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d-23046House OversightOther

Technical cash‑flow definitions and deadweight loss discussion in House Oversight document

Date
November 11, 2025
Source
House Oversight
Reference
House Oversight #011039
Pages
1
Persons
0
Integrity
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Summary

The passage contains only abstract financial terminology and equations with no mention of individuals, institutions, transactions, dates, or allegations. It offers no actionable investigative leads, c Defines cash flow as earned revenue minus plowback and transfer‑in. Equates gross realized output with gross cash flow and recovered decapitalization. Mentions deadweight loss arising from natural di

This document is from the House Oversight Committee Releases.

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cash-floweconomic-theoryhouse-oversightdeadweight-lossfinancial-terminology
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Negative cash flow, or transfer in, always means new investment added from outside. Plowback from revenue is excluded, as it is already recognized as a deduction from positive cash flow. For the firm, the only source of positive cash flow is proceeds from new shares issued. With this understood, cash flow = gross cash flow - plowback - transfer in = earned revenue - plowback - transfer in = positive cash flow - negative cash flow, (6.6) where positive cash flow = earned revenue - plowback, and negative cash flow = transfer in. (6.7) Firms use the term gross realized output to mean the same thing as what I call gross cash flow. A common definition is gross realized output = realized output + depreciation. Now we come to the subtle point allowing for deadweight loss. The total return truism shows that output equals value growth plus cash flow. Then output is negative wherever the sum of growth and cash flow is less than zero. Natural disasters and bad investments can make them so. Those unexpected setbacks are examples of deadweight loss. It amounts to unrecovered depreciation, meaning depreciation not recovered (realized) in positive cash flow. I'll get back to that soon. The point at present is that the equation above really means gross realized output = realized output + recovered depreciation. Here too | prefer the generality of “decapitalization” over “depreciation”, and define gross realized output = gross cash flow = realized output + recovered decapitalization = earned revenue + recovered decapitalizaton. (6.8) Chapter 6: Parallels with the Firm 2/4/16 5

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