登陆注册
15713600000088

第88章

The Conception of Costs Whatever economic production goods a man has within his disposal, whether lands, capital, or labour power, he counts part of his wealth -- although they do not directly increase his satisfactions; and he does so with just as much right as he counts those consumption goods wealth which permit of direct enjoyment. The possession of production goods gives the promise of acquiring consumption goods later. Production, therefore, not only creates value, it also destroys value. Only so long as one is taken by surprise at the emergence of productive value, in that it is unexpected, is it reckoned as pure gain. When the Phoenicians -- as the fable goes -- accidentally came upon glass among the ashes, only the gain of production would be present to their minds; but whoever, thereafter, began to produce glass, and in doing so was obliged to pay attention to the materials of its production, would learn perforce the destructive part of production. If production, on the one side, brings forth products, it limits, on the other, the producing powers. On this account it is every one's duty to see that his production is always directed towards the greatest possible result, in case he should consume more value than he will eventually gain.

This circumstance receives more distinct form and emphasis in the case of production goods capable of many and various employments. Here care must be taken to choose those employments which will prove the most economically efficient, both as regards kind and amount. Circulating capital or labour power devoted to any one production, is thereby absolutely withdrawn from all others; the same is true of fixed capital, and even of unconsumable land, during the period of the production to which they are devoted. In consideration of this fact the devotion of means of production to individual undertaking must always be well considered. It is necessary, for this end, that the man who resolves on the making of one special product, should form an exact idea of the value of all the other products whose manufacture is thereby rendered impossible. But how can this be done? It is done by taking account of the value of their common economic factors of production. In these factors the value of all "cognate" products, without exception, is incorporated.

Productive value, consequently, occupies a position of mention among the whole circle of cognate products. Whenever the value of any class of products falls or rises, and thereby either the extension or the limitation of other branches of production is demanded,(1*) the effect is first communicated to productive value, and is then passed on from productive value. The products and the value of the products adjust themselves, in each individual case, to the productive value, and the productive value indicates the limit of production common to all.

In this way we reach the point of view from which production goods are conceived of as costs. The first element in it is that the productive employment figures as outlay, as sacrifice, as loss; the second is that, in virtue of this, attention is called to the equalisation of several connected productions. To say that any kind of production involves cost, simply implies that the economic means of production, which could doubtless have been usefully employed in other directions, are either used up in it, or are suspended during it. Costs are production goods when these are devoted to one individual employment, and, on account of their capacity of being otherwise employed, take the shape of outlay, expenditure.(2*) The measure for estimating costs is always the productive marginal utility, as it is found on consideration of all the employments economically permissible.

Thus only those production goods which we have already (in Book III. chap. xii) called "cost goods," as opposed to "monopoly goods," can be regarded as costs. Productive elements which admit of only one kind of employment, do not share the multiplicity of conditions necessary for the emergence of what we recognise as costs. A mineral spring, which can be used only by drawing off its contents and putting them into bottles, must, obviously, stand in a quite different relation to the value of the product from the unskilled labour which fills the bottles, but is capable of a hundred other uses besides. "Monopoly goods" simply take to themselves the value of the products imputed to them, and do not conduct it back again to these products, as do "cost goods," --while cost goods are the parent goods of the great productive relationships, within which they act as combining forces and equalisers of value. The more various the employments of any productive element are, and the shorter the processes are, -- as this continually necessitates new deliberations as to how the goods are to be employed next -- the more does their employment in production obtain the character of a sacrifice whose amount must be well weighed if the proper balance of production is to be maintained. Unskilled labour and the commonest kinds of floating capital, are, consequently, the goods to which the conception of costs most frequently applies.

NOTES:

1. If, for instance, the price of cotton thread is reduced, thread manufacturers will not pay the former price for cotton yarns. But if cotton spinners are compelled to quote a lower price to thread manufacturers they cannot ask a higher price from cloth weavers. Thus the weavers get their raw material cheaper because of the fall in the price of the cognate product, thread, and this tends to an extension of the cloth manufacture. -- W.S.

2. This definition requires a slight readjustment only in so far as interest and land rent (see below, Book V. chaps. xi and xii)are reckoned among costs. Interest and rent -- or the goods which constitute them -- are not production goods; they are simply elements of the production calculus as production goods are.

同类推荐
  • 杂譬喻经

    杂譬喻经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • The Early Short Fiction Part One

    The Early Short Fiction Part One

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 入幕须知

    入幕须知

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 景德传灯录

    景德传灯录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 伤寒论条辨

    伤寒论条辨

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 离殇尽

    离殇尽

    心微动,奈何情己远,物也非,人也非,往日不可追。只缘感君一回顾,使我思君朝与暮。雾散,梦醒,我终于看见真实,那是千帆过尽的沉寂。凄凉别后两应同,最是不胜清怨月明中。若教无离恨,不信人间有白头。
  • 公主长清之血染江山

    公主长清之血染江山

    帝后最疼爱的女儿,万人仰慕的嫡长公主,川域王朝最尊贵的女子。“世情薄,人情恶,雨送黄昏花易落”,看她如何在这险恶的宫中生存下来,协助母后助哥哥坐稳太子之位,登基!又能否在这步步惊心中找到良人,携子之手,与子同老。
  • 儒魔至圣

    儒魔至圣

    道有万千,我取两道,儒道控欲,魔道随欲,一念之间,花开花落。何为正,何又为邪?青涩少年,自万千大山中走出,沧桑世事,乱动红尘,逆苍天,斩轮回,只为在漂泊的天地间,搏一条属于自己的大道!感谢阅文书评团提供书评支持!
  • 兽魂觉醒

    兽魂觉醒

    灵兽与人类的完美结合,让灵兽成为这个世界上所有人类最强大的伙伴.兽化成铠,心灵相通.使人类得到更加强大的力量,撼天动地,所向披靡.可别人都是收灵兽,雷泽却被灵兽所收,是精神力太低,连灵兽都看不起他吗?别人想换灵兽便换灵兽,可雷泽就算机缘再好遇到上古灵兽也无法更换灵兽.无奈啊,悲剧啊,这样一个极品有会闹出怎么一番故事,一切尽在兽魂觉醒.
  • 仇人变爱人

    仇人变爱人

    叶晓因为家庭变故,被背叛,长大后进行复仇,而仇人却莫名变成爱人
  • 火爆王妃不好惹

    火爆王妃不好惹

    现代警花穿越异世,绑了朝廷都忌惮的头号江湖大人物,还对其进行百般羞辱,她发誓,如果不是庸医误诊她魂归西天了,她是绝对不敢惹上这么一个大魔头的!可明明说要将她碎尸万段的某大魔头,却对她穷追不舍……楼兮瑾无语问苍天:有受虐狂谤我、欺我、辱我、笑我、轻我、贱我、非礼我,调戏我,我当如何处置乎?老天答:推倒攻之……楼兮瑾:滚你芭蕉的推倒,他又不是受!!在后面偷听着的某大魔头挑眉:是不是兽,要身体力行才会知晓的。【情节虚构,请勿模仿】
  • 复仇迷途之小妻别想逃

    复仇迷途之小妻别想逃

    八年前她妈妈被杀害,爸爸带着另外一个女人和一个七岁的小女孩,爸爸派人追杀她,她被一个亿万富翁救走……八年后她建立了一个强大帮派——鬼魅帮,她和她乔转打扮进了樱花学院开始了她们的复仇之路,却遇见了他和他,他冷酷,他花心,但是这样的他们却融化了她们的心,她们的复仇之路又会如何,他们的相遇是命中注定还是命运多舛……
  • 青春都是这样

    青春都是这样

    自己的随意写的作品~作品也许不这么细腻,但出于自己的想法
  • 血契公主

    血契公主

    这是一个残酷的世界。魔族只能以人类的血肉为食才能够获得魔力,延续生命。人类必须用魔族的骨血制作魔具才可以使用魔法,保卫家园。在这个规则下,人族、魔族之间进行了数千年的互相杀戮与践踏。在这个残酷世界里,拥有王者宿命的少女和少年将会发生怎么样的罗曼史呢?
  • 孔窈传

    孔窈传

    数十年前在地球上突然看到天空出现一个巨大球体,正朝着地球靠近。新的世界的到来,四维世界到五维世界的进化。前期世界的设定可能会进入主题比较慢。