jump increment - traducción al Inglés
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jump increment - traducción al Inglés

INCREASE IN THE VALUE OF LAND OR ANY PROPERTY WITHOUT EXPENDITURE OF ANY KIND ON THE PART OF THE PROPRIETOR
Unearned Increment

jump increment      
(n.) = incremento del salto
Ex: Press this key to display the next 10th record (your library may have changed the "jump" increment to another number, such as 20, or even 50).
triple jump         
  • [[International University Sports Federation]] – Gwangju 2015 – Men's Triple Jump Final, Dmitrii Sorokin (RUS 17.29) wins gold.
TRACK AND FIELD EVENT
Triple Jump; Triple jumper; Triple-jump; Hop, step and jump; Hop, skip and jump; Hop, skip, and a jump; Hop skip jump; Hop step and jump
triple salto, salto triple
long jump         
  • 250px
  • Sand pit where [[Bob Beamon]] set the 8.90 m record in Mexico City
  • Halteres]] used in athletic games in ancient Greece
  • Multi-eventer]] [[Jessica Ennis]] during a long jump, preparing to land
  • Takeoff board
  • An indicator of wind direction and a device for measuring wind speed (here +2.6 m/s) along a run-up track
  • Women's Long Jump Final – 28th Summer Universiade 2015
  • An athlete performing a long jump as part of the [[heptathlon]] at the 2013 French Athletics Championships in [[Stade Charléty]], Paris
TRACK AND FIELD EVENT
Broad jump; Long Jump; Longjumper; Longjump; Long jumper; Long-jumping; Long jumping; Long-jumper; Farthest jumper; Long jump (sport); Running long jump; Broad jumper
salto en largo

Definición

increment
['??kr?m(?)nt]
¦ noun
1. an increase or addition, especially one of a series on a fixed scale.
a regular increase in salary on such a scale.
2. Mathematics a small positive or negative change in a variable quantity or function.
Derivatives
incremental adjective
incrementally adverb
Origin
ME: from L. incrementum, from the stem of increscere (see increase).

Wikipedia

Unearned increment

Unearned increment is an increase in the value of land or any property without expenditure of any kind on the part of the proprietor; it is an early statement of the notion of unearned income. It was coined by John Stuart Mill, who proposed taxing it so that it benefits every member of a society. Mill's concept was refined and developed by nineteenth-century economist Henry George in his book Progress and Poverty (1879). George argued that the value of land increased as population growth expanded the division of labor. A landowner's exclusive claim to their land granted them the ability to collect the excess productivity as economic rent. Thorstein Veblen further developed the concept, pointing out that the value of a piece of land was also dependent on current technological capabilities.
Veblen thought the unearned increment increased as the industrial arts advanced, so the argument could be extended from land to capital goods. Focusing on the role of technical knowledge in the creation and operation of capital, Veblen argues the unearned increment in the case of capital is in the monopolization of the community's knowledge. As industrial methods advance and the unit of industrial equipment grows larger, it becomes feasible to monopolize the required materials for earning a living, effectively monopolizing a portion of the community's knowledge. For both George and Veblen, the unearned increment emerges from the actions of an individual with the ability to exclusively use a community asset in order to generate profit. The profit takes the form of an unearned increment because the individual reaping the profit didn't create the land (or knowledge) used to do so. Both thinkers also argued that such monopolization of the community's resources would lead to the creation of economic slavery.