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Capital (economics)



 
 
In economics
Economics

File:Ballard Farmers' Market - vegetables.jpgEconomics is the Social sciences that studies the Production theory basics, Distribution , and Consumption of Good and Service ....
, capital or capital goods or real capital refers to factors of production
Factors of production

In economics, factors of production are the resources employed to produce Good and services. Here the rate of output is modeled as a production function of the rate of use of each input employed.They are generally land, labor, and capital; the three groups of resources that are used to make all goods and services....
 used to create goods or services that are not themselves significantly consumed (though they may depreciate
Depreciation

Depreciation is a term used in accounting, economics and finance to spread the cost of an asset over the span of several years.In simple words we can say that depreciation is the reduction in the value of an asset due to usage, passage of time, wear and tear, technological outdating or obsolescence, depletion, inadequacy, rot, rust, decay o...
) in the production process. Capital goods may be acquired with money
Money

Money is anything that is generally accepted as payment for goods and services and repayment of debts. The main uses of money are as a medium of exchange, a unit of account, and a store of value....
 or financial capital
Financial capital

Financial capital can refer to money used by entrepreneurs and businesses to buy what they need to make their products or provide their services or to that sector of the economy based on its operation, i.e....
. In finance
Finance

The field of finance refers to the concepts of time, money and risk and how they are interrelated. Banks are the main facilitators of funding through the provision of credit, although private equity, mutual funds, hedge funds, and other organizations have become important....
 and accounting, capital generally refers to financial wealth
Wealth (economics)

In economics and business, wealth of a person or nation is the value of assets owned net of Liability#Financial accounting owed at a point in time....
, especially that used to start or maintain a business.

a class="link1" onMouseover='showByLink("m836167",this)' onMouseout='hide("m836167")'href="http://www.absoluteastronomy.com/topics/Classical_economics">classical economics
Classical economics

Classical economics is widely regarded as the first modern school of history of economic thought. It is the idea that free markets can regulate themselves....
, capital is one of three (or four, in some formulations) factors of production
Factors of production

In economics, factors of production are the resources employed to produce Good and services. Here the rate of output is modeled as a production function of the rate of use of each input employed.They are generally land, labor, and capital; the three groups of resources that are used to make all goods and services....
.






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In economics
Economics

File:Ballard Farmers' Market - vegetables.jpgEconomics is the Social sciences that studies the Production theory basics, Distribution , and Consumption of Good and Service ....
, capital or capital goods or real capital refers to factors of production
Factors of production

In economics, factors of production are the resources employed to produce Good and services. Here the rate of output is modeled as a production function of the rate of use of each input employed.They are generally land, labor, and capital; the three groups of resources that are used to make all goods and services....
 used to create goods or services that are not themselves significantly consumed (though they may depreciate
Depreciation

Depreciation is a term used in accounting, economics and finance to spread the cost of an asset over the span of several years.In simple words we can say that depreciation is the reduction in the value of an asset due to usage, passage of time, wear and tear, technological outdating or obsolescence, depletion, inadequacy, rot, rust, decay o...
) in the production process. Capital goods may be acquired with money
Money

Money is anything that is generally accepted as payment for goods and services and repayment of debts. The main uses of money are as a medium of exchange, a unit of account, and a store of value....
 or financial capital
Financial capital

Financial capital can refer to money used by entrepreneurs and businesses to buy what they need to make their products or provide their services or to that sector of the economy based on its operation, i.e....
. In finance
Finance

The field of finance refers to the concepts of time, money and risk and how they are interrelated. Banks are the main facilitators of funding through the provision of credit, although private equity, mutual funds, hedge funds, and other organizations have become important....
 and accounting, capital generally refers to financial wealth
Wealth (economics)

In economics and business, wealth of a person or nation is the value of assets owned net of Liability#Financial accounting owed at a point in time....
, especially that used to start or maintain a business.

Capital in narrow and broad uses

In classical economics
Classical economics

Classical economics is widely regarded as the first modern school of history of economic thought. It is the idea that free markets can regulate themselves....
, capital is one of three (or four, in some formulations) factors of production
Factors of production

In economics, factors of production are the resources employed to produce Good and services. Here the rate of output is modeled as a production function of the rate of use of each input employed.They are generally land, labor, and capital; the three groups of resources that are used to make all goods and services....
. The others are land
Land (economics)

In economics, land comprises all natural resource whose supply is inherently fixed such as any and all particular geographical locations, mineral deposits, and even geostationary orbit locations and portions of the electromagnetic spectrum....
, labour and (in some versions) organization, entrepreneurship, or management. Goods with the following features are capital:
  • It can be used in the production of other goods (this is what makes it a factor of production).
  • It was produced, in contrast to "land," which refers to naturally occurring resources such as geographical locations and minerals.
  • It is not used up immediately in the process of production unlike raw materials or intermediate good
    Intermediate good

    Intermediate goods or producer goods are Good used as inputs in the production of other goods, such as partly finished goods. They are goods used in production of final goods....
    s. (The significant exception to this is depreciation
    Depreciation

    Depreciation is a term used in accounting, economics and finance to spread the cost of an asset over the span of several years.In simple words we can say that depreciation is the reduction in the value of an asset due to usage, passage of time, wear and tear, technological outdating or obsolescence, depletion, inadequacy, rot, rust, decay o...
     allowance, which like intermediate goods, is treated as a business expense.)


These distinctions of convenience carried over to neoclassical economics
Neoclassical economics

Neoclassical economics is a term variously used for approaches to economics focusing on the determination of prices, outputs, and income distribution s in markets through supply and demand, often as mediated through a hypothesized maximization of income-constrained utility by individuals and of cost-constrained profits of firms employing avai...
 with little change in formal analysis for an extended period. There was the further clarification that capital is a stock
Stock and flow

Economics, business, accounting, and related fields often distinguish between quantities which are stocks and those which are flows. A stock variable is measured at one specific time, and represents a quantity existing at that point in time, which may have been capital accumulation in the past....
. As such, its value can be estimated at a point in time, say December 31. By contrast, investment
Investment

Investment or investing is a term with several closely-related meanings in business management, finance and economics, related to Saving or deferring Consumption ....
, as production to be added to the capital stock, is described as taking place over time ("per year"), thus a flow
Stock and flow

Economics, business, accounting, and related fields often distinguish between quantities which are stocks and those which are flows. A stock variable is measured at one specific time, and represents a quantity existing at that point in time, which may have been capital accumulation in the past....
.

Earlier illustrations often described capital as physical items, such as tools, buildings, and vehicles that are used in the production process. Since at least the 1960s economists have increasingly focused on broader forms of capital. For example, investment in skills and education can be viewed as building up human capital
Human capital

Human capital refers to the stock of skills and knowledge embodied in the ability to perform Labour so as to produce economic value. It is the skills and knowledge gained by a worker through education and experience.Many early economic theories refer to it simply as labor, one of three factors of production, and consider it to be a fungible...
 or knowledge capital
Knowledge capital

Knowledge capital is the value in ideas which means that sharing information equals sharing power, it is the know how that results from the experience, information, knowledge, learning, and skills of the employees or individual of an organization or group....
, and investments in intellectual property can be viewed as building up intellectual capital
Intellectual capital

Intellectual capital is a term with various definitions in different theories of management and economics. Accordingly, its only truly neutral definition is as a debate over economic "intangibles"....
. These terms lead to certain questions and controversies discussed in those articles. Human development theory
Human development theory

Human development theory is a theory that merges older ideas from ecological economics, sustainable development, welfare economics, and feminist economics....
 describes human capital as being composed of distinct social, imitative and creative elements:
  • Social capital
    Social capital

    Social capital is a concept developed in sociology and also used in business, capital , organizational behaviour, political science, public health and natural resources management that refers to connections within and between social networks as well as connections among individuals....
     is the value of network trusting relationships between individuals in an economy.
  • Individual capital
    Individual capital

    Individual capital , also known as human capital, comprises inalienable or personal traits of persons, tied to their bodies and available only through their own free will, such as skill, creativity, Entrepreneur, courage, capacity for moral example, non-communicable wisdom, invention or empathy, non-transferable personal trust and lead...
     which is inherent in persons, protected by societies, and trades labor for trust or money. Close parallel concepts are 'talent
    Talent

    Talent may refer to:*Talent, a personal intellectual giftedness/skill*A Celebrity or group of them**Tarento, the Japanese pronunciation of the word; a variety entertainment personality in Japan...
    ', 'ingenuity
    Ingenuity

    The term ingenuity or applied ideas is used in the analysis of Thomas Homer-Dixon, building on that of Paul Romer, to refer to what is usually called instructional capital....
    ', 'leadership
    Leadership

    Leadership is one of the most salient aspects of the organizational context. However, defining leadership has been challenging. The following sections discuss several important aspects of leadership including a description of what leadership is and a description of several popular theories and styles of leadership....
    ', 'trained bodies', or 'innate skills' that cannot reliably be reproduced by using any combination of any of the others above. In traditional economic analysis individual capital is more usually called labour.


Further classifications of capital that have been used in various theoretical or applied uses include:
  • Financial capital
    Financial capital

    Financial capital can refer to money used by entrepreneurs and businesses to buy what they need to make their products or provide their services or to that sector of the economy based on its operation, i.e....
     which represents obligations, and is liquidated as money for trade, and owned by legal entities. It is in the form of capital assets, traded in financial markets. Its market value is not based on the historical accumulation of money invested but on the perception by the market of its expected revenues and of the risk entailed.
  • Natural capital
    Natural capital

    Natural capital is the extension of the economic notion of capital to environmental goods and services. Natural capital is thus the stock of natural ecosystems that yields a flow of valuable ecosystem goods or services into the future....
     which is inherent in ecologies and protected by communities to support life, e.g. a river which provides farms with water.
  • Infrastructural capital
    Infrastructural capital

    Infrastructural capital refers to any physical means of production or means of protection beyond that which can be gathered or found directly in nature, i.e....
     is non-natural support systems (e.g. clothing, shelter, roads, personal computers) that minimize need for new social trust, instruction, and natural resources. (Almost all of this is manufactured, leading to the older term manufactured capital, but some arises from interactions with natural capital, and so it makes more sense to describe it in terms of its appreciation/depreciation process, rather than its origin: much of natural capital grows back, infrastructural capital must be built and installed.)


In part as a result, separate literatures have developed to describe both natural capital
Natural capital

Natural capital is the extension of the economic notion of capital to environmental goods and services. Natural capital is thus the stock of natural ecosystems that yields a flow of valuable ecosystem goods or services into the future....
 and social capital
Social capital

Social capital is a concept developed in sociology and also used in business, capital , organizational behaviour, political science, public health and natural resources management that refers to connections within and between social networks as well as connections among individuals....
. Such terms reflect a wide consensus
Consensus

Consensus has two common meanings. One is a general Wiktionary:agreement among the members of a given group or community, each of which exercises some discretion in decision making and follow-up action....
 that nature and society both function in such a similar manner as traditional industrial infrastructural capital, that it is entirely appropriate to refer to them as different types of capital in themselves. In particular, they can be used in the production of other goods, are not used up immediately in the process of production, and can be enhanced (if not created) by human effort.

There is also a literature of intellectual capital
Intellectual capital

Intellectual capital is a term with various definitions in different theories of management and economics. Accordingly, its only truly neutral definition is as a debate over economic "intangibles"....
 and intellectual property law. However, this increasingly distinguishes means of capital investment, and collection of potential rewards for patent
Patent

A patent is a set of exclusive rights granted by a state to an inventor or his assignee for a term of patent in exchange for a disclosure of an invention....
, copyright
Copyright

Copyright is a form of intellectual property which gives the creator of an original work exclusive rights for a certain time period in relation to that work, including its publication, distribution and adaptation; after which time the work is said to enter the public domain....
 (creative or individual capital
Individual capital

Individual capital , also known as human capital, comprises inalienable or personal traits of persons, tied to their bodies and available only through their own free will, such as skill, creativity, Entrepreneur, courage, capacity for moral example, non-communicable wisdom, invention or empathy, non-transferable personal trust and lead...
), and trademark
TradeMark

TradeMark is a tall, primarily residential, skyscraper in Charlotte, North Carolina. It was completed in 2007 and has 28 floors. There are 200 hundred residential units....
 (social trust or social capital
Social capital

Social capital is a concept developed in sociology and also used in business, capital , organizational behaviour, political science, public health and natural resources management that refers to connections within and between social networks as well as connections among individuals....
) instruments.

Capital in classical economics and beyond

Within classical economics, Adam Smith (Wealth of Nations, Book II, Chapter 1) distinguished fixed capital
Fixed capital

Fixed capital is a concept in economics and accounting, first theoretically analysed in some depth by the economist David Ricardo. It refers to any kind of real or physical capital that is not used up in the production of a product and is contrasted with circulating capital such as raw materials, operating expenses and the like....
 from circulating capital
Circulating capital

Circulating capital is a term used by classical economists such as Adam Smith, David Ricardo and Karl Marx. It refers to physical capital and operating expenses, i.e., short-lived items that are used in production and used up in the process of creating other goods or services....
, including raw materials and intermediate products. For an enterprise, both were kinds of capital.

Karl Marx
Karl Marx

Karl Heinrich Marx was a Germanphilosophy, political economy, historian, sociologist, humanism, political theorist and revolutionary credited as the founder of communism....
 adds a distinction that is often confused with David Ricardo
David Ricardo

David Ricardo was a political economy, often credited with systematizing economics, and was one of the most influential of the classical economicss, along with Thomas Malthus and Adam Smith....
's. In Marxian theory, variable capital refers to a capitalist's investment in labor-power, seen as the only source of surplus-value. It is called "variable" since the amount of value
Labor theory of value

The labor theories of value are theory of value according to which the Value of commodities are related to the Labour needed to produce them....
 it can produce varies from the amount it consumes, i.e., it creates new value. On the other hand, constant capital
Constant capital

Constant capital , is a concept created by Karl Marx and used in Marxian political economy. It refers to one of the forms of Capital invested in Production, costs, and pricing, which contrasts with variable capital ....
 refers to investment in non-human factors of production, such as plant and machinery, which Marx takes to contribute only its own replacement value
Replacement value

The term replacement cost or replacement value refers to the amount that an entity would have to pay, at the present time, to replace any one of its assets....
 to the commodities it is used to produce. It is constant, in that the amount of value committed in the original investment, and the amount retrieved in the form of commodities produced, remains constant.

Investment
Investment

Investment or investing is a term with several closely-related meanings in business management, finance and economics, related to Saving or deferring Consumption ....
 or capital accumulation
Capital accumulation

Most generally, the accumulation of capital refers simply to the gathering or amassment of objects of value; the increase in wealth; or the creation of wealth....
 in classical economic theory is the production of increased capital. In order to invest, goods must be produced which are not to be immediately consumed, but instead used to produce other goods as a means of production
Means of production

Means of production , include machines, tools, plant and equipment, infrastructure, and so on: "all those things with the aid of which man acts upon the subject of labor, and transforms it." ....
. Investment is closely related to saving, though it is not the same. As Keynes pointed out, saving involves not spending all of one's income on current goods or services, while investment refers to spending on a specific type of goods, i.e., capital goods.

The Austrian
Austrian School

The Austrian School is a Heterodox economics school of economics. It emphasizes the spontaneous organizing power of the price mechanism, holds that the complexity of subjective human choices makes mathematical modelling of the evolving market extremely difficult and therefore advocates a laissez faire approach to the economy....
 economist Eugen von Böhm-Bawerk maintained that capital intensity
Capital intensity

Capital intensity is the term in economics for the amount of fixed or real Capital present in relation to other factors of production, especially labor....
 was measured by the roundaboutness
Roundaboutness

Roundaboutness, or roundabout methods of production, is the term used to describe the process whereby capital goods are produced first and then, with the help of the capital goods, the desired consumer goods are produced....
 of production processes. Since capital is defined by him as being goods of higher-order, or goods used to produce consumer goods, and derived their value from them, being future goods.

See also

  • Capital deepening
    Capital deepening

    Capital deepening is a term used in economics to describe an economy where Capital per worker is increasing. A process of increasing the amount of capital per worker....
  • Capitalism
    Capitalism

    Capitalism is an economic system in which wealth, and the means of producing wealth, are private property and controlled rather than commonly, publicly, or state-owned and controlled....
  • Capitalist mode of production
    Capitalist mode of production

    In Marxian economic discourse the capitalist mode of production refers to the socio-economic Base and superstructure of capitalism society which began to grow rapidly in Western Europe from the end of the eighteenth century, and later extended to most of the world....
  • Factors of production
    Factors of production

    In economics, factors of production are the resources employed to produce Good and services. Here the rate of output is modeled as a production function of the rate of use of each input employed.They are generally land, labor, and capital; the three groups of resources that are used to make all goods and services....
  • Physical capital
    Physical capital

    In general physical capital refers to any non-human asset made by humans and then used in production. Often, it refers to capital in some ambiguous combination of infrastructural capital and natural capital....
  • Means of production
    Means of production

    Means of production , include machines, tools, plant and equipment, infrastructure, and so on: "all those things with the aid of which man acts upon the subject of labor, and transforms it." ....
  • Venture capital
    Venture capital

    Venture capital is a type of private equity capital typically provided to early-stage, high-potential, Growth investing companies in the interest of generating a return through an eventual realization event such as an IPO or mergers and acquisitions of the company....
  • Wealth (economics)
    Wealth (economics)

    In economics and business, wealth of a person or nation is the value of assets owned net of Liability#Financial accounting owed at a point in time....

Lists
  • list of economists
    List of economists

    This is an alphabetical list of notable economists, that is, experts in the social science of economics. There is also a separate list of politicians with economics training....
  • list of management topics
    List of management topics

    This is a list of articles on general management and strategic management topics. For articles on specific areas of management, such as marketing management, production management, human resource management, information technology management, and international trade, see the list of related topics at the bottom of this page....
  • list of marketing topics
    List of marketing topics

    This is a list of marketing topics....
  • list of accounting topics
    List of accounting topics

    This page is a list of accounting topics.AAccounting Ethics- Accounting for risk- Accounting information system- Accounting methods...
  • list of finance topics
    List of finance topics

    Topics in finance include:...
  • list of ethics topics
    List of ethics topics

    This list of ethics topics puts articles relevant to well-known ethical debates and decisions in one place - including practical problems long known in philosophy, and the more abstract subjects in law, politics, and some professions and sciences....