A bakery combines a rented storefront (land), flour and ovens (capital), bakers and a manager (labor), and the owner's recipe, risk-taking, and operational judgment (entrepreneurship) to produce bread. Strip away any one of these and production stops. Every good and service in the economy is produced by some combination of these four inputs — and the efficiency with which they're combined determines how much the economy produces and how prosperous its population can be.
In plain terms
The factors of production are the fundamental inputs used to produce goods and services. Classical economics identifies four:
Land: all natural resources used in production — the actual ground beneath a factory, mineral deposits, water rights, radio spectrum, timber, and agricultural land. Land is distinct because its total quantity is largely fixed; production cannot create more of it, only more productive uses of it.
Labor: the human time, effort, skill, and knowledge contributed to production. A construction worker swinging a hammer, a software engineer writing code, and a surgeon performing an operation are all providing labor — different skills, different markets, but all selling time and capability to employers.
Capital: manufactured inputs used to produce other goods and services — machinery, buildings, vehicles, computers, tools, and infrastructure. Capital is distinct from financial capital (money); economic capital is the physical equipment that amplifies what labor can accomplish.
Entrepreneurship: the organizing function — combining the other three factors, bearing the risk of production, and innovating to create something new or more efficient. The entrepreneur who starts a business, hires workers, rents space, and purchases equipment is performing the coordinating function that turns separate inputs into productive output.
Why it works this way
Each factor earns a distinct return in competitive factor markets:
- Land earns rent — payment for access to a fixed natural resource
- Labor earns wages — payment for time, effort, and skill
- Capital earns interest (or profit) — the return on physical investment
- Entrepreneurship earns profit — the residual after all other factors are paid
The Bureau of Economic Analysis national income accounts decompose national income into these factor payments: employee compensation (labor income), rental income (land), net interest (capital), and proprietors' and corporate profits (entrepreneurship and capital combined).
A real example
The Bureau of Labor Statistics Occupational Employment Statistics shows the labor factor market — wages for thousands of occupations, reflecting the supply and demand for different types of labor. The wage premium for college-educated workers reflects higher marginal productivity — a better-quality labor input commanding a higher factor price.
The BEA's Fixed Assets data tracks the U.S. capital stock — the physical quantity of the capital factor — showing how investment adds to productive capacity over time. Capital deepening (more capital per worker) is the primary driver of long-run productivity growth and rising wages.
Why it matters
Factors of production are the supply-side foundation of every economy. Policies that affect their quantity, quality, or allocation — immigration policy (labor), land use regulation (land), interest rates (capital formation), and business formation policy (entrepreneurship) — directly determine productive capacity. Long-run differences in living standards across countries are largely explained by differences in factor quantities and, more importantly, the productivity with which they are combined.





