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Wealth - The creation of wealth |  | Wealth - The creation of wealth: Encyclopedia II - Wealth - The creation of wealth |  | Wealth is created through several means.
Natural resources can be harvested and sold to those who want them.
Material can be changed into something more valuable through proper application of knowledge, skill, labor and equipment.
Better/smarter production methods also create additional wealth by allowing faster creation of wealth.
Ideas create additional wealth by allowing it ...
See also:Wealth, Wealth - Wealth and poverty, Wealth - The anthropological view of wealth, Wealth - A rudimentary notion of wealth, Wealth - The interpersonal concept of wealth, Wealth - Wealth as the accumulation of non-necessities, Wealth - Wealth as control of arable land, Wealth - The capitalist notion of wealth, Wealth - Other concepts of wealth, Wealth - Global wealth, Wealth - Not a zero-sum game, Wealth - The non-normative concept of wealth, Wealth - Non financial wealth, Wealth - Wealth as time, Wealth - Sustainable Wealth, Wealth - Wealth Redefined Individualistically, Wealth - The creation of wealth, Wealth - The limits to wealth creation, Wealth - The distribution of wealth, Wealth - Wealth in the form of land, Wealth - Books |  | | Wealth, Wealth - A rudimentary notion of wealth, Wealth - Books, Wealth - Global wealth, Wealth - Non financial wealth, Wealth - Not a zero-sum game, Wealth - Other concepts of wealth, Wealth - Sustainable Wealth, Wealth - The anthropological view of wealth, Wealth - The capitalist notion of wealth, Wealth - The creation of wealth, Wealth - The distribution of wealth, Wealth - The interpersonal concept of wealth, Wealth - The limits to wealth creation, Wealth - The non-normative concept of wealth, Wealth - Wealth Redefined Individualistically, Wealth - Wealth and poverty, Wealth - Wealth as control of arable land, Wealth - Wealth as the accumulation of non-necessities, Wealth - Wealth as time, Wealth - Wealth in the form of land, Capital accumulation, Distribution of wealth, Poverty, Surplus product, Value added, Wealth condensation |  | |
|  |  | Wealth: Encyclopedia II - Wealth - The creation of wealth
Wealth - The creation of wealth
Wealth is created through several means.
- Natural resources can be harvested and sold to those who want them.
- Material can be changed into something more valuable through proper application of knowledge, skill, labor and equipment.
- Better/smarter production methods also create additional wealth by allowing faster creation of wealth.
- Ideas create additional wealth by allowing it to be created faster or with new methods.
For example, consider our early ancestors. Building a house from trees created something of greater value for the builder. Hunting and firewood created food and fed a growing family. Agriculture converted labor into more food and resources. Continuing use of resources and effort has allowed many descendants to own much more than that first house.
This is still true today. It is more obvious to those working with physical material than to a service worker or knowledge worker. A cubicle worker may not be aware in how many ways their work is creating something which is of more value to their employer than the amount that employer paid to produce it. This profit creates wealth for the owners of the organization. The process also provides income for employees, and suppliers, and it makes the continued existence of the organization possible.
Wealth - The limits to wealth creation
There is a debate in economic literature, usually referred to as the limits to growth debate in which the ecological impact of growth and wealth creation is considered. Many of the wealth creating activities mentioned above (cutting down trees, hunting, farming) have an impact on the environment around us. Sometimes the impact is positive (for example, hunting when herd populations are high) and sometimes the impact is negative (for example, hunting when herd populations are low).
Most researchers feel that sustained environmental impacts can have an effect on the whole ecosystem. They claim that the accumulated impacts on the ecosystem put a theoretical limit on the amount of wealth that can be created. They draw on archeology to cite examples of cultures that they claim have disappeared because they grew beyond the ability of their ecosystems to support them.
Others are more optimistic. They claim that although localized environmental impacts may occur, large scale ecological effects are either minor (in terms of magnitude) or non-existent. They sometimes claim that if these global scale ecological effects exist, human ingenuity will always find ways of adapting to them. To them, there is no limit to the amount of growth or wealth that this planet will sustain.
The limited surface of Earth also restricts potential growth and the effects upon this planet.
Other related archives18th century, 19th century, 21st century, Adam Smith, Agricultural economics, Anthropology, Capital accumulation, Cascadia, Connecticut, Cro-Magnons, David Ricardo, Digs, Distribution of wealth, Egypt, Georgist, Gorillas, Great Apes, Haida, Humans, Industrialization, Irrigation, Jane Jacobs, John Locke, John Stuart Mill, Karl Marx, Keynesian, Labour specialization, Lockean proviso, Man, Marxian, Michel Foucault, Midwest, Millennium Development Goals, Neandertal, Neoclassical economics, New York City, Niccolò Machiavelli, Poverty, Russia, Sumer, Surplus product, The Prince, U.S.A., United Nations, Upper East Side, Value added, Wealth, Wealth condensation, agricultural policy, agriculture, aqueducts, aristocracy, ark of taste, artisan, banking, biomes, bioregionalism, buildings, castles, cathedral, cave painting, children, city walls, city-state, classical economics, clothing, conspicuous consumption, crops, cruelty, cultivation, cultural bias, developing countries, discourse, distribution of wealth, ecological economics, economic system, economics, ecoregion, entropy, feudal, forts, funerary rites, geolibertarian, government, great apes, guardianship, health care, hominids, human development theory, infrastructural capital, inheritance, irrigation systems, labor theory of value, land, livestock, macroeconomics, means of persuasion, means of protection, member states, monarchy, monastery, money, money supply, moral syndromes, multiplier effect, natural capital, neoclassical economics, net worth, obligations, ownership, persuasion, pets, philanthropy, physical capital, political choice theory, political economy, potlatch, poverty, power, production, property, real estate, sewage systems, social, social capital, social contract, social engineering, specialized labor, state, styles of capital, supply-side theory, temple, the Enlightenment, urbanization, value, vice, war, wealth creation, well-being, zero-sum
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "The creation of wealth", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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