Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- General Introduction
- Editorial Introduction
- Preface
- Preface to the German Edition
- Preface to the Japanese Edition
- Preface to the French Edition
- Book I Introduction
- Book II Definitions and Ideas
- Book III The Propensity to Consume
- Book IV The Inducement to Invest
- 11 The Marginal Efficiency of Capital
- 12 The State of Long-term Expectation
- 13 The General Theory of the Rate of Interest
- 14 The Classical Theory of the Rate of Interest
- 15 The Psychological and Business Incentives to Liquidity
- 16 Sundry Observations on the Nature of Capital
- 17 The Essential Properties of Interest and Money
- 18 The General Theory of Employment Re-stated
- Book V Money-wages and Prices
- Book VI Short Notes Suggested by the General Theory
- Appendix 1 Printing Errors in the First Edition
- Appendix 2 Fluctuations in Net Investment in the United States (1936)
- Appendix 3 Relative Movements of Real Wages and Output (1939)
- Index
16 - Sundry Observations on the Nature of Capital
from Book IV - The Inducement to Invest
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 November 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- General Introduction
- Editorial Introduction
- Preface
- Preface to the German Edition
- Preface to the Japanese Edition
- Preface to the French Edition
- Book I Introduction
- Book II Definitions and Ideas
- Book III The Propensity to Consume
- Book IV The Inducement to Invest
- 11 The Marginal Efficiency of Capital
- 12 The State of Long-term Expectation
- 13 The General Theory of the Rate of Interest
- 14 The Classical Theory of the Rate of Interest
- 15 The Psychological and Business Incentives to Liquidity
- 16 Sundry Observations on the Nature of Capital
- 17 The Essential Properties of Interest and Money
- 18 The General Theory of Employment Re-stated
- Book V Money-wages and Prices
- Book VI Short Notes Suggested by the General Theory
- Appendix 1 Printing Errors in the First Edition
- Appendix 2 Fluctuations in Net Investment in the United States (1936)
- Appendix 3 Relative Movements of Real Wages and Output (1939)
- Index
Summary
An act of individual saving means—so to speak—a decision not to have dinner to-day. But it does not necessitate a decision to have dinner or to buy a pair of boots a week hence or a year hence or to consume any specified thing at any specified date. Thus it depresses the business of preparing to-day's dinner without stimulating the business of making ready for some future act of consumption. It is not a substitution of future consumption-demand for present consumption-demand,—it is a net diminution of such demand. Moreover, the expectation of future consumption is so largely based on current experience of present consumption that a reduction in the latter is likely to depress the former, with the result that the act of saving will not merely depress the price of consumption-goods and leave the marginal efficiency of existing capital unaffected, but may actually tend to depress the latter also. In this event it may reduce present investment-demand as well as present consumption-demand.
If saving consisted not merely in abstaining from present consumption but in placing simultaneously a specific order for future consumption, the effect might indeed be different. For in that case the expectation of some future yield from investment would be improved, and the resources released from preparing for present consumption could be turned over to preparing for the future consumption.
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- The Collected Writings of John Maynard Keynes , pp. 210 - 221Publisher: Royal Economic SocietyPrint publication year: 1978