enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Cost of equity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cost_of_equity

    Such costs are separated into a firm's cost of debt and cost of equity and attributed to these two kinds of capital sources. A firm's overall cost of capital, which consists of the two types of capital costs, is then determined as the weighted average cost of capital. Knowing a firm's cost of capital is needed in order to make better decisions ...

  3. Compensation and benefits - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compensation_and_benefits

    Total guaranteed package or fixed cost to company are aggregates that include guaranteed pay and benefits. This represents the total fixed cost of the reward package and is useful for budgeting. All forms of variable pay (annual bonus and equity compensation) are excluded from this aggregate.

  4. Cost of capital - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cost_of_capital

    The total capital for a firm is the value of its equity (for a firm without outstanding warrants and options, this is the same as the company's market capitalization) plus the cost of its debt (the cost of debt should be continually updated as the cost of debt changes as a result of interest rate changes).

  5. Factors of production - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Factors_of_production

    But unlike the classical school and many economists today, Marx made a clear distinction between labor actually done and an individual's "labor power" or ability to work. Labor done is often referred to nowadays as "effort" or "labor services". Labor-power might be seen as a stock which can produce a flow of labor.

  6. Labor theory of value - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Labor_theory_of_value

    The LTV seeks to explain the level of this equilibrium. This could be explained by a cost of production argument—pointing out that all costs are ultimately labor costs, but this does not account for profit, and it is vulnerable to the charge of tautology in that it explains prices by prices. [17]

  7. Labour power - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Labour_power

    Consequently, labour power may be hired not "because it creates more value than it costs to buy", but simply because it conserves the value of a capital asset which, if this labour did not occur, would decline in value by an even greater amount than the labour cost involved in maintaining its value; or because it is a necessary expense which ...

  8. Marginal product of capital - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marginal_product_of_capital

    The real interest rate, the depreciation rate, and the relative price of capital goods determine the cost of capital. According to the neoclassical model, firms invest if the rental price is greater than the cost of capital, and they disinvest if the rental price is less than the cost of capital. [2]

  9. Abstract labour and concrete labour - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abstract_labour_and...

    Skilled labour costs more to produce than unskilled labour, and can be more productive. Generally Marx assumed that—irrespective of the price for which it is sold—skilled labour power had a higher value (it costs more to produce, in money, time, energy and resources), and that skilled work could produce a product with a higher value in the ...

  1. Related searches the reward for labour is the difference between cost of capital and cost of equity

    cost of equity wikipediacost of capital wikipedia
    cost of equity and debtwhat is cost of capital