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A LIFE OF SERVICE, REWARD, AND ACHIVEMENT --- The Basics And The Options

Introduction THE BASICS Starting A Life Of Service - It Begins With Parents Doing The Needful Taking Charge Of Your Life When Of Age - ...

Friday, 24 June 2016

The Potency Of Your Productive Resources Or Capitals



What type of labour are you? What capitals or productive resources do you possess? What is the potency of your productive resources? It is important that you consider these questions because their answers have great impact on your life. It will determine whether you live a life of perpetual struggle or that of constant achievement. To live a life of achievement though, you need productive resources (or capitals). Capitals, of course, are things we put in to create wealth. There are four factors that determine our ability to create wealth. They are collectively called “factors of production”. Factors of production encompasses all the resources and efforts aimed at creating wealth (i.e. creating value or producing goods and services), including the ones we have discussed so far. They are: Land, Capital, Labour, and Entrepreneur. These can be further grouped into two broad categories, namely: Capital and Labour.
Capital on the one hand, comprises of land and other productive resources such as finance and material commodities that are used to create wealth, while Labour on the other hand, is a collective term for both labour and entrepreneur. We shall see the difference latter, but they are the human factors of production that use their skills to work on the other factors of production such as land and capital to create value or wealth. The amount of wealth that can created depend largely on the competence of these two human factors of production (i.e. Labour and Entrepreneur). Their competence depends on their level of education or training. So if you have a large competent workforce (labour), working on a large amount of capital (e.g. land, money and material goods), then you are likely to have large returns on your investment. Having incompetent workforce, working on your capitals is a recipe for disaster. Now let’s see how all these factors of production contribute to wealth creation.

                                             FACTORS OF PRODUCTION
Land
Capital
Labour
Entrepreneur
                                                               
                                                                   LAND
Land is the medium or space on which production activities take place. No production can take place without land or space. For example, farmers need large expanse of land to crow crops or rear live stocks. Factories are located on land; offices and markets on which business activities take place are also located on land. Even if you are operating on an open space, that space on which you operate is land. You can do nothing without land.

                                                                  CAPITAL
Capital, simply put, is wealth that is used to create further wealth. It could be a large amount of money invested in or used to start a business. It could be capital goods like buildings, machineries, tools or equipments used in producing more wealth. Hence different things constitute capital to different people, depending on what they do. For instance, besides money, a farmer’s capital includes his hoes, machetes, machineries, and other farm implements as well as seeds and seedlings. To a fisher man, his capital would include his net, fishing hooks, baits canoe or boat etc. A tailor’s capital includes his scissors, sewing machine, iron, cutting table, fabrics etc. In fact, any asset that one has that can aid him in the production of further wealth is his capital. Thus there are numerous tangible and intangible, acquired or naturally endowed assets that are potent capitals for wealth creation. They range from physical strength, knowledge and skill to experience, idea, status and even beauty... All the factors of production are also capitals for investment.

                                                                LABOUR
Labour is the application of physical or mental effort of man in the production of goods and services. It also refers to the people who make themselves available for work. It is the people who work on other factors of production such as land and capital to create value (e.g.to produce goods and provide services). A labour gets his reward in the form of wages or salaries.
There are differences in the caliber of labour depending on the level of education, training and experience. Hence, we have three types of labour namely: unskilled, semi skilled, and skilled labour.

                                                        UNSKILLED LABOUR
This is the application of physical effort of man in the production of goods and provision of services. The work done by unskilled labour requires little or no education or training. Example of unskilled labour include: local security men, cleaners, petty traders, house helps, small scale stone and sand miners, those who earn a living by bush or grass clearing, fetching or splitting of firewood etc. The income accruing to an unskilled labour is often very small.  

                                                      SEMI-SKILLED LABOUR
This is the category of workers who combine both physical and mental effort in their work. Workers in this group are people with little education or training. For example, clerks, SSCE, GCE, and NECO holders. Others are craftsmen or artisans who have received proper training in their chosen vocation such as carpentry, welding, electronics, computer operation, cookery, etc. They are often paid better than the unskilled labour.

                                                             SKILLED LABOUR
This are highly educated professional workers whose intellects are highly developed through years of advanced studies. Hence they use largely mental effort in carrying out their own part of the production process. They are professionals, products of tertiary institutions such as the university and the different professional bodies such as COREN, NBA, NMA etc. Example, doctors, lawyers, engineers, architects, accountants, economists, surveyors etc. They are better remunerated than the semi-skilled labour.

                                                              ENTREPRENEUR
The entrepreneur is the factor of production that organizes and coordinates other factors of production in the process of producing goods and services or creating value. The entrepreneur is the one who provides the capital for establishing and running the business. He also controls and manages the other factors of production­­­­­ --- land, labour, and capital--- to ensure efficiency and maximize profit. The success or failure of a business depends to a large extend, on the competence of the entrepreneur. 


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