Labour Share of Income

Definition

The proportion of national or firm-level income paid to workers as compensation, as opposed to returns on capital. The declining labour share observed in many advanced economies is partly attributed to the growing role of intangible capital, which tends to be more scalable and generates higher returns for capital owners.

Complementary Terms

Concepts that frequently appear alongside Labour Share of Income in practice.

Income Approach (Valuation)

A valuation methodology that estimates the value of an asset based on the present value of expected future economic benefits, such as cash flows, earnings, or cost savings. The income approach is the most widely used method for valuing intangible assets and includes techniques such as the relief-from-royalty and multi-period excess earnings methods.

Labour Productivity

The amount of output produced per unit of labour input, commonly measured as gross value added (GVA) divided by labour costs or number of employees. Labour productivity is a key efficiency metric that reflects the quality of human capital, processes, and technology deployed by a firm.

Intangible Capital Formation

The process by which firms and economies accumulate intangible capital through investment in R&D, software development, training, brand building, and organisational design. Intangible capital formation is now the dominant form of business investment in advanced economies, yet it is only partially captured by national accounts and corporate balance sheets.

Growth Accounting

An analytical framework that decomposes economic or firm-level output growth into contributions from labour, capital, and a residual factor often interpreted as technological progress or total factor productivity. Growth accounting is fundamental to understanding how intangible investments — in R&D, software, organisational design, and human capital — drive productivity improvements.

Capital Deepening

An increase in the amount of capital available per worker, which typically raises labour productivity. In modern economies, capital deepening increasingly involves investment in intangible assets such as software, data infrastructure, and organisational systems rather than traditional machinery and equipment.

Automation Rate

The proportion of tasks, processes, or workflows within an organisation that are performed by automated systems rather than human labour. Automation rate is a key productivity metric, with higher rates typically correlating to improved operational efficiency, reduced error rates, and scalability — though the transition period often involves significant restructuring costs.

Weighted Average Cost of Capital (WACC) Premium

An adjustment applied to the standard WACC to reflect the additional risk associated with specific intangible assets or early-stage businesses. Intangible-heavy investments typically warrant a higher discount rate than the firm-level WACC because their cash flows are less certain and more sensitive to competitive and technological disruption.

Contributory Asset Charge

A charge applied in the multi-period excess earnings method to account for the fair return attributable to other assets that contribute to the cash flows being valued. Contributory asset charges ensure that the residual earnings attributed to the subject intangible asset are not overstated by stripping out returns earned by tangible assets, working capital, and other identified intangibles.

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