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Mises Economics Blog

The Market (part 2)

September 5, 2008 4:26 PM by Weekend Edition (Archive)

Profit, in a broader sense, is the gain derived from action; it is the increase in satisfaction (decrease in uneasiness) brought about; it is the difference between the higher value attached to the result attained and the lower value attached to the sacrifices made for its attainment; it is, in other words, yield minus costs. To make profit is invariably the aim sought by any action. If an action fails to attain the ends sought, yield either does not exceed costs or lags behind costs. In the latter case the outcome means a loss, a decrease in satisfaction.

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(Robert Murphy has written a study guide for this chapter, available in HTML and PDF.)

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