Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- General Introduction
- Editorial Foreword
- Author's Preface
- Special Prefaces to German and Japanese editions
- BOOK I THE NATURE OF MONEY
- BOOK II THE VALUE OF MONEY
- BOOK III THE FUNDAMENTAL EQUATIONS
- 9 CERTAIN DEFINITIONS
- 10 THE FUNDAMENTAL EQUATIONS FOR THE VALUE OF MONEY
- 11 THE CONDITIONS OF EQUILIBRIUM
- 12 THE DISTINCTION BETWEEN SAVINGS AND INVESTMENT
- 13 THE ‘MODUS OPERANDI’ OF BANK RATE
- 14 ALTERNATIVE FORMS OF THE FUNDAMENTAL EQUATIONS
- BOOK IV THE DYNAMICS OF THE PRICE LEVEL
- Appendix 1 PRINTING ERRORS IN THE FIRST EDITION
- Appendix 2 DEFINITION OF THE UNITS EMPLOYED
- Appendix 3 COMPARATIVE INDEX TO FIRST EDITION AND NEW SETTING OF VOLUME I
9 - CERTAIN DEFINITIONS
from BOOK III - THE FUNDAMENTAL EQUATIONS
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 November 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- General Introduction
- Editorial Foreword
- Author's Preface
- Special Prefaces to German and Japanese editions
- BOOK I THE NATURE OF MONEY
- BOOK II THE VALUE OF MONEY
- BOOK III THE FUNDAMENTAL EQUATIONS
- 9 CERTAIN DEFINITIONS
- 10 THE FUNDAMENTAL EQUATIONS FOR THE VALUE OF MONEY
- 11 THE CONDITIONS OF EQUILIBRIUM
- 12 THE DISTINCTION BETWEEN SAVINGS AND INVESTMENT
- 13 THE ‘MODUS OPERANDI’ OF BANK RATE
- 14 ALTERNATIVE FORMS OF THE FUNDAMENTAL EQUATIONS
- BOOK IV THE DYNAMICS OF THE PRICE LEVEL
- Appendix 1 PRINTING ERRORS IN THE FIRST EDITION
- Appendix 2 DEFINITION OF THE UNITS EMPLOYED
- Appendix 3 COMPARATIVE INDEX TO FIRST EDITION AND NEW SETTING OF VOLUME I
Summary
Before we can formulate our fundamental equations, we must first make precise our use of certain terms.
INCOME, PROFITS, SAVINGS AND INVESTMENT
(1) Income. We propose to mean identically the same thing by the three expressions:
(1) the community's money income; (2)the earnings of the factors of production; and (3)the cost of production; and we reserve the term profits for the difference between the cost of production of the current output and its actual sale proceeds, so that profits are not part of the community's income as thus defined.
More particularly we include in income:
(a) Salaries and wages paid to employees, including any payments made to unemployed or partially employed or pensioned employees-these being in the long run a charge on industry just as much as other outgoings to remunerate the factors of production.
(b) The normal remuneration of entrepreneurs.
(c) Interest on capital (including interest from foreign investments).
(d) Regular monopoly gains, rents and the like.
The entrepreneurs being themselves amongst the factors of production, their normal remuneration—the definition of which for the present purpose will be given in (2) below—is included in income, and, therefore, in the costs of production, under heading (b). But we exclude their windfall profits or losses represented by the difference (positive or negative) between the earnings, thus defined, of the factors of production and the actual sale proceeds.
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- Information
- The Collected Writings of John Maynard Keynes , pp. 111 - 119Publisher: Royal Economic SocietyPrint publication year: 1978