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
- 4 The Choice of Units
- 5 Expectation as Determining Output and Employment
- 6 The Definition of Income, Saving and Investment
- 7 The Meaning of Saving and Investment Further Considered
- Book III The Propensity to Consume
- Book IV The Inducement to Invest
- 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
5 - Expectation as Determining Output and Employment
from Book II - Definitions and Ideas
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
- 4 The Choice of Units
- 5 Expectation as Determining Output and Employment
- 6 The Definition of Income, Saving and Investment
- 7 The Meaning of Saving and Investment Further Considered
- Book III The Propensity to Consume
- Book IV The Inducement to Invest
- 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
All production is for the purpose of ultimately satisfying a consumer. Time usually elapses, however—and sometimes much time—between the incurring of costs by the producer (with the consumer in view) and the purchase of the output by the ultimate consumer. Meanwhile the entrepreneur (including both the producer and the investor in this description) has to form the best expectations he can as to what the consumers will be prepared to pay when he is ready to supply them (directly or indirectly) after the elapse of what may be a lengthy period; and he has no choice but to be guided by these expectations, if he is to produce at all by processes which occupy time.
These expectations, upon which business decisions depend, fall into two groups, certain individuals or firms being specialised in the business of framing the first type of expectation and others in the business of framing the second. The first type is concerned with the price which a manufacturer can expect to get for his ‘finished’ output at the time when he commits himself to starting the process which will produce it; output being ‘finished’ (from the point of view of the manufacturer) when it is ready to be used or to be sold to a second party. The second type is concerned with what the entrepreneur can hope to earn in the shape of future returns if he purchases (or, perhaps, manufactures) ‘finished’ output as an addition to his capital equipment.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Collected Writings of John Maynard Keynes , pp. 46 - 51Publisher: Royal Economic SocietyPrint publication year: 1978