| Leslie Stephen - 1899 - 476 pages
...was pursuant to the principle of commercial policy formulated by him in the king's speech of 1721, ' to make the exportation of our own manufactures and the importation of the commodities used in the manufacturing of them as practicable and as easy as may be.' In May 1 739 the English and... | |
| Katharine Coman, Elizabeth Kimball Kendall - 1899 - 574 pages
...king's speech of Source-Booh, 1721 it was declared to be the purpose of the government PP- 34i. 342"to make the exportation of our own manufactures, and the importation of the commodities used in the manufacturing of them, as practicable and as easy as may be." Accordingly export duties... | |
| Elizabeth Kimball Kendall - 1900 - 526 pages
...this nation chiefly depend. It is very obvious, that nothing would more conduce to the obtaining so public a good, than to make the exportation of our...manufactures, and the importation of the commodities used in the manufacturing of them, as practicable and easy as may be ; by this means, the balance of... | |
| William Cunningham - 1907 - 662 pages
...this nation chiefly depend. It is very obvious, that nothing would more conduce to the obtaining so public a good, than to make the exportation of our...manufactures, and the importation of the commodities used in the manufacturing of them, as practicable and easy as may be; by this means, the balance of... | |
| Norris Arthur Brisco - 1907 - 252 pages
...this nation chiefly depend. It is very obvious that nothing would more conduce to the obtaining so public a good, than to make the exportation of our...manufactures and the importation of the commodities used in the manufacturing of them, as practicable and easy as may be ; by this means, the balance in... | |
| William Cunningham - 1908 - 520 pages
...this nation chiefly depend. It is very obvious, that nothing would more conduce to the obtaining so public a good, than to make the exportation of our...manufactures, and the importation of the commodities used in the manufacturing of them, as practicable and easy as may be ; by this means, the balance of... | |
| William Cunningham - 1908 - 516 pages
...this nation chiefly depend. It is very obvious, that nothing would more conduce to the obtaining so public a good, than to make the exportation of our...manufactures, and the importation of the commodities used in the manufacturing of them, as practicable and easy as may be; by this means, the balance of... | |
| Sir Charles Grant Robertson - 1911 - 602 pages
...himself an enlightened mercantilist, anxious to redeem the pledge in the King's Speech of 1721 : " to make the exportation of our own manufactures and the importation of the commodities used in the manufacturing of them as practicable and as easy as may be ". In 1721 and 1724 the book... | |
| Frederick Converse Beach, George Edwin Rines - 1912 - 854 pages
...Accordingly he overhauled the book of rates between 1721-4 with the object, to use his own words, of making "the exportation of our own manufactures and the importation of the commodities used in the manufacturing of them as' practical and easy as may be? He repealed or reduced the import... | |
| David Playfair Heatley - 1913 - 310 pages
...ministry of Walpole, it was claimed that nothing would more conduce to the extension of British commerce ' than to make the exportation of our own manufactures, and the importation of the commodities used in the manufacturing of them, as practicable and easy as may be ; by this means, the balance of... | |
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