-
Unearned increment is an
increase in the
value of land or any
property without expenditure of any kind on the part of the proprietor; it is an
early statement...
- Mill's term '
unearned increment of land' to
broaden the
concept to
include all land rent, not just
increases in land price. In
economics '
unearned income'...
-
Robert V. (January 2000). "On
Separating the Landowner's
Earned and
Unearned Increment: A
Georgist Rejoinder to F. A. Hayek".
American Journal of Economics...
- of the poor law (1891) The
scandal of London's
markets (1891) The "
unearned increment" (1891) Socialism : true and
false (1894) The
London vestries: what...
-
quantity of
labour put into it; and that what is now
known as the "
unearned increment" of land is a
proper object for taxation. By his
Analysis of the Phenomena...
- made by the
property owner. It is, therefore,
usually referred to as
unearned increment or
windfall gain. When, for instance, a
property is
rezoned for higher-value...
-
expenditure on roads, drainage,
building of parks, etc.
described as
unearned increment. The tax was
based on the
difference between the
amount of two valuations...
- used
without consent. Plagiarism, in contrast, is
concerned with the
unearned increment to the
plagiarizing author's re****tion, or the
obtaining of academic...
-
Contributions Cultural heritage as
factor of production,
Economic sabotage,
Unearned increment of ****ociation,
Money as
means of
distribution of production, A +...
-
cooperating in the
productive process was
named by
Douglas as the "
unearned increment of ****ociation" –
historic ac****ulations of
which constitute what...