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    The limitations of the Ricardian theory of rent : a study of static theory in relation to changing business practice

    Camp, William R., 1873-1934
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    [PDF] RicardianTheoryRent.pdf (58.33Mb)
    Date
    1918
    Format
    Thesis
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    Abstract
    PART I. Adaptation of the theory of rent to the time of its origin. The early dominance of the landlord class -- The rise of a trading class -- The competitive theory in the natural order of Adam Smith -- The historical basis for the belief in free competition -- The monopoly theory of rent in the natural order -- Wealth centralized in the hands of tradesmen in the existing order -- James Anderson's theory of the relation of the landlord and capitalistic classes -- Ricardo's Theory of Rent, an analysis of the relation of the landlord and capitalistic classes -- Adaptation of the theory of rent to the time of its origin -- The early dominance of the landlord class -- The rise of a trading class -- The competitive theory in the natural order of Adam Smith -- The historical basis for the belief in free competition -- The monopoly theory of rent in the natural order -- Wealth centralized in the hands of tradesmen in the existing order -- James Anderson's theory of the relation of the landlord and capitalistic classes -- Ricardo's Theory of Rent, an analysis of the relation of the landlord and capitalistic classes. PART II. Relation of the landed interests to the promotion and capitalization of railroads -- The distribution of land and the development of railroad traffic -- The relation of farming to the large scale business -- Early theories of the relation of transportation to agriculture -- Rail roads made subsidiary to the development of agriculture -- An improvement in the method of transportation expected to be of advantage to the landlord -- Railroads not operated at cost -- Belief in the sufficiency of competition to determine prices -- The first recognition of the monopoly character of railroads -- Early struggle between the railroads and the landlords -- Resultant high costs of English railways -- Constant increase in the capitalization of English railways -- Depreciation in English land values. PART III. The relation of t ransportation charges to the incone of railroads and of agricultural lands -- The disappearance of the monopoly advantage of the lands near the old centers of population -- Failures of doctrine of costs -- Disadvantage of small shipper during the period of rebates -- The organization of large scale business favored by rebates -- Impossible for the farmer to become his own shipper -- The development of large middlemen organizations -- The rebate or quantity price, granted large business, a restriction on free competition -- Early period of individualistic competition in the grain business -- Railroads side with the grain dealers -- The elevator not simply a labor-saving instrument but a device for the control of the grain business -- Farmers' organizations not confronted by the industrial competition assumed by the classical school -- No profits from integration of processes in agriculture -- Accumulation of intangible assets in manufacturing through the sale of standardized products -- Relation to the rate of interest charged farmers -- PART IV. The co-operative form of agricultural organization not favorable to the centralization of wealth.
    URI
    https://hdl.handle.net/10355/43593
    https://doi.org/10.32469/10355/43593
    Degree
    Ph. D.
    Thesis Department
    Economics (MU)
    Rights
    OpenAccess.
    This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 License.
    Collections
    • 1910-1919 Dissertations (MU)
    • Economics electronic theses and dissertations (MU)

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