Alfred Marshall Quotes
Collection of top 23 famous quotes about Alfred Marshall
Alfred Marshall Quotes & Sayings
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Producer's Surplus is a convenient name for the genus of which the rent of land is the leading species.
— Alfred Marshall
The commercial storm leaves its path strewn with ruin. When it is over there is calm, but a dull, heavy calm.
— Alfred Marshall
Madam, my father has left me flopping like a flounder at low tide and you say what's the matter.
— Harper Lee
To make abstractions hold in reality is to destroy reality.
— Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
Practice is the price of mastery. Whatever you practice over and over again becomes a new habit of thought and performance.
— Brian Tracy
Knowledge is our most powerful engine of production.
— Alfred Marshall
Consumption may be regarded as negative production.
— Alfred Marshall
Political Economy or Economics is a study of mankind in the ordinary business of life.
— Alfred Marshall
The most valuable of all capital is that invested in human beings
— Alfred Marshall
Actions are destiny's pen.
— Grenville Kleiser
All labour is directed towards producing some effect.
— Alfred Marshall
Though a simple book can be written on selected topics, the central doctrines of economics are not simple and cannot be made so.
— Alfred Marshall
In common use almost every word has many shades of meaning, and therefore needs to be interpreted by the context.
— Alfred Marshall
Every short statement about economics is misleading (with the possible exception of my present one).
— Alfred Marshall
The love for money is only one among many.
— Alfred Marshall
The most reckless and treacherous of all theorists is he who professes to let facts and figures speak for themselves.
— Alfred Marshall
Slavery was regarded by Aristotle as an ordinance of nature, and so probably was it by the slaves themselves in olden time.
— Alfred Marshall
Individual and national rights to wealth rest on the basis of civil and international law, or at least of custom that has the force of law.
— Alfred Marshall
Again, most of the chief distinctions marked by economic terms are differences not of kind but of degree.
— Alfred Marshall
Civilized countries generally adopt gold or silver or both as money.
— Alfred Marshall