img What Is Free Trade?  /  Chapter 9 A WONDERFUL DISCOVERY. | 39.13%
Download App
Reading History

Chapter 9 A WONDERFUL DISCOVERY.

Word Count: 1123    |    Released on: 06/12/2017

on; when, to put these means into practice, we are levelling roads, improving rivers, perfecting steamboats, est

their place of consumption, as near as possible to their price in that of production"-I would believe myself to be acting a culpable part toward

most complete certainty of having discovered an infallible means of bringing produce from all parts of the

reparatory studies, nor engineers, nor machinists, nor capital, nor stockholders, nor governmental assistance! There is no danger of shipwrecks

the contrary. It will not augment the number of office-holders, nor the exigencies of State; but the contrar

, not from accident, but from obs

question to

tance, at Montreal, bear an increas

troubles and losses in our own person, or pay another for bearing them for us. Then come rivers, hills, accidents, heavy and muddy roads. These are so many difficulties to be overcome; in order to do which, causeways are constructed, bridges buil

ce difficulties in the way of the transportation of goods from one country to another. These men are called custom-house officers, and their effect is precisely similar to that of rutted and boggy roads. They retard and put obstacles in t

s have constructed a Northern railway which will cost us nothing. Nay, more, we w

les interposed between the United States and other nations, only at the same time to pay so many millions more in order to replace them by artificial obstacles, which have exact

the expenses of transportation, thirty dollars at New York. A similar article of Ne

a level with that of the New York one-the government, withal, paying numerous officials to attend t

us spend two or three millions in railways, and we will reduce it one-half. Evidently the resul

s-price a

" d

ortation b

l, or market pr

me end by lowering the tariff to

s-price a

du

tation on the

l, or market pr

ay, besides the expense saved in custom-house surveillance, which would of c

he effect of it by your railway. For if you persist in your determination to keep the Canadian article on a

s-price a

otectiv

ortation b

otal, at equ

enefit, under these circ

usly and gravely practised? To be the dupe of another, is bad enough; but to employ all the forms and ceremonies of representation in order to cheat

img

Contents

What Is Free Trade?
Chapter 1 PLENTY AND SCARCITY.
06/12/2017
What Is Free Trade?
Chapter 2 OBSTACLES TO WEALTH AND CAUSES OF WEALTH.
06/12/2017
What Is Free Trade?
Chapter 3 EFFORT-RESULT.
06/12/2017
What Is Free Trade?
Chapter 4 EQUALIZING OF THE FACILITIES OF PRODUCTION.
06/12/2017
What Is Free Trade?
Chapter 5 OUR PRODUCTIONS ARE OVERLOADED WITH INTERNAL TAXES--
06/12/2017
What Is Free Trade?
Chapter 6 BALANCE OF TRADE.
06/12/2017
What Is Free Trade?
Chapter 7 A PETITION.
06/12/2017
What Is Free Trade?
Chapter 8 DISCRIMINATING DUTIES.
06/12/2017
What Is Free Trade?
Chapter 9 A WONDERFUL DISCOVERY.
06/12/2017
What Is Free Trade?
Chapter 10 RECIPROCITY.
06/12/2017
What Is Free Trade?
Chapter 11 ABSOLUTE PRICES.
06/12/2017
What Is Free Trade?
Chapter 12 DOES PROTECTION RAISE THE RATE OF WAGES
06/12/2017
What Is Free Trade?
Chapter 13 THEORY AND PRACTICE.
06/12/2017
What Is Free Trade?
Chapter 14 CONFLICT OF PRINCIPLES.
06/12/2017
What Is Free Trade?
Chapter 15 RECIPROCITY AGAIN.
06/12/2017
What Is Free Trade?
Chapter 16 OBSTRUCTED RIVERS PLEAD FOR THE PROHIBITIONISTS.
06/12/2017
What Is Free Trade?
Chapter 17 A NEGATIVE RAILROAD.
06/12/2017
What Is Free Trade?
Chapter 18 THERE ARE NO ABSOLUTE PRINCIPLES.
06/12/2017
What Is Free Trade?
Chapter 19 NATIONAL INDEPENDENCE.
06/12/2017
What Is Free Trade?
Chapter 20 HUMAN LABOR-NATIONAL LABOR.
06/12/2017
What Is Free Trade?
Chapter 21 RAW MATERIAL.
06/12/2017
What Is Free Trade?
Chapter 22 METAPHORS.
06/12/2017
What Is Free Trade?
Chapter 23 CONCLUSION.
06/12/2017
img
  /  1
img
Download App
icon APP STORE
icon GOOGLE PLAY