Select Problems in Historical Interpretation: Government and the American economy, 1870-present |
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Page 214
The farmer has tended increasingly to con- centrate on the production of a single staple crop , all of which he sells , and to buy all his ... At this period American industry was producing mainly for the domestic market , so that it ...
The farmer has tended increasingly to con- centrate on the production of a single staple crop , all of which he sells , and to buy all his ... At this period American industry was producing mainly for the domestic market , so that it ...
Page 445
And so it became the order of the day for large industry to get control of combinations of pat- ents so that new producers could be shut out , To prevent foreign production from getting into this country , international cartels were ...
And so it became the order of the day for large industry to get control of combinations of pat- ents so that new producers could be shut out , To prevent foreign production from getting into this country , international cartels were ...
Page 456
Conscious determination of production pri- orities implies also conscious regulation of rela- tive wage rates . ... and this planning of wage rates must , indeed , extend not only as far as the planning of production , but farther .
Conscious determination of production pri- orities implies also conscious regulation of rela- tive wage rates . ... and this planning of wage rates must , indeed , extend not only as far as the planning of production , but farther .
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Contents
I | 2 |
PHILOSOPHERS OF LAISSEZ FAIRE | 7 |
Attitudes during the Progressive Era | 13 |
Copyright | |
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action administration agricultural American amount asked authority believe Board called capital cars cent Cleveland coal combination commerce Commissioner committee common competition Congress conservation contract corporation cost course court deal demand direct economic effect employees fact farm farmers Federal force give hand important increase individual industry interests issue labor land less major manufacturers materials matter means ment nature necessary never operation organization party persons political possible practices present President Problem production profits protection Pullman question railroad reason received regulation relations representatives result road secure Senator Standard Oil steel strike supply thing tion trade trust union United wages whole workers