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With an open trade in corn and a fixed duty we should have every man in the country fully fed and h
With an open trade in corn and a fixed duty we should have every man in the country fully fed and h
With an open trade in corn and a fixed duty we should have every man in the country fully fed and h
With an open trade in corn and a fixed duty we should have every man in the country fully fed and h
With an open trade in corn and a fixed duty we should have every man in the country fully fed and h
With an open trade in corn and a fixed duty we should have every man in the country fully fed and h
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Joseph Hume:
Now, what produces a want of demand? A refusal to take from other countries the commodities which tJoseph Hume:
Fortunately for England, all her imports are raw materials.Joseph Hume:
In Great Britain the price of food is at a higher level than in any other country, and consequentlyJoseph Hume:
At the present moment the people of England are only three-quarters fed, and the result of this impJoseph Hume:
There is abundant proof that the opening of our ports always tends to raise the price of foreign coJoseph Hume:
Worse there cannot be; a better, I believe, there may be, by giving energy to the capital and skillJoseph Hume:
The advantage to Great Britain of a regular free trade in corn would, therefore, be more by raisingJoseph Hume:
Our course, then, is clear; if we desire to put an end to pauperism, or to lessen it, we should impJoseph Hume:
Land, in England, is valuable, because we have highly-paid artisans to consume the produce on the sJoseph Hume:
Destroy or take away the employment and wages of those artisans - which the corn laws in a great me