| Adam Smith - 1884 - 604 páginas
...gainer, the work of all artificers coming in this way much cheaper to market. It is to prcvenf 'Jiis reduction of price, and consequently of wages and...greater part of corporation laws, have been established. In order to erect a corporation, no other authority in ancient times was requisite, in many parts of... | |
| Adam Smith - 1894 - 526 páginas
...the public would be a gainer, the work of all artificers coming in this way much cheaper to market. It is to prevent this reduction of price, and consequently...greater part of corporation laws, have been established. In order to erect a corporation, no other authority in ancient times was requisite in many parts of... | |
| Charles Jesse Bullock - 1907 - 732 páginas
...the public would be a gainer, the work of all artificers coming in this way much cheaper to market. It is to prevent this reduction of price, and consequently...greater part of corporation laws, have been established. In order to erect a corporation, no other authority in ancient times was requisite in many parts of... | |
| Adam Smith - 1922 - 522 páginas
...the public would be a gainer, the work of all artificers coming in this way much cheaper to market. It is to prevent this reduction of price, and consequently of wages Corpora and profit, by restraining that free competition which would most mubiuhed certainly occasion... | |
| United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Government Operations - 1974 - 1012 páginas
...public would be the gainer, the work of all artificers coming in this way much cheaper to the market. It is to prevent this reduction of price and consequently...competition which would most certainly occasion it, that corporations and the greater part of corporation law have been established." Smith condemned "the clamor... | |
| Adam Smith - 2008 - 1148 páginas
...prices ana conse- i ' . ,° 1-1 11 i qucntly wages and free competition which would most certainly Plßi occasion it, that all corporations, and the greater part of corporation laws, have been established. In order to erect a corporation, no other authority in ancient times was requisite in many parts of... | |
| David Little - 1984 - 288 páginas
...181. 147. II Institutes, 63. 148. /Wtf., 540; my italics. 149. Wealth of Nations (London, 1893), 93. and consequently of wages and profit, by restraining...and the greater part of corporation laws, have been established."150 As to the matter of guild regulations, Smith speaks in language that might have been... | |
| Willard F. Enteman - 1993 - 276 páginas
...literature and since it may come as a surprise to many people, it bears direct quotation at some length: It is to prevent this reduction of price, and consequently...greater part of corporation laws, have been established. . . . . . . The pretence that corporations are necessary for the better government of trade, is without... | |
| Neil James Mitchell - 1997 - 270 páginas
...did Smith: "It is to prevent this reduction of price . . . by restraining that free competition that would most certainly occasion it, that all corporations,...greater part of corporation laws, have been established" tSmith l776. 227l. Regulations on apprenticeship interested Adam Smith. They had little to do with... | |
| Anouar Majid - 2000 - 244 páginas
...Hartman, Fateful Question of Culture, esp. 21-59. 35 In The Wealth of Nations (1776), Adam Smith wrote: "It is to prevent this reduction of price, and consequently...it, that all corporations, and the greater part of corporate laws, have been established." And elsewhere: "People of the same trade seldom meet together,... | |
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