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1978 | OriginalPaper | Chapter

Capital and Technical Progress

Author : A. P. Thirlwall

Published in: Growth and Development

Publisher: Macmillan Education UK

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The capital stock of a country increases through the process of net investment (I), which is the difference between a country’s net income in an accounting period (i.e. gross income minus depreciation) and how much it consumes out of that income in the same period. Capital accumulation enlarges a country’s capacity to produce goods. As we saw in Chapter 2, however, production-function studies, at least for advanced countries, cast some doubt on whether capital accumulation by itself is central to the development process. A lot depends on how capital is defined and whether it is inclusive of technological progress. Capital is certainly a wider concept than capital goods traditionally defined, i.e. goods which yield no immediate utility but produce goods which do. If capital is defined as any asset which generates an additional future stream of measurable income to society, many goods and services commonly regarded as consumption goods ought strictly to be included as part of a country’s capital stock. Expenditure on education, for instance, which may permanently enhance the earning capacity of individuals, as well as giving immediate satisfaction, must be regarded partly as investment expenditure. Similarly, if certain types of ‘consumption’ goods, e.g. clothes, durable consumer goods, etc., are necessary to induce peasant producers in the agricultural sector to increase their productivity, they, too, ought to be considered as part of the capital stock. If it is agreed, therefore, that the only way to build up a country’s productive potential, and to raise per capita income, is to expand the capacity for producing goods, this need not refer simply to the production of physical capital but to the production of other types of capital such as ‘incentive’ consumer goods and the expansion of facilities for investment in human capital, all of which can contribute to increased productivity and higher living standards.

Metadata
Title
Capital and Technical Progress
Author
A. P. Thirlwall
Copyright Year
1978
Publisher
Macmillan Education UK
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-15875-1_4