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Gray versus Malthus, or, The principles of population and production investigated
and the result found to be that population regulates subsistence, not subsistence population, while the increase of population, far from tending to overstock, and to produce poverty and distress, is the grand source of the permanent increase of wealth, and of amplifying the means of employment and happiness -
The happiness of states, or, An inquiry concerning population, the modes of subsisting and employing it, and the effects of all on human happiness
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All classes productive of national wealth, or, The theories of M. Quesnai, Dr. Adam Smith, and Mr. Gray
concerning the various classes of men, as to the production of wealth to the community -
The happiness of states, or, An inquiry concerning population, the modes of subsisting and employing it, and the effects of all on human happiness
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Gray versus Malthus, the principles of population and production investigated
and the questions, does population regulate subsistence, or subsistence population ... and should government encourage or check early marriage -
All classes productive of national wealth, or, The theories of M. Quesnay, Dr. Adam Smith, and Mr. Gray concerning the various classes of men, as to the production of wealth to the community analysed and examined
to which are added, four letters to the celebrated French econonomist M. Say, on his "De L'Angleterre et des anglais" -
A Letter to the Right Honourable William Pitt, Esq, one of His Majesty's principal secretaries of state : relating to the abuses practised by bakers, corndealers, farmers, and millers
in consequence of a pamphlet, intitled, Poison detected, which that confederacy is supposed to have endeavoured to suppress -
Remarks on the production of wealth, and the influence, which the various classes of society have, in carrying on that process
in a letter to the Rev. T.R. Malthus, occasioned by his attempt to maintain the division of classes into productive and unproductive