Capital determines whether a society will be prosperous or poor, well-fed or not, populated by independent and self-reliant citizens or dependent subjects. An abundance of nutritious food, clean water, sturdy homes, safe modes of transportation, reliable sources of heat and power, modern medicines, and many other products and technologies that improve the quality of human life are impossible without capital.
A teacher can help students understand what capital is by encouraging them to think of capital as an individual’s “starter pack” for being productive and getting things done. Capital includes the tools, money, and other valuable resources a person needs to create something of value, or to solve a problem in order to create wealth.
For example, if you wanted to start a lemonade stand, the money you use to buy cups, lemons, water, and a sweetener is capital. While money is an important form of capital, capital can include other resources that help you create wealth for yourself by producing value for others.
Other Kinds of Capital:
Capital is anything you can use to “build” something that will provide experiences of value for other people. Money is the most obvious example of capital, but creativity, friendships, and even your honesty and intelligence, can be just as important, maybe even more important in some circumstances.
So, yes! Capital is cash and more: Capital includes any resource that helps you be more productive. Ask students: What kinds of capital do they have? Maybe it is their energy, ideas, or even their ability to make people laugh. Remind them that everyone—even people with little or no money—have important capital over which each person has much control: A person’s own reputation, honesty, and trustworthiness.
Evaluating incentives
One of the most important questions within any society is: Who will allocate capital? One possibility is that individuals choose whether, how, when, where, and why to spend their own money and invest their own capital. Another option is that political elites within government will tax citizens and confiscate the wealth that others have created, and then those in government will choose how to allocate other people’s their capital.
Individuals choosing how to invest their own capital have strikingly different incentives than politicians and bureaucrats in government spending other people’s money.
As we discuss in another section, profit is the happiness of other people. When individuals and business owners make their own choices about how to allocate and when to invest their own capital, they aim to earn a profit—they want a return on their investment—which is another way of saying they’re trying to make other people happy by producing value for them.
When those in government choose how to spend other people’s money, they serve their own interests, usually by expanding the scope and power of government. That is worth repeating: Business owners allocate their own capital in order to make a profit for themselves by making other people happy; government allocates other people’s capital in order to extend the power and control of government.
Every new government spending program, after all, requires expanding the class of unelected bureaucrats, adding new levels of control over what citizens may do, and adding new kinds of taxpayer-funded government competition to businesses and other private organizations.
Incentives of Allocation
For politicians and bureaucrats, resource allocation often means achieving political ends or aiming for short-term gains. Without direct knowledge of costs or profits, these decisions can be quite unpredictable.
When private individuals choose how to invest or spend their own money, they have strong incentives to make careful, strategic decisions. If they invest wisely, they personally reap the rewards; if they invest foolishly, they suffer the losses. This direct link between decisions and consequences encourages efficiency and accountability. Individuals are motivated to seek the highest return (or best use) for their funds, and they also bear the risk of losing their capital if a project fails.
By contrast, when those in government take capital from citizens through taxation, politicians and bureaucrats end up allocating resources that are not their own. As a result, several distortions can arise:
In short, when individuals allocate their own funds, they have personal incentives—financial risk and reward—to be careful stewards of their capital. When governments collect taxes and decide how to spend them, officials are allocating other people’s funds and often do so under weak or no incentives for efficiency, with less direct accountability for mistakes, and with political or bureaucratic considerations that can overshadow the goal of maximizing societal well-being.
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It is not uncommon to hear people assert that businesses are especially corrupt because business owners are greedy and will swindle or even hurt people if they are not closely regulated. But is this characterization of businesses true?
There are some bad business owners just as there are some bad people, of course. But the accusations against businesses typically go beyond the impeachment of a few shady business owners—the accusations imply that business itself is something bad, and an incentive for bad behavior.
In talking about this subject, it’s helpful to identify and clarify the principle of what a business is. Let us phrase it as a question: What exactly IS a business?
A business is organized, specialized labor (and other resources) for the purpose of earning a profit by increasing productivity.
Organizing specialized labor—people with particular talents, skills, or knowledge—and other resources—including capital and raw materials—that are specialized for specific work makes a business efficient, and efficiency is productivity.
Consider, as just an example, the smart phone that is likely in your pocket right now. It was made by a business. You could try to make a smart phone by yourself, from scratch. You could hire a team of scientists, engineers, and researchers to develop the technology needed for the phone. You could go around the world and try to get all the raw materials needed for the phone’s hardware, and you could then hire people to design and build the machinery necessary to turn the raw materials into refined, useful materials. And maybe at some point, after some assembly and programming, you might have a useable smart phone (and you might not if the phone doesn’t actually work).
That would be a very inefficient way to get a smart phone. It would cost millions or even billions of dollars, many years of time, and the expenses of many trials and errors.
An alternative would be to walk into a business that sells smart phones (or order one online), pay several hundred dollars, and immediately become the owner of a working, useable smart phone that’s probably much better quality than anything you could make on your own.
Let us address the simple question: Why is the smartphone you purchased in a store so good, so (relatively) cheap, and instantly available? The answer is: The company that makes and sells smartphones is a business. Every business features specialized labor and resources, which makes businesses efficient and productive.
Typically, a business that makes something or offers some service—daily—can make the thing or perform the service far more efficiently than you can. That is why you are willing to pay businesses for many services and products, which is how businesses earn profit.
Just imagine if you tried to make all the things and do all the services for which you typically pay businesses: Imagine trying to build, repair, and paint your own house—plant, cultivate, harvest, and prepare your own food—build your own car from scratch—weave your own cloth and design and make your own clothes—make your own computer—invent your own medicines—etc. Such an exercise of the imagination makes it clear that businesses are efficient and productive precisely because they organize specialized labor and other resources.
Where there are more businesses, there is more productivity because there is more efficiency. Where there are few or no businesses, there is little productivity because each individual person, trying to do everything for and by himself, is not very efficient.
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