Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- BOOK V MONETARY FACTORS AND THEIR FLUCTUATIONS
- BOOK VI THE RATE OF INVESTMENT AND ITS FLUCTUATIONS
- 27 FLUCTUATIONS IN THE RATE OF INVESTMENT —I. FIXED CAPITAL
- 28 FLUCTUATIONS IN THE RATE OF INVESTMENT —II. WORKING CAPITAL
- 29 FLUCTUATIONS IN THE RATE OF INVESTMENT —III. LIQUID CAPITAL
- 30 HISTORICAL ILLUSTRATIONS
- BOOK VII THE MANAGEMENT OF MONEY
- Appendix 1 PRINTING ERRORS IN THE FIRST EDITION
- Appendix 2 COMPARATIVE INDEX TO FIRST EDITION AND NEW SETTING OF VOLUME 2
- Index
27 - FLUCTUATIONS IN THE RATE OF INVESTMENT —I. FIXED CAPITAL
from BOOK VI - THE RATE OF INVESTMENT AND ITS FLUCTUATIONS
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 November 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- BOOK V MONETARY FACTORS AND THEIR FLUCTUATIONS
- BOOK VI THE RATE OF INVESTMENT AND ITS FLUCTUATIONS
- 27 FLUCTUATIONS IN THE RATE OF INVESTMENT —I. FIXED CAPITAL
- 28 FLUCTUATIONS IN THE RATE OF INVESTMENT —II. WORKING CAPITAL
- 29 FLUCTUATIONS IN THE RATE OF INVESTMENT —III. LIQUID CAPITAL
- 30 HISTORICAL ILLUSTRATIONS
- BOOK VII THE MANAGEMENT OF MONEY
- Appendix 1 PRINTING ERRORS IN THE FIRST EDITION
- Appendix 2 COMPARATIVE INDEX TO FIRST EDITION AND NEW SETTING OF VOLUME 2
- Index
Summary
When there is a disequilibrium between savings and investment, this is much more often due to fluctuations in the rate of investment than to sudden changes in the rate of savings, which is, in normal circumstances, of a fairly steady character. To understand, therefore, the genesis and the severity of the disequilibria which we have analysed in volume I, it is chiefly necessary to consider what causes the rate of investment to fluctuate and to estimate the order of magnitude of such fluctuations. In this chapter and the two following, we shall treat in turn the causes and the degree of fluctuations of investment in fixed capital, working capital and liquid capital. These chapters are in the nature of a digression, which is doubtfully in place in a treatise on money but has to be included because the fluctuations in the rate of investment have not been treated, sufficiently for my purpose, elsewhere.
In the case of fixed capital it is easy to understand why fluctuations should occur in the rate of investment. Entrepreneurs are induced to embark on the production of fixed capital or deterred from doing so by their expectations of the profit to be made. Apart from the many minor reasons why these should fluctuate in a changing world, Professor Schumpeter's explanation of the major movements may be unreservedly accepted. He points to
the innovations made from time to time by the relatively small number of exceptionally energetic business men—their practical applications of scientific discoveries and mechanical inventions, their development of new forms of industrial and commercial organisation, their introduction of unfamiliar products, their conquests of new markets, exploitation of new resources, shifting of trade routes, and the like. Changes of this sort, when made on a large scale, alter the data on which the mass of routine business men have based their plans. But when a few highly endowed individuals have achieved success, their example makes the way easier for a crowd of imitators. So, once started, a wave of innovation gains momentum.
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- Chapter
- Information
- The Collected Writings of John Maynard Keynes , pp. 85 - 90Publisher: Royal Economic SocietyPrint publication year: 1978