Manufactured capital: Difference between revisions
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imported>Doug Williamson (Add link.) |
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* [[Capitalisation]] | * [[Capitalisation]] | ||
* [[Capitalism]] | * [[Capitalism]] | ||
* [[Capitals Coalition]] | |||
* [[Corporate finance]] | * [[Corporate finance]] | ||
* [[Cost of capital]] | * [[Cost of capital]] | ||
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* [[Money]] | * [[Money]] | ||
* [[Natural capital]] | * [[Natural capital]] | ||
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* [[Regulatory capital]] | * [[Regulatory capital]] | ||
* [[Security]] | * [[Security]] |
Latest revision as of 15:48, 6 October 2021
Manufactured capital is capital in the form of goods or fixed assets that contribute to production processes.
Contrasted with items that are the final output of the production process.
Examples include tools, machines and buildings.
Manufactured capital is one of the five areas of capital identified in the Forum for the Future's model of sustainable capital.
The other four areas of capital being:
- Human capital
- Social capital
- Financial capital
- Natural capital
See also
- Assets
- Capital
- Capital goods
- Capital intensity
- Capital market
- Capital mobility
- Capital structure
- Capitalisation
- Capitalism
- Capitals Coalition
- Corporate finance
- Cost of capital
- Debt capital
- Enterprise
- Equity
- Equity cost of capital
- Factors of production
- Finance
- Financial asset
- Financial capital
- Fixed assets
- Forum for the Future
- Funding
- Human capital
- Interest
- Labour
- Land
- Liabilities
- Materiality
- Money
- Natural capital
- Produced capital
- Regulatory capital
- Security
- Share capital
- Social capital
- Stakeholder
- Sustainability
- Working capital