- Joined
- 20 November 2010
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Really? Your flawed argument was that such investment did not contribute to capital formation. Since shares represent an ownership stake in a business however small, the extent to which a business participates in capital formation is attributable to the owners of the business entity.Buying existing shares in a company is not investment. Purchases of newly issues shares via an IPO or issue of new shares is likely to be investment, but then maybe not depending on what the raised funds are put to.
Investment: the investing of money or capital in order to gain profitable returns, as interest, income, or appreciation in value. What dictionary are you reading from or are you asserting a new definition for the term "investment"?
Such an "investment" may indeed contribute to capital formation if goods or services production occurs as a result of its use. The act of building an office tower in itself is not capital formation.If you build a new office tower - that's investment.
Capital Formation: The creation of productive assets that expand an economy's capacity to produce goods and services. Private savings facilitates capital formation by allowing resources to be diverted to corporate investment rather than individual consumption.