Wednesday, July 15, 2009

Straight Shotacon Kid

Quotes Jean Baptiste Say

Quotes Jean Baptiste Say (1767-1832), French classical economist and businessman. In 1803, he published The Treatise on Political Economy. Say It Was Most Famous work. Say He Is Originated law (deriving their supply Its Own Demand).

"So there is actually producing wealth where it is created or increased utility. "
Jean-Baptiste Say, Treatise on Political Economy, 1803-1826

" Lowering taxes, increasing public enjoyment, increases tax revenues. "
Jean-Baptiste Say, Treatise on Political Economy, 1803-1826

" When a man sells to another any product it sells is the utility that into the product, the buyer does not buy that because of its usefulness, the use he can do. "
Jean-Baptiste Say, Treatise on Political Economy, 1803-1826

" Money is the car products. "
Jean-Baptiste Say, Treatise on Political Economy, 1803-1826

" Any savings, while increasing capital, prepares an annual gain in perpetuity, not only to those who made this accumulation, but to all the people whose industry is set in motion by this portion of the capital. It prepares an annual interest to the capitalist who has savings, and annual profits to the industrious work she does. Perpetually consumed, it is many times shown to be consumed again, as the profits it creates. "
Jean-Baptiste Say, Treatise on Political Economy, 1803-1826

" It is fortunate that the personal interest ever before to the conservation of private capital, and we can under no time entertainment capital of productive employment, without depriving themselves of adequate income. "
Jean-Baptiste Say, Treatise on Political Economy, 1803-1826

"Men also are much better ways to achieve a certain goal, when the goal is near, and that their attention is constantly turned the same side. Most discoveries, even those that scientists have made, should be attributed originally to the subdivision of work, since it is a result of this subdivision that men are busy looking at some branches of knowledge exclusively to all other , which allowed them to follow them much further. "
Jean-Baptiste Say, Treatise on Political Economy, 1803-1826

"A man who does, throughout his life, that same operation succeeds are sure to run better and more quickly than another man but at the same time it becomes less capable of any other occupation, whether physical or moral; off his other faculties, and the result is degeneration in man considered individually. "
Jean-Baptiste Say, Treatise on Political Economy, 1803-1826

" You can take the consequence, therefore, is the industry of a nation is not limited by the extent of its territory, but by the extent of its capital. "
Jean-Baptiste Say, Treatise on Political Economy, 1803-1826

" The fund, capital and industry are sometimes combined in the same hands. A man who cultivates his own expense the garden belongs to him, has the money, capital and industry. He, alone, the benefit of the owner, the capitalist and industrious man. The Grinder, which carries an industry where there must be no land, concerns his back while his capital and his industry in his fingertips: he is both an entrepreneur, capitalist and worker. "
Jean-Baptiste Say, Treatise on Political Economy, 1803-1826

" Finally, it is not true that Colbert had ruined France. It is a fact, however, that under the administration of Colbert, France came out of the misery which had plunged two regencies and a bad rule. It was, indeed, then ruined again, but it is the glitz and the wars of Louis XIV that he must impute this evil, and similar expenses of the prince show the extent resources that Colbert had generated. "
Jean-Baptiste Say, Treatise on Political Economy, 1803-1826

" The object of economic science is the knowledge of the laws that govern the formation, distribution and consumption of wealth . "
Jean-Baptiste Say, Catechism of Political Economy, 1821

" What do you mean by utility? I hear that quality possessed by certain things that we can use in any manner whatsoever. Why the utility of a thing that does it something of value? Because the utility makes it desirable, and leads men to make a sacrifice to possess. It does nothing for what is good for nothing, but it gives a certain amount of things you have (a certain quantity of silver coins, for example) to get the thing one feels the need. That's what makes its value. "
Jean-Baptiste Say, Catechism of Political Economy, 1821

" Henry IV was not one of the least despotic kings of France, yet France and prospered under his rule, because you don ' it bothered not individuals. "
Jean-Baptiste Say, Cours Political Economy, 1840

" The mere fact of the formation of a product opens, diced very moment, an outlet for others. "
Jean-Baptiste Say, Cours Political Economy, 1840

" best of all plans of finance is to spend little, and best of all taxes is the smallest. "
Jean-Baptiste Say, Cours Political Economy, 1840

" Adam Smith did not embrace the whole phenomenon production and consumption of wealth, but he has done so much, that we must be entered for him recognition. "
Jean-Baptiste Say, Cours Political Economy, 1840

" The perfection of the administration is to administer low. "
Jean-Baptiste Say, Cours Political Economy, 1840

" Entrepreneurs industry may have very little knowledge, but it takes a decision to use knowledge about and talents that circulate in society, and to apply them to designs utility. "
Jean-Baptiste Say, Cours Political Economy, 1840

" The sales and purchases are in the reality of trade in goods. "
Jean-Baptiste Say, Cours Political Economy, 1840

" When a baker burn wood to cook his bread, he consumes reproductively, because it adds to her bread all the value that it takes away from its timber. But we burn wood for heat is consumed unproductively, because it does not burn this value overrides the value of wood. "
Jean-Baptiste Say, Course of Political Economy, 1840

"What we teach economics? It teaches us how wealth is produced, distributed and consumed in society. "
Jean-Baptiste Say, Cours Political Economy, 1840

" It's partly because we invented the plow it was permissible for men to develop the arts and all types of knowledge. "
Jean-Baptiste Say, Cours Political Economy, 1840

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