• unfreeradical@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Owning is not supplying. Owning is holding. Supplying is transferring possession to another party. When you hold ownership of a business, you maintain control of the business, as it operates, and you collect profit from its operation. You never deplete the supply of the business you own as a natural consequence of its operation.

    Capital is assets that have productive value, such as businesses or rented properties. Cars and homes that are used by their owners are not capital, and neither is cash deposited in a bank. Most capital is owned by a very small cohort of society.

    Business owners own capital. Workers own essentially none.

    You have very deep confusion about extremely basic concepts, a condition that is not being helped by your snarkiness and hostility

      • unfreeradical@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Ok. Capital is just cars and cash.

        The article you referenced explains (emphasis added)…

        While money itself may be construed as capital, capital is more often associated with cash that is being put to work for productive or investment purposes.

        I think my time is better spent now supplying my capital to a local drinking establishment.

        Enjoy ranting.

          • unfreeradical@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            The act of investment is purchasing (or exchanging) capital using cash or other assets.

            A business may acquire funding from investment, but in such a case the investor is trading cash for equity, bonds, or some other investment asset representing the present or future value of the company, or generated by the company. The investor is not supplying capital, but rather purchasing capital (or trading capital).

            The idea that the investor is supplying capital to the company is only a metaphor.

            Someone may lose money from an investment, but most capital is owned by immensely wealthy individuals, whose situation is vastly removed from that of ordinary workers, who actually do face the risk of losing their only home or their only car.

            Even small businesses are owned by individuals who have chosen to become business owners in order to profit from others’ work. Any risk they assume is through an attempt to enrich themselves from gains not shared with workers. By not sharing their gains with those who are working to create them, business owners, large or small, are not helping workers, but rather preventing workers from advancing.