softwareAddict
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- Mar 21, 2013
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So to all you awesome economic students out there,
The factors of production are
- Land
- Labour
- Capital
- Enterprise
The reward for each of these makes sense, except for capital, where the reward is interest.
So if a business invests in capital and takes out a loan and has to pay interest on that loan, how are they
being rewarded in interest? Isn't it the lender of the money who is getting this reward? Because in the other factors
like land, the business who owns say, a fishing area, will be rewarded in "rent" from whatever they get from the fishing area, so
by this logic, shouldn't the reward for capital be the production the capital creates?
Thanks!
The factors of production are
- Land
- Labour
- Capital
- Enterprise
The reward for each of these makes sense, except for capital, where the reward is interest.
So if a business invests in capital and takes out a loan and has to pay interest on that loan, how are they
being rewarded in interest? Isn't it the lender of the money who is getting this reward? Because in the other factors
like land, the business who owns say, a fishing area, will be rewarded in "rent" from whatever they get from the fishing area, so
by this logic, shouldn't the reward for capital be the production the capital creates?
Thanks!