Investment and the Valuation of Capital
THE ESSENTIAL ARGUMENT of this paper is that the new capital acquired by all the traders in a closed economy in a given period is given a putative or constructive turnover of once for the period by typical accounting procedure. It is possible to demonstrate the truth of this argument in a very convincing way in the case where unit prices are imagined to be constant over time, for in that case the concept of increase in cost value of all traders' stock of goods is clearly seen to be a construct itself in the sense that it is not really an excess of input at cost over output at cost. In any case the output of a given trader in physical units is the same as the physical input of the trader to whom he sells; so in any case the physical rate of output of all traders by trade is equal to their physical rate of input by trade. Moreover, the cost price of one trader at a given time is the selling price of a trader at an earlier stage of production at the same time if there is no price change. Let X, 2, 3, ... , represent the physical outputs (and inputs) at various stages of the productive process, while p1 2, 3, ..., i are the unit prices respectively. Then the money value of total inputs may be stated as Xipi+Xi_pi_-+ · , while the money value of the outputs are Xipi_l+Xi-pi-2_2+ Thus if Xi units of ore, limestone, labor, etc., in the form of pig iron are sold for pi dollars per ton, and the iron was made of cost elements worth p2 dollars per equivalent composite unit, the input of the buyer would be Xlpl dollars, and the output of the seller would be Xlp2 dollars. The difference between the value of total input at cost and total output at cost for all traders would be EXipi -Xipi_l. But this difference may be restated as follows: