity. § 1. Commodities which are susceptible of indefinite multipli- cation without increase of cost. Law of their Value, 2. operating through potential, but not actual, alterations. CHAPTER IV. Ultimate Analysis of Cost of Production. 4. Profits an element in Cost of Production, in so far as they vary from employment to employment. 5. - or are spread over unequal lengths of time. CHAPTER V. Of Rent, in its Relation to Value. § 1. Commodities which are susceptible of indefinite multipli- cation, but not without increase of cost. Law of their CHAPTER VI. Summary of the Theory of Value. Page |