| David Ricardo - 1821 - 566 pagine
...gravitation is not more certain than the tendency of such laws to change wealth and power into misery and weakness ; to call away the exertions of labour from...increased, and when an increase of population would be naturally called for. But if our progress should become more slow ; if we should attain the stationary... | |
| Samuel Bailey - 1823 - 420 pagine
...continues, " is not more certain than the tendency of such laws to change wealth and power into misery and weakness; to call away the exertions of labour from...be infected with the plague of universal poverty." — Principles of Political Economy and Taxation, chap. v. The reader may see a full explanation of... | |
| Henry Charles Carey - 1859 - 528 pagine
...subsistence, and to such an extent confounding all intellectual distinction, as to threaten that " at last, all classes should be infected with the plague of universal poverty." * The successors of those gentlemen have assured their readers, that a poor law has "an irresistible... | |
| David Ricardo, John Ramsay McCulloch - 1886 - 688 pagine
...gravitation is not more certain than the tendency of such laws to change wealth and power into misery and weakness; to call away the exertions of labour from...increased, and when an increase of population would be naturally called for. But if our progress should become more slow ; if we should attain the stationary... | |
| David Ricardo - 1895 - 166 pagine
...gravitation is not more certain than the tendency of such laws to change wealth and power into misery and weakness ; to call away the exertions of labour from...increased, and when an increase of population would be naturally called for. But if our progress should become more slow ; if we should attain the stationary... | |
| Élie Halévy - 1904 - 534 pagine
...16 déc. 1819 (Hansard, XLI, 1206). —Cf. Rieardo, Principles, p. 59 : Happily these laws (the poor laws) have been in operation during a period of progressive...increased, and when an increase of population would be naturally called for. But if our progress should become more slow, if we should attain the stationary... | |
| David Ricardo - 1919 - 526 pagine
...tendency of such laws to change wealth and power into misery and weakness ; to call away the exertion's of labour from every object, except that of providing...increased, and when an increase of population would be naturally called for. But if our progress should become more slow ; if we should attain the stationary... | |
| John Bowditch, Clement Ramsland - 1961 - 210 pagine
...gravitation is not more certain than the tendency of such laws to change wealth and power into misery and weakness; to call away the exertions of labour from...be infected with the plague of universal poverty. . . . CHILD LABOR IN FACTORIES AND MINES The seamy side of the industrial revolution was graphically... | |
| Alan W. Bellringer, C. B. Jones - 1980 - 176 pagine
...gravitation is not more certain than the tendency of such laws to change wealth and power into misery and weakness; to call away the exertions of labour from...increased, and when an increase of population would be naturally called for. But if our progress should become more slow; if we should attain the stationary... | |
| Maxine Berg - 1982 - 396 pagine
...reason, not been felt in the context of a rapidly expanding capital and growing economy. He argued, 'Happily these laws have been in operation during...increased, and when an increase of population would be naturally called for."s The 'pernicious nature of these laws' would only become clear with the approach... | |
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