|
|
|
| Notepad | |
| Calculator | |
| Search | |
|
|
|
| About the Author | |
| Preface to the English-Language Edition, by Arthur Goddard | |
| Introduction, by Henry Hazlitt | |
| Author's Introduction to the French Edition | |
| I. First Series | |
| I.1. Abundance and Scarcity | |
| I.2. Obstacle and Cause | |
| I.3. Effort and Result | |
| I.4. Equalizing the Conditions of Production | |
| I.5. Our Products Are Burdened with Taxes | |
| I.6. The Balance of Trade | |
| I.7. A Petition | |
| I.8. Differential Tariffs | |
| I.9. An Immense Discovery! | |
| I.10. Reciprocity | |
| I.11. Money Prices | |
| I.12. Does Protectionism Raise Wage Rates? | |
| I.13. Theory and Practice | |
| I.14. Conflict of Principles | |
| I.15. Reciprocity Again | |
| I.16. Obstructed Rivers as Advocates for the Protectionists | |
| I.17. A Negative Railroad | |
| I.18. There Are No Absolute Principles | |
| I.19. National Independence | |
| I.20. Human vs. Mechanical Labor and Domestic vs. Foreign Labor | |
| I.21. Raw Materials | |
| I.22. Metaphors | |
| I.23. Conclusion | |
| II. Second Series | |
| II.1. The Physiology of Plunder | |
| II.2. Two Systems of Ethics | |
| II.3. The Two Hatchets | |
| II.4. Subordinate Labor Council | |
| II.5. High Prices and Low Prices | |
| II.6. To Artisans and Laborers | |
| II.7. A Chinese Tale | |
| II.8. Post Hoc, Ergo Propter Hoc | |
| II.9. Robbery by Subsidy | |
| II.10. The Tax Collector | |
| II.11. The Utopian | |
| II.12. Salt, the Postal Service, and the Tariff | |
| II.13. Protectionism, or the Three Aldermen | |
| II.14. Something Else | |
| II.15. The Little Arsenal of the Freetrader | |
| II.16. The Right Hand and the Left | |
| II.17. Domination through Industrial Superiority | |
| Footnotes | |
| About the Book and Author | |