The Pamphlet Collection of Sir Robert Stout: Volume 51
Free Trade and English Commerce
Contents
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- Free Trade and English Commerce
- Chapter I. — Introductory
- Chapter II. — Exports (Unless in Payment of Debt) Necessitate Imports to the Same Amount p. 12
- Chapter III. — Futility of the Attempt to Export much and Import Little p. 16
- Chapter IV. — If Protection be Beneficial as between Country and Country, it must be Beneficial as between Province and Province p. 17
- Chapter V. — Reciprocity p. 19
- Chapter VI. — Division of Labour p. 21
- Chapter VII. — Protection Applied to Young States p. 24
- Chapter VIII. — Protection in Old States p. 27
- Chapter IX. — What England is to do if she be the Only Nation that Adopts Free Trade p. 31
- Chapter X. — Impossibility of Encouraging Exports and at the Same Time Checking Imports p. 36
- Chapter XI. — Free Trade Practised Internally by all Protectionist States p. 39
- Chapter XII. — Concluding Remarks p. 43
- Part II.—English Commerce. 1879
- Chapter XIII. — Population, Debts, and Trade of the World p. 45
- Chapter XIV. — The Amount of our Foreign Trade has been Diminishing since 1874 p. 50
- Chapter XV. — Fall in Prices Since 1874 p. 57
- Chapter XVI. — Competition in Neutral Markets p. 62
- Chapter XVII. — Fall in the Wages of Labour
- Chapter XVIII. — Commercial and Banking Failures Since 1874, and Ratio of Fall in Prices p. 70
- Chapter XIX. — The Increased Excess in the Amount of our Imports over that of our Exports p. 76
- Chapter XX. — The Depression in Trade not Confined to England, But Prevalent Everywhere p. 87
- Chapter XXI — The Effect on Trade of Political Complications and of Losses on the Debts of Defaulting States p. 92
- Chapter XXII. — Summing Up p. 94
- Free Trade and English Commerce