The Rent Concept, Narrowed and Broadened
Frank T. Carlton
The Quarterly Journal of Economics, 1907, vol. 22, issue 1, 48-61
Abstract:
Manufacture and agriculture may be reduced to a common denominator; manufacture is merely a more highly intensive form of utilizing the forces and products of nature, while land plays the same role in each form of industry, 48–50.—Rent depends upon absolute and relative position as to a market, and is sharply differentiated from interest, 51–53.—"Land" rent is, however, only one kind of rent; the various forms of economic privilege also give rise to rents, 54–61.
Date: 1907
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