| |
| | capital4 |
 | | The word capital is opposed to that of profit or gain, though the profit often increases the capital, and becomes itself a part of it. |
 | | Specifically, the wealth employed in carrying on a particular trade, manufacture, business, or undertaking; stock in trade; the actual estate, whether in money or property, which is owned and employed by an individual, firm, or corporation in business.... |
 | | His capital is therefore identical with one of my senses of capital; namely, "capital-value."(42*) In a very excellent paper,(43*) which has recently appeared, Fetter emphasizes, with Clark, the fact that rent and interest apply equally to all goods, the one to the things themselves, the other to their value. |
| cupid.ecom.unimelb.edu.au /het/fisher/capital4 (5813 words) |
|