| Joseph Ragland Long - 1922 - 540 стор.
...any human need or assist in production. To do this it must be exchanged for other things which can. What capital does for production is to afford the shelter, protection, tools, and materials required by labor in production, and to feed and otherwise maintain the laborer while he is at work.... | |
| Lionel Danforth Edie, Benjamin Palmer Whitaker - 1927 - 184 стор.
...set aside for the satisfaction — directly or indirectly — of future needs. ' ' ( NICHOLSON. ) (5) "What capital does for production is to afford the...otherwise maintain the labourers during the process. Whatever things are destined for this use — destined to supply productive labour with these various... | |
| James Keir Hardie - 1974 - 386 стор.
...therefrom should be equitably distributed over the population.—Independent Labour Party. CHAPTER II What capital does for production is to afford the...otherwise maintain the labourers during the process. Whatever things are destined for this use, destined to supply productive labour with these various... | |
| Terry Peach - 2003 - 370 стор.
...reserved for immediate consumption. A subsequent sentence, however, supplies this differentia: — 'What capital does for production is to afford the...to feed and otherwise maintain the labourers during its progress. These are the services which present labour requires from past, and from the produce... | |
| John Stuart Mill - 2006 - 477 стор.
...introductory chapter. Money is no more synonymous with capital than it is with wealth. Money cannot itself perform any part of the office of capital,...work requires, and to feed and otherwise maintain the laborers during the process. These are the services which present labor requires from past, and from... | |
| Louis Le Baut - 1959 - 358 стор.
...production. 5 To do this, it must be exchanged for other things; and anything, which is susceptib:e of being exchanged for other things, is capable of...requires, and to feed and otherwise maintain the labourers 10 during the process. These are the services which present labour requires from past, and from the... | |
| Royal Statistical Society (Great Britain) - 1866 - 696 стор.
...the established one, and much simpler. Mr. JS Mill says (Principles, 3rd edition, vol. i, p. 67), " What capital does for production is to afford the...otherwise maintain the labourers during the process." To understand capital properly, we must omit all but the last enumerated part. Thus, I define capital... | |
| John Cunningham Wood - 1991 - 220 стор.
...reserved for immediate consumption. A subsequent sentence, however, supplies this differentia: — 'What capital does for production is to afford the...to feed and otherwise maintain the labourers during its progress. These are the services which present labour requires from past, and from the produce... | |
| American Management Association - 1926 - 508 стор.
...which are accessible lr man able as well as anxious to acquire them." John Stuart Mill pointed ort that "what capital does for production is to afford the...which the work requires and to feed and otherwise maintair the workers during the process." Root of the Problem It seems to me that the words "ability"... | |
| |