What is the way economics distinguishes between items that people buy to use/keep, and people just buy to sell at a higher price to other sellers? I see both referred to as “commodities”, and both have “intrinsic value” (People will pay for them), but they seem clearly different to me.

316 views

What is the way economics distinguishes between items that people buy to use/keep, and people just buy to sell at a higher price to other sellers? I see both referred to as “commodities”, and both have “intrinsic value” (People will pay for them), but they seem clearly different to me.

In: 39

12 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

Just wanted to say, thank you for all the answers. I am still a bit confused, but I think part of that comes from how these definitions are abstracted ways of viewing a much more complex system.

Anonymous 0 Comments

The distinction isn’t the item, it’s the action.

Purchasing an item with the intent to use the item is consumption, or expenditure. If it’s something you’ll use and reuse for a while it’s a durable good. If it will be used up, or wear out quickly it’s a consumable good. If you’ll use the durable good to aid your business it’s a capital expense.

Purchasing an item with the intent to resell is called trading,, or brokering, or speculation; depending on the details.