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Untersuchungen über Begriff und Wesen der Grundrente

1889

by Schullern-Schrattenhofen

Knowledge EconomicsAdolf WagnerAustrian SchoolCarl MengerEugen von Bohm-BawerkGround RentIncome DistributionMarginal UtilityMethodologySocial PolicyComplementary GoodsExchange ValueObjective ValueSubjective ValueUse ValueEconomic GoodsFactors of ProductionRaw MaterialsScarcityAgricultureInterest RatesRoundabout ProductionZurechnungDavid RicardoMethodological IndividualismAccountingOpportunity CostUncertaintyWagesClassical EconomicsJohann Heinrich von ThunenJohn Stuart MillJohann Karl RodbertusThomas MalthusDiminishing ReturnsCapital TheoryPrice TheoryLiquidityProduction CostsCompetitionPrice FormationProperty RightsCapital AccumulationInternational TradeMonopolySocialismEconomic HistoryAdam SmithKarl KniesLabor Theory of ValuePhysiocracyWilliam Stanley JevonsAlbert SchaffleFrederic BastiatPhenomenologyJean Charles Léonard de Sismondi

Table of Contents · 39 segments

1
Google Books Notice, Library Provenance, and Title Pagesessay
2
Introduction and the Role of Value Theory in Ground-Rent Analysistheoretical
3
Subjective Value and Marginal Utilitychapter
4
Economic Definitions of Nature and Landchapter
5
Land Use: Definition, Time Dimension, and Separation from Capital and Laborchapter
6
The Second Premise: Experience as Guide for Rent Theorychapter
7
Empirical Starting Point and the Theory of Human Needstheoretical
8
Practical Calculation of Ground Rent as Residual Incomechapter
9
Definition of Ground Rent: Problem and Productive Cooperation of Factorstheoretical
10
Whether the Nature-Produced Part of the Product Has Valuetheoretical
11
Agricultural Land, Substitution, Diminishing Returns, and Scarcitytheoretical
12
The Cause of Ground Rentchapter
13
Nature as a Good of the Lowest Orderchapter
14
Application to Leased Land and the Pachtschillingchapter
15
Ground Rent in Money Formchapter
16
The General Measure of Ground Renttheoretical
17
Calculating the Measure of Ground Renttheoretical
18
Economic Productivity of Nature in Agriculture, House Sites, and Minestheoretical
19
The Measure of the Pachtschillingchapter
20
The Value and Price of Land Itselfchapter
21
Conclusion and Transition to Testing the Theoryessay
22
When Ground Rent Arises, Rises, and Fallschapter
23
Fertility, Location, and Differential Ground Rentchapter
24
Whether the Worst Land Can Yield Rentchapter
25
Population Density, Expanded Cultivation, and Higher Rentchapter
26
Additional Capital and Labor on the Same Landchapter
27
Different Crops, Mineral Products, and Rent Differenceschapter
28
Rising and Falling Product Valueschapter
29
When Changes in Product Value Create or Eliminate Rentchapter
30
Imports, Exports, and Ground Rentchapter
31
Ground Rent and Private Propertychapter
32
Conclusion to the Empirical Test of the Rent Theoryessay
33
Introduction to the Comparison with Earlier Rent Theoriestheoretical
34
The Physiocrats and the Ricardo Traditiontheoretical
35
Schäffle, Mangoldt, and Rent as a Generalized Extra Incometheoretical
36
Rodbertus, Labor-Only Rent Theories, and Henry Georgetheoretical
37
Final Assessment of Earlier Ground Rent Theoriesessay
38
Beginning of the Table of Contentsbibliography
39
Continuation of Table of Contents and Digitization Artifactschapter