tag="{http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml}a">177
|
The Claims of Service |
181 |
|
The Claims of Abstinence |
182 |
XIII |
Social and Presumptive Justifications of Interest |
187 |
|
Limitations of the Sacrifice Principle |
187 |
|
The Value of Capital in a No-Interest Régime |
188 |
|
Whether the Present Rate of Interest is Necessary |
191 |
|
Whether at Least two Per Cent. is Necessary |
193 |
|
Whether any Interest is Necessary |
196 |
|
The State is Justified in Permitting Interest |
199 |
|
Civil Authorisation not Sufficient for Individual Justification |
201 |
|
How the Interest-Taker is Justified |
204 |
XIV |
Co-operation a Partial Solvent of Capitalism |
210 |
|
Reducing the Rate of Interest |
211 |
|
Need for a Wider Distribution of Capital |
213 |
|
The Essence of Co-operative Enterprise |
214 |
|
Co-operative Credit Societies |
216 |
|
Co-operative Agricultural Societies |
217 |
|
Co-operative Mercantile Societies |
220 |
|
Co-operation in Production |
222 |
|
Advantages and Prospects of Co-operation |
228 |
|
References on Section II |
233 |
SECTION III THE MORAL ASPECT OF PROFITS |
XV |
The Nature of Profits |
237 |
|
The Functions and Rewards of the Business Man |
237 |
|
The Amount of Profits |
239 |
|
Profits in a Joint-Stock Company |
241 |
XVI |
The Principal Canons of Distributive Justice |
243 |
|
The Canon of Equality |
243 |
|
The Canon of Needs |
244 |
|
The Canon of Efforts and Sacrifice |
246 |
|
The Canon of Productivity |
|