登陆注册
5159100000043

第43章 HUMAN COSTS IN THESUPPLY OF CAPITAL(2)

§3.Let us first examine the economic costs involved in the provision of industrial capital.That process consists in making, or causing to be made, non-consumable goods, which are useful for assisting the future production of consumable goods, instead of making, or causing to be made, directly consumable goods.We need not discuss at length the shallow criticism pressed by some socialists to the effect that since labour makes all goods whether non-consumable or consumable, the only economic and human cost of providing these forms of capital is the productive energy of labour.For the decision and effort of mind or will, which determines that non-consumables shall be made instead of consumables, proceeds not from the labour employed in making them, but from the owners of income who decide to save instead of spending.This decision to save instead of spending is the economic force which causes so much of the productive power of labour to occupy itself in making non-consumables.It is of the first importance that the ordinary business man, to whom 'saving' is apt to mean putting money in a bank, or buying shares, shall realise the concrete significance of his action.

What he is really doing is causing to be made and to be maintained some addition to the existing fabric of material instruments for furthering the future production of commodities.This is not, as it may at first appear, a single act of choice, the determination to use a portion of one's income, say £100, in paying men to make steel rails or to put up a factory chimney, instead of paying them to make clothes, furniture, or wine for one's current consumption.The effort of postponement, or the preference of uncertain future for certain present consumables, necessary for supplying capital, if it is an effort, is a continuous one lasting all the time the capital is in use.The critic who asks, why a single 'act of abstinence'

which is past and done with should be rewarded by a perpetual payment of annual interest, fails to realise that, so far as saving involves a serviceable action of the saver, it goes on all the time that the saver lies out of the full present enjoyment of his property, i.e., as long as his savings continue to function as productive instruments.

This view, of course, by no means begs the question whether there is of necessity and always some human cost or sacrifice involved in such a process of saving.It is, indeed, clear that a good deal of capital may be supplied without any human costs either in postponement of current satisfaction or in risk-taking.The squirrel stores nuts by an organic instinct of economy against the winter, as the bear stores fat.The thrifty housewife lays up provisions by a calculation hardly less instinctive against the probable requirements of the family in the near future.The balancing of future against present satisfaction, involved in such processes, cannot be considered as involving any human cost, but rather some slight balance of utility.

I am certainly in no sense the loser in that I do not lay out all my income the same day that i receive it in purchasing immediate satisfaction.Why I am not the loser is evident.The first 5 per cent of my income I can perhaps spend advantageously at once upon necessaries and comforts which contribute immediately to my welfare.But if I know the sum has got to last me for six months, it will evidently pay me in organic welfare to spread nearly all the rest in a series of expenditures over the whole period, so that I may have these necessaries and comforts all the time.If my income is no more than just sufficient to keep me in full health, i.e., in providing vital 'necessaries', organic welfare demands a quite even expenditure, entailing the proper quantity of postponement.If there is anything over for expenditure on unnecessaries, this will not be quite evenly spread over the six months.For any comforts it affords appear to bring more pleasure if enjoyed now than in three or six months' time.1 And, besides, there is the question of uncertainty of life, upon the one hand, and the risk of being unable to get bold of the future comforts when I may want them.

This depreciation of future as compared with present satisfaction and these risks will properly induce me to grade downwards the expenditure on comforts during the period in question.But in this laying out of my income, so as to secure for myself the maximum of satisfaction and utility,2 there is no human cost or sacrifice.On the contrary, any failure to 'save' or 'postpone' might be attended by a heavy cost.Many a savage has died of starvation because he has gorged to repletion instead of storing food to tide him over till he gets possession of a new supply.Thus this simplest economy of saving, the spreading of consumption over a period of time, is evidently costless.

§4.Now, though the saving which consists in keeping stores of consumables for future consumption does not furnish what would be called capital, and so does not come directly within the scope of our particular enquiry into 'costs of capital,' it gives a useful test for the economy of saving under modern capitalism.The modern saver does not, indeed, usually keep in his possession for future consumption a store of consumable goods.

It would be inconvenient to store them, many of them are by nature perishable and so incapable of storage.Besides, modern industry affords him a way of making industrial society store them for him, or, more strictly, makes it produce a constant supply of fresh consumables to which he can get access.

Nay, it provides still better for his needs, for it enables him, by postponing some present consumption to which he is entitled, not merely to take out of the constant social supply the full equivalent of his postponed consumption at any time he chooses, but to receive an additional small regular claim upon other consumptive or productive goods, called interest.

同类推荐
  • 情变

    情变

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 代宗朝赠司空大辩正广智三藏和上表制集

    代宗朝赠司空大辩正广智三藏和上表制集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 归潜志

    归潜志

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 钦定满洲源流考

    钦定满洲源流考

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 北齐书

    北齐书

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 魔尊盛宠魔妃倾天下

    魔尊盛宠魔妃倾天下

    她是人见人喊打的云家丑女,一双异眸人见人怕,天生废材不可修炼,谁见了都想踩一脚。他,魔界尊主,同时也是大陆学院最受人敬仰的院长,有着人神共愤的颜值,清贵绝尘的气质,修为深不可测,传说是整个大陆最无情冷漠的男人。看着眼前的男人,魔千姚挑眉“听说你是整个大陆最不能靠近的男人?”某尊主抬手摸了摸她的头,满眼宠溺的道“乖,先看书。”
  • 金牌当家菜

    金牌当家菜

    本书中收录了我们日常生活中经常食用的家常菜的制作方法及菜谱。家常菜是指百姓人家日常制作和食用的菜肴,是选用普通的原料、根据家人的品味爱好制成的,不仅味美可口,而且有浓郁的乡土情愫,让人深深地喜爱和留恋,犹如乡音、母语一般深入骨髓和灵魂。中国烹饪大师史正良先生通过潜心总结研究、反复实践、制作、编写出这一套全新的家常菜谱,其中的菜肴用料普通、制法简便、调味适口,并且营养合理、易学易变,对于提高百姓的生活质量和培养美食情趣有极大好处。
  • 谁在操纵你

    谁在操纵你

    本书通过具体阐述如何通过操纵自我、操纵对手、操纵爱情和生活等,一步步掌握操纵人心的奥秘,使你无论是在商场、职场,还是情场中都所向无敌。
  • 蓬莱山西灶还丹歌

    蓬莱山西灶还丹歌

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 郁达夫大全集(超值金版)

    郁达夫大全集(超值金版)

    郁达夫的作品风格在新文化运动中是独树一帜的。他作品中的“伤感”与“颓废”迅速打动了那些刚从封建礼教的桎梏下脱离出来,却又陷入彷徨的青年的心,“沉沦”几乎成了战乱时代青年苦闷忧郁的代名词。本书不仅收录了郁达夫以往最具代表性的作品:小说《沉沦》《春风沉醉的晚上》《迟桂花》,散文《故都的秋》《一个人在途中》,脍炙人口的古体诗,表露心迹的日记等,还还收录了一些郁达夫与亲人、爱人及友人来往的重要书信。另外,在分类上,编者没有根据以往广义的散文概念进行分类,而是把游记和自传单独编排,以求用更清晰的视角让读者领略郁达夫散文的魅力。
  • 明伦汇编皇极典僭号部

    明伦汇编皇极典僭号部

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 进程毁灭者

    进程毁灭者

    一切都在进程之中毁灭,没有人能够抵达毁灭的终点。
  • 金口才成就一生

    金口才成就一生

    自古至今,语言充满着独特的魅力和无穷的力量,它如一朵盛开的奇葩傲立在人类历史的长河中,经久不衰,永不凋零。在古战场上,口才好的人能够平息两国之间的纷争,化干戈为玉帛。充分印证了“一人之辩,重于九鼎之宝;三寸之舌,强于百万之师”这句话。其实,语言的作用远远不只于此,正如汉代刘向在《说苑·善说》中所写:“昔子产修其辞而赵武致其敬,王孙满明其言而楚庄以渐,苏秦行其说而六国以安,蒯通陈其说而身得以全。夫辞者,乃所以尊君、全身、安国、全性者也。”
  • 魔界之神的婚宴

    魔界之神的婚宴

    爱情就像看见鬼魂一样,相信的人多,看见的人少。但是我的确看见了,而且是两者都看见了。如果你也见过灵魂的话,那么你一定相信作者说的话,每一名人物都是活生生的真实人物,需要亲爱的读者们耐心的阅读。在这个人魔混杂的世界里,能成为神魔两界通吃的人物,非沙利文莫属了。在男修道院长大,被修道院的牧师侵害,成为魔界的大总管。千面美男,谁也想象不到他的人皮面具后长着的是怎样一张脸。直到遇到温纳哦,他的人生彻底改变。帮助神族找到圣婴,协助神魔两界的朋友,完成任务。同时收获了至高无上的真谛。在天神的婚宴,来临之前,三大祭师长的复生,魔界的强烈进攻。新拣选的圣女玛利亚,以及神国的王子琥珀川,能否在前辈杰瑞和美女华生的协助下,平安成长?天魔两界何时恢复平静安详,请拭目以待吧!
  • 阿修罗之剑道多途

    阿修罗之剑道多途

    我是谁?我是行走在黑暗中的阿修罗!早已闭上双眼的我,已不再知何为光明!我只知道,在无尽的黑暗中,每当我抬起头来,唯一能看见的,就是夜空上闪烁着的一点星光!小星星,你是我眼中唯一的光明!为你,我愿化身阿修罗!