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To: JohnGalt
It's not transferable; thats the problem with Industrial Age.
who needs the headaches?

WEALTH: The net ownership of material possessions and productive resources. In other words, the difference between physical and financial assets that you own and the liabilities that you owe. Wealth includes all of the tangible consumer stuff that you possess, like cars, houses, clothes, jewelry, etc.; any financial assets, like stocks, bonds, bank accounts, that you lay claim to; and your ownership of resources, including labor, capital, and natural resources. Of course, you must deduct any debts you owe.

VALUE ADDED: The increase in the value of a good at each stage of the production process. The value that's being increased is specifically the ability of a good to satisfy wants and needs either directly as a consumption good or indirectly as a capital good. A good that provides greater satisfaction has greater value. In essence, the whole purpose of production is to transform raw materials and natural resources that have relatively little value into goods and services that have greater value.

SERVICE: An activity that provides direct satisfaction of wants and needs without the production of a tangible product or good. Examples include information, entertainment, and education. This term good should be contrasted with the term good, which involves the satisfaction of wants and needs with tangible items. You're likely to see the plural combination of these two into a single phrase, "goods and services," to indicate the wide assortment of economic production from the economy's scarce resources.

Wealth is created only by engaging in value-added activities. By the same token, Service sector activities do not create wealth, they merely transfer, redistribute and eventually dissipate wealth as consumption. Thus, as value-added activities move offshore and the U.S. labor force shifts to the Service Sector, wealth is dissipated, not created. And the U.S. standard of living declines as a result.
25 posted on 07/11/2002 12:48:37 PM PDT by Willie Green
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To: Willie Green
I agree, however, the value-added of the Information Age is a radical reconstruction of the economy that makes it much more responsive to changes in market conditions. There is simply trillions and trillions of dollars to be 'saved' in automating business processes (off site sales rep to plant floor, for example.)

While not inovation and rather application, the process by which we learn to do things exponentially 'cheaper' has 'value.'

26 posted on 07/11/2002 1:04:59 PM PDT by JohnGalt
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