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CONTENTS.
Introductory. | |
Page | |
The Problem | 3 |
Book I.—Wages and Capital. | |
Chapter I.—The current doctrine of wages—its insufficiency | 17 |
II.—The meaning of the terms | 30 |
III.—Wages not drawn from capital, but produced by the labor | 49 |
IV.—The maintenance of laborers not drawn from capital | 70 |
V.—The real functions of capital | 79 |
Book II.—Population and Subsistence. | |
Chapter I.— The Malthusian theory, its genesis and support | 91 |
II.—Inferences from facts | 103 |
III.—Inferences from analogy | 129 |
IV.—Disproof of the Malthusian theory | 140 |
Book III.—The Laws of Distribution. | |
Chapter I.—The inquiry narrowed to the laws of distribution—necessary relation of these laws | 153 |
II.—Rent and the law of rent | 165 |
III.—Interest and the cause of interest | 173 |
IV.—Of spurious capital and of profits often mistaken for interest | 189 |
V.—The law of interest | 195 |
VI.—Wages and the law of wages | 204 |
VII.—Correlation and co-ordination of these laws | 217 |
VIII.—The statics of the problem thus explained | 219 |
Book IV.—Effect of Material Progress upon the Distribution of Wealth. | |
Chapter I.—The dynamics of the problem yet to seek | 225 |
II.—Effect of increase of population upon the distribution of wealth | 228 |
III.—Effect of improvements in the arts upon the distribution of wealth | 242 |
IV.—Effect of the expectation raised by material progress | 253 |
Book V.—The Problem Solved. | |
Chapter I.—The primary cause of recurring paroxysms of industrial depression | 261 |
II.—The persistence of poverty amid advancing wealth. | 280 |