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Factors of production

In economics, factors of production, resources, or inputs are what is used in the production process to produce output—that is, goods and services. The utilized amounts of the various inputs determine the quantity of output according to the relationship called the production function. There are four basic resources or factors of production: land, labour, capital and entrepreneur (or enterprise).[1] The factors are also frequently labeled "producer goods or services" to distinguish them from the goods or services purchased by consumers, which are frequently labeled "consumer goods".[2]

There are two types of factors: primary and secondary. The previously mentioned primary factors are land, labour and capital. Materials and energy are considered secondary factors in classical economics because they are obtained from land, labour, and capital. The primary factors facilitate production but neither becomes part of the product (as with raw materials) nor becomes significantly transformed by the production process (as with fuel used to power machinery). Land includes not only the site of production but also natural resources above or below the soil. Recent usage has distinguished human capital (the stock of knowledge in the labor force) from labour.[3] Entrepreneurship is also sometimes considered a factor of production.[4] Sometimes the overall state of technology is described as a factor of production.[5] The number and definition of factors vary, depending on theoretical purpose, empirical emphasis, or school of economics.[6]

Historical schools and factors edit

In the interpretation of the currently dominant view of classical economic theory developed by neoclassical economists, the term "factors" did not exist until after the classical period and is not to be found in any of the literature of that time.[7]

Differences are most stark when it comes to deciding which factor is the most important.

Physiocracy edit

Physiocracy (from the Greek for "government of nature") is an economic theory developed by a group of 18th century Enlightenment French economists who believed that the wealth of nations was derived solely from the value of "land agriculture" or "land development" and that agricultural products should be highly priced.

Classical edit

 
An advertisement for labor from Sabah and Sarawak seen in Jalan Petaling, Kuala Lumpur

The classical economics of Adam Smith, David Ricardo, and their followers focus on physical resources in defining its factors of production and discuss the distribution of cost and value among these factors. Adam Smith and David Ricardo referred to the "component parts of price"[8] as the costs of using:

  • Land or natural resource — naturally occurring goods like water, air, soil, minerals, flora, fauna and climate that are used in the creation of products. The payment given to a landowner is rent, loyalties, commission and goodwill.
  • Labor — human effort used in production which also includes technical and marketing expertise. The payment for someone else's labor and all income received from one's own labor is wages. Labor can also be classified as the physical and mental contribution of an employee to the production of the good(s).
  • Capital stock — human-made goods which are used in the production of other goods. These include machinery, tools, and buildings. They are of two types, fixed and working. Fixed are one time investments like machines, tools and working consists of liquid cash or money in hand and raw material.

The classical economists also employed the word "capital" in reference to money. Money, however, was not considered to be a factor of production in the sense of capital stock since it is not used to directly produce any good.[9] The return to loaned money or to loaned stock was styled as interest while the return to the actual proprietor of capital stock (tools, etc.) was styled as profit. See also returns.

Marxism edit

Marx considered the "elementary factors of the labor-process" or "productive forces" to be:

  • Labor
  • Subject of labor (objects transformed by labor)
  • Instruments of labor (or means of labor).[10]

The "subject of labor" refers to natural resources and raw materials, including land. The "instruments of labor" are tools, in the broadest sense. They include factory buildings, infrastructure, and other human-made objects that facilitate labor's production of goods and services.

This view seems similar to the classical perspective described above. But unlike the classical school and many economists today, Marx made a clear distinction between labor actually done and an individual's "labor power" or ability to work. Labor done is often referred to nowadays as "effort" or "labor services." Labor-power might be seen as a stock which can produce a flow of labor.

Labor, not labor power, is the key factor of production for Marx and the basis for Marx's labor theory of value. The hiring of labor power only results in the production of goods or services ("use-values") when organized and regulated (often by the "management"). How much labor is actually done depends on the importance of conflict or tensions within the labor process.

Neoclassical economics edit

Neoclassical economics, one of the branches of mainstream economics, started with the classical factors of production of land, labor, and capital. However, it developed an alternative theory of value and distribution. Many of its practitioners have added various further factors of production (see below).

Further distinctions from classical and neoclassical microeconomics include the following:

  • Capital — this has many meanings, including the financial capital raised to operate and expand a business. In much of economics, however, "capital" (without any qualification) means goods that can help produce other goods in the future, the result of investment. It refers to machines, roads, factories, schools, infrastructure, and office buildings which humans have produced to create goods and services.
  • Fixed capital — this includes machinery, factories, equipment, new technology, buildings, computers, and other goods that are designed to increase the productive potential of the economy for future years. Nowadays, many consider computer software to be a form of fixed capital and it is counted as such in the National Income and Product Accounts of the United States and other countries. This type of capital does not change due to the production of the good.
  • Working capital — this includes the stocks of finished and semi-finished goods that will be economically consumed in the near future or will be made into a finished consumer good in the near future. These are often called inventory. The phrase "working capital" has also been used to refer to liquid assets (money) needed for immediate expenses linked to the production process (to pay salaries, invoices, taxes, interests...) Either way, the amount or nature of this type of capital usually changes during the production process.
  • Financial capital — this is simply the amount of money the initiator of the business has invested in it. "Financial capital" often refers to his or her net worth tied up in the business (assets minus liabilities) but the phrase often includes money borrowed from others.
  • Technological progress — For over a century, economists have known that capital and labor do not account for all economic growth. To include the technological progress into the theory, it was proposed to introduce capital service and labour service as production factors in line with capital and labour. This is reflected in total factor productivity and the Solow residual used in economic models called production functions that account for the contributions of capital and labor, yet have some unexplained contributor which is commonly called technological progress. Russian economist Vladimir Pokrovskii proposed to consider capital service as one of independent production factors in line with labour and capital.[11] Capital service as production factor was interpreted by Ayres and Warr [12] as useful work of production equipment, which makes it possible to reproduce historical rates of economic growth with considerable precision [11][13][12][14] and without recourse to exogenous and unexplained technological progress, thereby overcoming the major flaw of the Solow Theory of economic growth.

Ecological economics edit

Ecological economics is an alternative to neoclassical economics. It integrates, among other things, the first and second laws of thermodynamics (see: Laws of thermodynamics) to formulate more realistic economic systems that adhere to fundamental physical limitations. In addition to the neoclassical focus on efficient allocation, ecological economics emphasizes sustainability of scale and just distribution. Ecological economics also differ from neoclassical theories in its definitions of factors of production, replacing them with the following:[15][16]

  • Matter — the material from which products are produced. Matter can be recycled or reused through refining or reforming, but it cannot be created or destroyed, placing an upper limit on the amount of material that can be withdrawn and used. Consequently, the total amount of available matter is fixed, and once all the available matter is used, nothing more can be produced without recycling or reusing matter from prior products.
  • Energy — the physical but non-material inputs of production. We can place different forms of energy on a scale of utility depending on how useful it is for creating a product. Due to the law of entropy, energy tends to decrease in utility over time. (e.g. electricity, a very useful form of energy, is used to run a machine that builds a stuffed bear. In the process, however, electricity is converted to heat, a less useful form of energy). Like matter, energy can neither be created nor destroyed and thus there is also an upper limit to the total amount usable energy.
  • Design intelligence — a factor that incorporates the knowledge, creativity, and efficiency of how goods are created - the better the design, the more efficient and beneficial the creation is. Designs are usually improvements on their predecessors since our store of accumulated knowledge grows with time. One possible neoclassical analogue of design intelligence is technological progress.

Integral to ecological economics is the following notion: at the maximum rates of sustainable matter and energy uptake, the only way to increase productivity would be through an increase in design intelligence. This provides the basis for a core tenet of ecological economics, namely that infinite growth is impossible.[15]

The fourth factor edit

In the first half of the 20th century, some authors added the work of organization or entrepreneurship as a fourth factor of production.[17] This became standard in the post-war Neoclassical synthesis. For example, J. B. Clark saw the co-ordinating function in production and distribution as being served by entrepreneurs; Frank Knight introduced managers who co-ordinate using their own money (financial capital) and the financial capital of others. In contrast, many economists today consider "human capital" (skills and education) as the fourth factor of production, with entrepreneurship as a form of human capital. Yet others refer to intellectual capital. More recently, many have begun to see "social capital" as a factor, as contributing to production of goods and services.

Entrepreneurship edit

In markets, entrepreneurs combine the other factors of production, land, labor, and capital, to make a profit. Often these entrepreneurs are seen as innovators, developing new ways to produce new products. In a planned economy, central planners decide how land, labor, and capital should be used to provide for maximum benefit for all citizens. Just as with market entrepreneurs, the benefits may mostly accrue to the entrepreneurs themselves.

The sociologist C. Wright Mills refers to "new entrepreneurs" who work within and between corporate and government bureaucracies in new and different ways.[18] Others (such as those practicing public choice theory) refer to "political entrepreneurs", i.e., politicians and other actors.

Much controversy rages about the benefits produced by entrepreneurship. But the real issue is about how well institutions they operate in (markets, planning, bureaucracies, government) serve the public. This concerns such issues as the relative importance of market failure and government failure.

In the book Accounting of Ideas, "intequity", a neologism, is abstracted from equity to add a newly researched production factor of the capitalist system. Equity, which is regarded as part of capital, was divided into equity and intequity. Intequity means capital of ideas. [19] Entrepreneurship was divided into network-related matters and creating-related matters. Network-related matters function in the sphere of equity, and creating-related matters in spheres of intequities.[20]

Natural resources edit

Ayres and Warr (2010) are among the economists who criticize orthodox economics for overlooking the role of natural resources and the effects of declining resource capital.[12] See also: Natural resource economics

Energy edit

Exercise can be seen as individual factor of production, with an elastication larger than labor.[21] A cointegration analysis support results derived from linear exponential (LINEX) production functions.[22]

Cultural heritage edit

C. H. Douglas disagreed with classical economists who recognized only three factors of production. While Douglas did not deny the role of these factors in production, he considered the “Cultural heritage” as the primary factor. He defined cultural inheritance as the knowledge, techniques, and processes that have accrued to us incrementally from the origins of civilization (i.e., progress). Consequently, mankind does not have to keep "reinventing the wheel". "We are merely the administrators of that cultural inheritance, and to that extent, the cultural inheritance is the property of all of us, without exception.[23] Adam Smith, David Ricardo, and Karl Marx claimed that labor creates all value. While Douglas did not deny that all costs ultimately relate to labour charges of some sort (past or present), he denied that the present labour of the world creates all wealth. Douglas carefully distinguished between value, costs and prices. He claimed that one of the factors resulting in a misdirection of thought in terms of the nature and function of money was economists' near-obsession about values and their relation to prices and incomes.[24] While Douglas recognized "value in use" as a legitimate theory of values, he also considered values as subjective and not capable of being measured in an objective manner.

Peter Kropotkin argued for the common ownership of all intellectual and useful property due to the collective work that went into creating it. Kropotkin does not argue that the product of a worker's labor should belong to the worker. Instead, Kropotkin asserts that every individual product is essentially the work of everyone since every individual relies on the intellectual and physical labor of those who came before them as well as those who built the world around them. Because of this, Kropotkin proclaims that every human deserves an essential right to well-being because every human contributes to the collective social product:[25] Kropotkin goes on to say that the central obstacle preventing humanity from claiming this right is the state's violent protection of private property. Kropotkin compares this relationship to feudalism, saying that even if the forms have changed, the essential relationship between the propertied and the landless is the same as the relationship between a feudal lord and their serfs.[25]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Addressing Labour Market Segmentation: the Role of Labour Law" (PDF). University of Cambridge. Retrieved 4 April 2023.
  2. ^ "Factors Of Production – Finance Reference". 18 February 2021. Retrieved 2021-08-01.
  3. ^ Paul A. Samuelson and William D. Nordhaus (2004). Economics, 18th ed., "Factors of production", "Capital", Human capital", and "Land" under Glossary of Terms.
  4. ^ O'Sullivan, Arthur; Sheffrin, Steven M. (2003). Economics: Principles in Action. Upper Saddle River, New Jersey: Pearson Prentice Hall. p. 4. ISBN 978-0-13-063085-8.
  5. ^ Michael Parkin; Gerardo Esquivel (1999). Macroeconomía (in Spanish) (5th ed.). Mexico: Addison Wesley. p. 160. ISBN 968-444-441-9.
  6. ^ Milton Friedman (2007). Price Theory. Transaction Publishers. p. 201. ISBN 978-0-202-30969-9.
  7. ^ Classical price theory follows "costs of reproduction" and does not allow for "factor" gains. The great questions of Rent, Wages, and Profits must be explained by the proportions in which the whole produce is divided between landlords, capitalists, and laborers, and which are not essentially connected with the doctrine of value. (Ricardo Johnson, David, 1820; 1951, "The Works and Correspondence of David Ricardo", edited by Piero Sraffa, 10 Volumes, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 1951–1955, VIII, p. 197.
  8. ^ Adam Smith (1776), The Wealth of Nations, B.I, Ch. 6, Of the Component Parts of the Price of Commodities in paragraph I.6.9.
  9. ^ Benchimol, J., 2015, Money in the production function: a new Keynesian DSGE perspective, Southern Economic Journal, Volume 82, Issue 1, pp. 152-184.
  10. ^ "Das Kapital", chapter 7, section 1.
  11. ^ a b Pokrovski, V.N. (2003). Energy in the theory of production. Energy 28, 769-788.
  12. ^ a b c Robert U. Ayres; Benjamin Warr (2009). The Economic Growth Engine: How Energy and Work Drive Material Prosperity. Edward Elgar Publishing. ISBN 978-1-84844-182-8.
  13. ^ Pokrovski, V.N. (2007) Productive energy in the US economy, Energy 32 (5) 816-822.
  14. ^ Pokrovskii, Vladimir (2021). "Social resources in the theory of economic growth". The Complex Systems (3): 32–43.
  15. ^ a b Eric Zencey (2012). The Other Road to Serfdom & the Path to Sustainable Democracy. U of New England. ISBN 978-1-58465-961-7.
  16. ^ Herman Daly; Joshua Farley (2011). Ecological Economics: Principles and Applications. Washington: Island. ISBN 978-1-59726-681-9.
  17. ^ "Agents of production". Encyclopaedia Britannica. Vol. 1 (14 ed.). 1930. p. 346.
  18. ^ "White Collar: The American Middle Classes," 1956. Oxford: Galaxy Books, pp. 94–100.
  19. ^ "What does intequity mean?".
  20. ^ Pienaar, M.D. (2014). Intequisms: Accounting of ideas, chap. 6. Centurion: Africahead, 2nd edition, Kindle eBook, Amazon.com.
  21. ^ R. Kümmel: The Productive Power of Energy and its Taxation 2017-08-10 at the Wayback Machine, 4th European Congress Economy and Managers of Energy in Industry, Porto, Portugal, 27.-30. Nov. 2007.
  22. ^ R. Stresing; D. Lindenberger; R. Kümmel (2008). "Cointegration of Output, Capital, Labor, and Energy" (PDF). European Physical Journal B. 66 (2): 279–287. Bibcode:2008EPJB...66..279S. doi:10.1140/epjb/e2008-00412-6. hdl:10419/26747. S2CID 38106343. (PDF) from the original on 2011-10-03.
  23. ^ Douglas, C.H. (22 January 1934). "The Monopolistic Idea" address at Melbourne Town Hall, Australia. The Australian League of Rights: Melbourne. Retrieved 28 February 2008.
  24. ^ Douglas, C.H. (1973). (PDF). New York: Gordon Press. p. 60. ISBN 0-9501126-1-5. Archived from the original (PDF) on 9 February 2010.
  25. ^ a b Kropotkin, Petr Alekseevich (2015). The Conquest of Bread. Priestland, David (This edition, using the 1913 text, first published in Penguin Classics in 2015 ed.). London: Penguin Classics. ISBN 9780141396118. OCLC 913790063.

Further reading edit

  • AP U.S. History (condensed). 2007.
  • (in German). Google Knol. Archived from the original on 2010-01-23. Retrieved 2010-02-16.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Factors of production at Wikimedia Commons

factors, production, economics, factors, production, resources, inputs, what, used, production, process, produce, output, that, goods, services, utilized, amounts, various, inputs, determine, quantity, output, according, relationship, called, production, funct. In economics factors of production resources or inputs are what is used in the production process to produce output that is goods and services The utilized amounts of the various inputs determine the quantity of output according to the relationship called the production function There are four basic resources or factors of production land labour capital and entrepreneur or enterprise 1 The factors are also frequently labeled producer goods or services to distinguish them from the goods or services purchased by consumers which are frequently labeled consumer goods 2 There are two types of factors primary and secondary The previously mentioned primary factors are land labour and capital Materials and energy are considered secondary factors in classical economics because they are obtained from land labour and capital The primary factors facilitate production but neither becomes part of the product as with raw materials nor becomes significantly transformed by the production process as with fuel used to power machinery Land includes not only the site of production but also natural resources above or below the soil Recent usage has distinguished human capital the stock of knowledge in the labor force from labour 3 Entrepreneurship is also sometimes considered a factor of production 4 Sometimes the overall state of technology is described as a factor of production 5 The number and definition of factors vary depending on theoretical purpose empirical emphasis or school of economics 6 Contents 1 Historical schools and factors 1 1 Physiocracy 1 2 Classical 1 3 Marxism 1 4 Neoclassical economics 1 5 Ecological economics 2 The fourth factor 2 1 Entrepreneurship 2 2 Natural resources 2 3 Energy 2 4 Cultural heritage 3 See also 4 References 5 Further reading 6 External linksHistorical schools and factors editIn the interpretation of the currently dominant view of classical economic theory developed by neoclassical economists the term factors did not exist until after the classical period and is not to be found in any of the literature of that time 7 Differences are most stark when it comes to deciding which factor is the most important Physiocracy edit Physiocracy from the Greek for government of nature is an economic theory developed by a group of 18th century Enlightenment French economists who believed that the wealth of nations was derived solely from the value of land agriculture or land development and that agricultural products should be highly priced Classical edit nbsp An advertisement for labor from Sabah and Sarawak seen in Jalan Petaling Kuala LumpurThe classical economics of Adam Smith David Ricardo and their followers focus on physical resources in defining its factors of production and discuss the distribution of cost and value among these factors Adam Smith and David Ricardo referred to the component parts of price 8 as the costs of using Land or natural resource naturally occurring goods like water air soil minerals flora fauna and climate that are used in the creation of products The payment given to a landowner is rent loyalties commission and goodwill Labor human effort used in production which also includes technical and marketing expertise The payment for someone else s labor and all income received from one s own labor is wages Labor can also be classified as the physical and mental contribution of an employee to the production of the good s Capital stock human made goods which are used in the production of other goods These include machinery tools and buildings They are of two types fixed and working Fixed are one time investments like machines tools and working consists of liquid cash or money in hand and raw material The classical economists also employed the word capital in reference to money Money however was not considered to be a factor of production in the sense of capital stock since it is not used to directly produce any good 9 The return to loaned money or to loaned stock was styled as interest while the return to the actual proprietor of capital stock tools etc was styled as profit See also returns Marxism edit Marx considered the elementary factors of the labor process or productive forces to be Labor Subject of labor objects transformed by labor Instruments of labor or means of labor 10 The subject of labor refers to natural resources and raw materials including land The instruments of labor are tools in the broadest sense They include factory buildings infrastructure and other human made objects that facilitate labor s production of goods and services This view seems similar to the classical perspective described above But unlike the classical school and many economists today Marx made a clear distinction between labor actually done and an individual s labor power or ability to work Labor done is often referred to nowadays as effort or labor services Labor power might be seen as a stock which can produce a flow of labor Labor not labor power is the key factor of production for Marx and the basis for Marx s labor theory of value The hiring of labor power only results in the production of goods or services use values when organized and regulated often by the management How much labor is actually done depends on the importance of conflict or tensions within the labor process Neoclassical economics edit Neoclassical economics one of the branches of mainstream economics started with the classical factors of production of land labor and capital However it developed an alternative theory of value and distribution Many of its practitioners have added various further factors of production see below Further distinctions from classical and neoclassical microeconomics include the following Capital this has many meanings including the financial capital raised to operate and expand a business In much of economics however capital without any qualification means goods that can help produce other goods in the future the result of investment It refers to machines roads factories schools infrastructure and office buildings which humans have produced to create goods and services Fixed capital this includes machinery factories equipment new technology buildings computers and other goods that are designed to increase the productive potential of the economy for future years Nowadays many consider computer software to be a form of fixed capital and it is counted as such in the National Income and Product Accounts of the United States and other countries This type of capital does not change due to the production of the good Working capital this includes the stocks of finished and semi finished goods that will be economically consumed in the near future or will be made into a finished consumer good in the near future These are often called inventory The phrase working capital has also been used to refer to liquid assets money needed for immediate expenses linked to the production process to pay salaries invoices taxes interests Either way the amount or nature of this type of capital usually changes during the production process Financial capital this is simply the amount of money the initiator of the business has invested in it Financial capital often refers to his or her net worth tied up in the business assets minus liabilities but the phrase often includes money borrowed from others Technological progress For over a century economists have known that capital and labor do not account for all economic growth To include the technological progress into the theory it was proposed to introduce capital service and labour service as production factors in line with capital and labour This is reflected in total factor productivity and the Solow residual used in economic models called production functions that account for the contributions of capital and labor yet have some unexplained contributor which is commonly called technological progress Russian economist Vladimir Pokrovskii proposed to consider capital service as one of independent production factors in line with labour and capital 11 Capital service as production factor was interpreted by Ayres and Warr 12 as useful work of production equipment which makes it possible to reproduce historical rates of economic growth with considerable precision 11 13 12 14 and without recourse to exogenous and unexplained technological progress thereby overcoming the major flaw of the Solow Theory of economic growth Ecological economics edit Ecological economics is an alternative to neoclassical economics It integrates among other things the first and second laws of thermodynamics see Laws of thermodynamics to formulate more realistic economic systems that adhere to fundamental physical limitations In addition to the neoclassical focus on efficient allocation ecological economics emphasizes sustainability of scale and just distribution Ecological economics also differ from neoclassical theories in its definitions of factors of production replacing them with the following 15 16 Matter the material from which products are produced Matter can be recycled or reused through refining or reforming but it cannot be created or destroyed placing an upper limit on the amount of material that can be withdrawn and used Consequently the total amount of available matter is fixed and once all the available matter is used nothing more can be produced without recycling or reusing matter from prior products Energy the physical but non material inputs of production We can place different forms of energy on a scale of utility depending on how useful it is for creating a product Due to the law of entropy energy tends to decrease in utility over time e g electricity a very useful form of energy is used to run a machine that builds a stuffed bear In the process however electricity is converted to heat a less useful form of energy Like matter energy can neither be created nor destroyed and thus there is also an upper limit to the total amount usable energy Design intelligence a factor that incorporates the knowledge creativity and efficiency of how goods are created the better the design the more efficient and beneficial the creation is Designs are usually improvements on their predecessors since our store of accumulated knowledge grows with time One possible neoclassical analogue of design intelligence is technological progress Integral to ecological economics is the following notion at the maximum rates of sustainable matter and energy uptake the only way to increase productivity would be through an increase in design intelligence This provides the basis for a core tenet of ecological economics namely that infinite growth is impossible 15 The fourth factor editIn the first half of the 20th century some authors added the work of organization or entrepreneurship as a fourth factor of production 17 This became standard in the post war Neoclassical synthesis For example J B Clark saw the co ordinating function in production and distribution as being served by entrepreneurs Frank Knight introduced managers who co ordinate using their own money financial capital and the financial capital of others In contrast many economists today consider human capital skills and education as the fourth factor of production with entrepreneurship as a form of human capital Yet others refer to intellectual capital More recently many have begun to see social capital as a factor as contributing to production of goods and services Entrepreneurship edit In markets entrepreneurs combine the other factors of production land labor and capital to make a profit Often these entrepreneurs are seen as innovators developing new ways to produce new products In a planned economy central planners decide how land labor and capital should be used to provide for maximum benefit for all citizens Just as with market entrepreneurs the benefits may mostly accrue to the entrepreneurs themselves The sociologist C Wright Mills refers to new entrepreneurs who work within and between corporate and government bureaucracies in new and different ways 18 Others such as those practicing public choice theory refer to political entrepreneurs i e politicians and other actors Much controversy rages about the benefits produced by entrepreneurship But the real issue is about how well institutions they operate in markets planning bureaucracies government serve the public This concerns such issues as the relative importance of market failure and government failure In the book Accounting of Ideas intequity a neologism is abstracted from equity to add a newly researched production factor of the capitalist system Equity which is regarded as part of capital was divided into equity and intequity Intequity means capital of ideas 19 Entrepreneurship was divided into network related matters and creating related matters Network related matters function in the sphere of equity and creating related matters in spheres of intequities 20 Natural resources edit Ayres and Warr 2010 are among the economists who criticize orthodox economics for overlooking the role of natural resources and the effects of declining resource capital 12 See also Natural resource economics Energy edit Exercise can be seen as individual factor of production with an elastication larger than labor 21 A cointegration analysis support results derived from linear exponential LINEX production functions 22 Cultural heritage edit C H Douglas disagreed with classical economists who recognized only three factors of production While Douglas did not deny the role of these factors in production he considered the Cultural heritage as the primary factor He defined cultural inheritance as the knowledge techniques and processes that have accrued to us incrementally from the origins of civilization i e progress Consequently mankind does not have to keep reinventing the wheel We are merely the administrators of that cultural inheritance and to that extent the cultural inheritance is the property of all of us without exception 23 Adam Smith David Ricardo and Karl Marx claimed that labor creates all value While Douglas did not deny that all costs ultimately relate to labour charges of some sort past or present he denied that the present labour of the world creates all wealth Douglas carefully distinguished between value costs and prices He claimed that one of the factors resulting in a misdirection of thought in terms of the nature and function of money was economists near obsession about values and their relation to prices and incomes 24 While Douglas recognized value in use as a legitimate theory of values he also considered values as subjective and not capable of being measured in an objective manner Peter Kropotkin argued for the common ownership of all intellectual and useful property due to the collective work that went into creating it Kropotkin does not argue that the product of a worker s labor should belong to the worker Instead Kropotkin asserts that every individual product is essentially the work of everyone since every individual relies on the intellectual and physical labor of those who came before them as well as those who built the world around them Because of this Kropotkin proclaims that every human deserves an essential right to well being because every human contributes to the collective social product 25 Kropotkin goes on to say that the central obstacle preventing humanity from claiming this right is the state s violent protection of private property Kropotkin compares this relationship to feudalism saying that even if the forms have changed the essential relationship between the propertied and the landless is the same as the relationship between a feudal lord and their serfs 25 See also edit nbsp Business and economics portalConditional factor demands Cost of production theory of value Diminishing returns Economic inequality Economics terminology that differs from common usage Factor market Factor world Labor demand Labor theory of value Labour economics Marginal factor cost Means of production Microeconomics Pareto principle Production relations Production theory basics Productivity model Productivity world Resource Based View Social metabolismReferences edit Addressing Labour Market Segmentation the Role of Labour Law PDF University of Cambridge Retrieved 4 April 2023 Factors Of Production Finance Reference 18 February 2021 Retrieved 2021 08 01 Paul A Samuelson and William D Nordhaus 2004 Economics 18th ed Factors of production Capital Human capital and Land under Glossary of Terms O Sullivan Arthur Sheffrin Steven M 2003 Economics Principles in Action Upper Saddle River New Jersey Pearson Prentice Hall p 4 ISBN 978 0 13 063085 8 Michael Parkin Gerardo Esquivel 1999 Macroeconomia in Spanish 5th ed Mexico Addison Wesley p 160 ISBN 968 444 441 9 Milton Friedman 2007 Price Theory Transaction Publishers p 201 ISBN 978 0 202 30969 9 Classical price theory follows costs of reproduction and does not allow for factor gains The great questions of Rent Wages and Profits must be explained by the proportions in which the whole produce is divided between landlords capitalists and laborers and which are not essentially connected with the doctrine of value Ricardo Johnson David 1820 1951 The Works and Correspondence of David Ricardo edited by Piero Sraffa 10 Volumes Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1951 1955 VIII p 197 Adam Smith 1776 The Wealth of Nations B I Ch 6 Of the Component Parts of the Price of Commodities in paragraph I 6 9 Benchimol J 2015 Money in the production function a new Keynesian DSGE perspective Southern Economic Journal Volume 82 Issue 1 pp 152 184 Das Kapital chapter 7 section 1 a b Pokrovski V N 2003 Energy in the theory of production Energy 28 769 788 a b c Robert U Ayres Benjamin Warr 2009 The Economic Growth Engine How Energy and Work Drive Material Prosperity Edward Elgar Publishing ISBN 978 1 84844 182 8 Pokrovski V N 2007 Productive energy in the US economy Energy 32 5 816 822 Pokrovskii Vladimir 2021 Social resources in the theory of economic growth The Complex Systems 3 32 43 a b Eric Zencey 2012 The Other Road to Serfdom amp the Path to Sustainable Democracy U of New England ISBN 978 1 58465 961 7 Herman Daly Joshua Farley 2011 Ecological Economics Principles and Applications Washington Island ISBN 978 1 59726 681 9 Agents of production Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 1 14 ed 1930 p 346 White Collar The American Middle Classes 1956 Oxford Galaxy Books pp 94 100 What does intequity mean Pienaar M D 2014 Intequisms Accounting of ideas chap 6 Centurion Africahead 2nd edition Kindle eBook Amazon com R Kummel The Productive Power of Energy and its Taxation Archived 2017 08 10 at the Wayback Machine 4th European Congress Economy and Managers of Energy in Industry Porto Portugal 27 30 Nov 2007 R Stresing D Lindenberger R Kummel 2008 Cointegration of Output Capital Labor and Energy PDF European Physical Journal B 66 2 279 287 Bibcode 2008EPJB 66 279S doi 10 1140 epjb e2008 00412 6 hdl 10419 26747 S2CID 38106343 Archived PDF from the original on 2011 10 03 Douglas C H 22 January 1934 The Monopolistic Idea address at Melbourne Town Hall Australia The Australian League of Rights Melbourne Retrieved 28 February 2008 Douglas C H 1973 Social Credit PDF New York Gordon Press p 60 ISBN 0 9501126 1 5 Archived from the original PDF on 9 February 2010 a b Kropotkin Petr Alekseevich 2015 The Conquest of Bread Priestland David This edition using the 1913 text first published in Penguin Classics in 2015 ed London Penguin Classics ISBN 9780141396118 OCLC 913790063 Further reading editAP U S History condensed 2007 Produktionsfaktoren in German Google Knol Archived from the original on 2010 01 23 Retrieved 2010 02 16 External links edit nbsp Media related to Factors of production at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Factors of production amp oldid 1176879020, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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