SEc. 2] EARNINGS AND INCOME 229
§2
If the rate of interest is not 5 per cent, but 2 per cent,
there will result great differences in the capital-values.
The consequences are seen in the last column of the
table. But the effect on capital-values wrought by thus
cutting the rate of interest in two will be different for each
of the five different articles. The more enduring ones will
be affected the most. When the rate of interest is halved
the value of the land will be doubled, rising from $20,000 to
$40,000, but the value of the house will rise by only about
60 per cent, i.e. from $18,300 to $28,400; the value of the
horse will rise only 10 per cent, i.e. from $508 to $551; the
value of the suit will rise only from $28 to $29; and, finally,
the value of the loaf of bread will not rise at all, but will
remain at 10 cents. We see in these five types of articles
that the sensitiveness of capital-value to a change in the
rate of interest is the greater the more enduring the income.
In general, also, this sensitiveness is the greater the more
remote the periods of time at which the income is concen-
trated. For instance, if the total income is $100, and is
all concentrated at a point of time fifty years distant, its
capital-value, when the rate of interest is 5 per cent, is $8.72,
but it becomes $29.09 when the rate of interest is reduced to
2} per cent. That is, the rate of interest being halved, the
capital-value is more than trebled. If the same income of
$100 were to be due only one year from date, the change
from 5 per cent to 23 per cent in the rate of interest would
elevate the capital-value only from $95 to $97.50.
§3
Thus far we have been concerned only with foal income,
in relation to capital-value; we now consider the rate of
income per year in relation to capital-value. This ratio
has already been called the rate of “value-return.”
In accordance with previous explanations the sequence