THE ENTREPRENEUR AND THE SUPPLY OF CAPITAL
George E. Barnett
El
ED
In the development of the theory of profits in English and
American economics, attention has been directed chiefly to the
function of the entrepreneur; that is, to the nature of the services
rendered. The present paper is devoted to the task of bringing
together such evidence as is available to indicate that the evo-
lution in the theory of profits has not been due in reality so much
to the better appreciation of the nature of entrepreneurial func-
tion as to changes in the dominant forms of capitalism and in
the mechanism for supplying capital to industry. The effect of
these changes, it will be contended, has been to produce shifts
in that factor of production to which profits attach themselves.
A real change in distribution has been the underlying factor in
much of the controversy as to function.
If we begin, as most present-day economists do, with Profes-
sor Clark’s definition of the undertaker as the owner of the
product—profits are the remains of the whole receipts of the
undertaking over and above the cost of the land, labor, including
labor of management, and capital used. Profits are made up of
various economic categories into which it is not necessary here
to inquire more particularly, especially since they are of hetero-
geneous kind and have never been adequately analyzed. The
argument to be hereafter set forth is to the effect that under
certain conditions this remainder as a totality falls to capital,
under other conditions to labor management and under still
other conditions to “active” or risk-taking capital. Whether it
falls to one or the other depends chiefly on the kind and amount
of capital required and the capital market prevailing at a given
time or in a given industry. The present functional theories of
profits tend to obscure the fact of these variations and to bring
the theory of profits into a uniformity which is not in accord
with the existing economic world