... second, and it is regulated as before by the difference in their productive powers. At the same time, the rent of the first quality will rise, for that must always be above the rent of the second by the difference between the produce which they yield... A Manual of Political Economy - Сторінка 90автори: Erasmus Peshine Smith - 1853 - 269 стор.Повний перегляд - Докладніше про цю книгу
| Oliver Joseph Thatcher - 1907 - 506 стор.
...by the difference between the produce which they yield with a given quantity of capital and labour. With every step in the progress of population, which...fertile land, will rise. Thus suppose land — No. I, 2, 3, — to yield, with an equal employment of capital and labour, a net produce of 100, 90, and... | |
| Oliver Joseph Thatcher - 1907 - 618 стор.
...by the difference between the produce which they yield with a given quantity of capital and labour. With every step in the progress of population, which...all the more fertile land, will rise. Thus suppose land—No. I, 2, 3,—to yield, with an equal employment of capital and labour, a net produce of 100,... | |
| Edward Sherwood Mead - 1909 - 510 стор.
...by the difference between the produce which they yield with a given quantity of capital and labor. With every step in the progress of population, which...the more fertile land, will rise. Thus, suppose land — Nos. 1, 2, 3 — to yield, with an equal employment of capital and labor, a net produce of 100,... | |
| Charles Gide - 1909 - 728 стор.
...amount of that rent will depend on the difference in the quality of these two portions of land." " With every step in the progress of population which...food, rent, on all the more fertile land, will rise." the cost of production per bushel will be $1.50. It is clear that the owners of this land will not... | |
| Lewis Henry Haney - 1911 - 598 стор.
...value of its produce and that of land of the third class. This leads to the following conclusion : " With every step in » the progress of population,...food, rent on all the more fertile land will rise," and will always be equal to the difference between the produce of a given quantity of capital and labor... | |
| Association of American Geographers - 1921 - 154 стор.
...by the difference between the produce which they yield with a given quantity of capital and labor. With every step in the progress of population, which...of food, rent, on all the more fertile land, will rise."2 The diagram (Fig. 1) illustrates the Ricardian theory of rent, and although the figures used... | |
| Hugo Bilgram, Louis Edward Levy - 1914 - 580 стор.
...by the difference between the produce which they yield with a given quantity of capital and labour. With every step in the progress of population, which...the more fertile land, will rise. Thus suppose land — Nos. 1, 2, 3 — to yield, with an equal employment of capital and labour, a net produce of 100,... | |
| Edward Sherwood Mead - 1914 - 514 стор.
...by the difference between the produce which they yield with a given quantity of capital and labor. With every step in the progress of population, which...all the more fertile land, will rise. Thus, suppose land—Nos. 1, 2, 3—to yield, with an equal employment of capital and labor, a net produce of 100,... | |
| Edwin Griswold Nourse - 1916 - 936 стор.
...the difference between the produce which they will yield with a given quantity of capital and labor. With every step in the progress of population, which...the more fertile land will rise. Thus suppose land — Nos. 1,2, 3 — to yield, with an equal employment of capital and labor, a net produce of 100,... | |
| Edwin Griswold Nourse - 1916 - 934 стор.
...use of the original and indestructible powers of the soil. With every step in the progress of society which shall oblige a country to have recourse to land of a worse quality (second or third degrees of fertility) to enable it to raise its supply of food, rent on all the more... | |
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