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" There is no greater fallacy than the proposition, that it is best to buy in the cheapest and to sell in the dearest market. "
Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine - 365. oldal
1816
Teljes nézet - Információ erről a könyvről

Blackwood's Magazine, 59. kötet

1846 - 816 oldal
...either deserts the homu market, and has recourse to a foreign one, the benefit is totally nentralized. There is no greater fallacy than the proposition,...knows better than the manufacturer, that he depends, ante omnia, upon the home market. Is not this the very interest which is now assailed and threatened...

Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, 59. kötet

1846 - 798 oldal
...There is no greater fallacy than the proposition, that it is best to buy iu the cheapest and to sell iu the dearest market. There is a preliminary consideration...knows better than the manufacturer, that he depends, ante omnia, upon the home market. Is not this the very interest which is now assailed and threatened...

Blackwood's Magazine, 69. kötet

1851 - 786 oldal
...man considers "the rights of labour" as identical with the operation of the maxim which exhorts ns " to buy in the cheapest, and to sell in the dearest market." Another defines those rights to mean, " a fair day's wage for a fair day's labour." And so the term...

The Christian observer [afterw.] The Christian observer and advocate

1841 - 844 oldal
...experiment — sugar, timber, and corn. Now, as a general principle of political economy, it is desirable to buy in the cheapest, and to sell in the dearest market ; and neither Sir I! . Peel, nor any other speaker of intelligence and weight on either side, has denied...

Hansard's Parliamentary Debates

Great Britain. Parliament - 1846 - 738 oldal
...clearly laid down and recognized ? No ! And we were willing, while we claimed for ourselves the right to buy in the cheapest, and to sell in the dearest market, to allow tho same privilege to our fellow countrymen, wherever they were placed. Recognizing no monopolies...

Knight's Penny Magazine, 1-2. kötet;15-16. kötet

1846 - 502 oldal
...remarkable speech in which Sir Robert Peel announced that the policy of a commercial] nation should be "to buy in the cheapest and to sell in the dearest market." While Parliament was engaged, during the Session of 1842, in carrying these measures into law, the...

Annual Register, 88. kötet

Edmund Burke - 1847 - 1206 oldal
...of giving it the advantage of every clime and latitude under heaven, and of enabling our population to buy in the cheapest and to sell in the dearest market. The honourable member concluded amid long-continued cheers by giving his support to the measures of...

Annual Register, 88. kötet

Edmund Burke - 1847 - 910 oldal
...of giving it the advantage of every clime and latitude under heaven, and of enabling our population to buy in the cheapest and to sell in the dearest market. The honourable member concluded amid long-continued cheers by giving his support to the measures of...

Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, 69. kötet

1851 - 792 oldal
...man considers " the rights of labour" as identical with the operation of the maxim which exhorts us " to buy in the cheapest, and to sell in the dearest market." Another defines those rights to mean, " a fair day's wage for a fair day's labour." And so the term...

Parliamentary Papers, 33. kötet

Great Britain. Parliament. House of Commons - 1859 - 506 oldal
...ask of hi* Excellency the Earl of Elgin, and which we think we are entitled to, is to be permitted to buy in the cheapest, and to sell in the dearest market in China. We have, &c. (Signed) ULLETT & Co. Inclosure 10 in No. 67. Messrs. Watson and Co. to Consul...




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