> "a succession of cases sufficient to evaluate the judgment or
determine its probable value transforms the profit into a wage."
(Knight, 1921: 311)
>
> then that profit is really a "wage" -- a return to a
> productive factor, and not a profit.
> So over the long haul, or in the aggregate,
> my interpretation emerges:
> any profit that is not the result of better
> judgment is just good luck.
> Ross Emmett
In the paradigm of classical economics, the three factors of
production - land, labor, and capital goods - are distinct sets;
moreover all inputs fall into one of the three factors, as do the
returns from factors.
Thus profit is not one of the classical factors, and profit income is
not separate from the returns to factors. Profit is either wages,
land rent, or a yield from capital goods. In the classical taxonomy,
profit cannot get transferred to wages, because they are already a
return to labor, or else a return to the other factors.
By classical taxonomy, the gains, i.e. economic profit, from
self-employment are thus all wages. A lucky entrepreneur who
stumbles into a product that yield a high return obtains a wage, just
as an employee who obtains a high remuneration in a job he obtains
due to chance is a wage.
One may distinguish types of wages, such as those of employees
(marginal products of labor) versus those from owner-entrepreneurship
(as residual claimants).
Moroever, wages can be distinguished from transfers gifted to workers
or entrepreneurs, or stolen by them. An overpaid executive may be
receiving gains that properly belong to the shareholders, and is
transferred from them to the executive by a corrupt board; this is
not really a wage due to his contribution, but rather looting.
Fred Foldvary
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