Title: COMPARATIVE CULTURAL
1COMPARATIVE CULTURAL ECONOMIC SYSTEMS
ECONOMICS 331 DR. GARCÍA III
2COMPARATIVE CULTURAL ECONOMICS Definitions
Classifications
3Comparative cultural economics is hard to
define an area or field in economics in search
of a definition.
4Comparative Cultural economics
- Studies economic outcomes in different cultural
settings and how economics interacts with the
culture of the system. - Economics systems must be understandable and
observable along with the understanding of
resources, their scarcity and endowment.
5Economic outcomes
- Economic outcomes of a system are influence by
- Traditional and non traditional inputs land,
labor, capital, and managerial ability. - Technology innovation and invention.
- Social forces and cultural forces (invisible
handshake). - Economic forces (invisible hand)
- Political and legal forces (invisible foot).
- Geographic forces.
- Random forces.
6Economic System
- An analysis of a system must understand and
control all the relevant variables in order to
study that economic system. - For example, economic level of development of the
economic system can be measure by using per
capita GDP and other aggregates. So - Need to know relationships between economic
development and GDP. - Percentage of services, industry, and agriculture
in GDP. - Level of development.
- Non traditional elements which might affect the
GDP such as social, cultural, political,
religious, legal, sovereign, and historical
forces.
7Definition of Economic Systems
- Since it is hard to define an economic system,
they are define based on their classifications. - Economic systems are classified into
- Traditional classification by using ideological
classification or spectrum of isms or by
anthropological classification using
environmental, social, historical, and cultural
classification. - Modern classification by considering a system as
a form of organization, the system then, defines
the tools of organizational theory. - This classification identifies important
characteristics such as ownership of the means
of production, class structure, role of the
state, mode of culture, and other institutions.
8Traditional Classification ISMS
- Ideological Classification
- Feudalism.
- Mercantilism
- Capitalism
- Socialism
- communism
9Traditional Classification - Social
- Economic Anthropology - Cultural Economics
- Nomadic
- Foraging bands.
- Hunters.
- Sedentary.
- Horticultural (tribes).
- Pre-capitalist states.
- Agrarian and present societies.
- Agricultural societies.
- Industrial societies.
- Informational societies.
- Globalization
10Modern classification
- Organizational theory
- Nature of information mechanism.
- Behavioral rules.
- Individual versus collectivism.
- Decision making arrangements.
- Property rights.
- Role of the sex (gender).
- Formal versus informal sectors.
- Urban versus rural areas.
11Economic system
- is a set of mechanisms and institutions for the
implementation of decisions concerning
production, consumption, allocation,
distribution, exchange, income, and technology
within a given geographic area (sovereignty). - An economic system consists of mechanisms and
institutions of organizational arrangements and
decision making rules.
12Economic Systems
- An economic system can vary in any of its
dimensions , particularly its structure, its
operations and functions, and its adaptability to
traditions, values, beliefs, norms, taboos, and
attitudes (culture distinctive way of life of a
group of people) and the resulting behavior
patterns that directly affect economic behavior
and outcomes.
13Economic Systems
- An economic system is multidimensional
- ES f( A1, A 2, A3, A 4 .An)
- Where
- ES Economic System
- A Attributes or characteristics of the system.
- Economic systems are define in terms of many (n)
characteristics, i.e., ownership of property.
14Economic Systems
- There are four general attributes, A4
- Organization of decision making arrangements ?
structure. - Mechanism for the provision of information and
for coordination ? Market and plan. - Property rights ? control of FOP and Income
return. - Mechanism for setting goals and objectives, and
for including and inducing people to act ?
incentives and rewards.
15First Attribute Structure
- Structure is an outcome based on value added ,
for example, some economic systems are heavily
agricultural in nature, others are in
manufacturing activities, and if the economic
system is highly developed then it will be in the
services which provide highest amount of labor
value added. - with development, transition on structure
usually occurs. - Example of two societies
- Columbus, Ohio service oriented with skilled
labor and managerial ability (service oriented
society). - Cleveland, Ohio Manufacturing, unskilled labor,
capital intensity Manufacturing oriented
society).
16First Attribute Structure
- Structure deals with the organization of decision
making arrangements. - Organization is structure.
- The rules of the organization are determine by
culture, rules and laws and their enforcement. - There are external frameworks, self imposed
rules, values, beliefs, norms (mores and
folkways), attitudes, and traditions that limit
their behavior. - Examples of organizations government
departments, stock markets, corporations,
charities, labor unions, churches, schools, etc. - Organization rules are generally written and
codified and are subsidiary of general culture
and laws of society. - Nobel Herbert Simon an organization refers to
the complex pattern of communications and other
relations in a group of human beings within the
context of their culture. - J. M. Montias an organization consists of a set
of participants (members) regularly interacting
in the process of carrying on one or more
activities within a culture and sovereignty.
17First Attribute Structure
- Organizations must have some turnover in its
membership and - must be able to change the activities it pursues.
- Organized behavior has different advantages than
unorganized. - In an organization goals exist, information is
created, and assumptions and attitudes are
formed. - In an organization individuals participate in an
organized behavior to pursue self interest
constrained by bounded rationality.
18First Attribute Structure
- Self interest is the maximization of some utility
function constrained by a broad range of human
limitations such as ability to generate, process,
and utilize information. - Self interest means that I take priority over the
unknown. - Self interest means to always take more out than
what you put in that is, efficiency where the
value of output exceeds the value of inputs in
the productions process.
19First Attribute Structure
- Two organizational problems in a system of self
interest participants - Technical administrative problems derive from
individuals who are limited in their ability to
make decisions because of incomplete information. - Agency managerial problems derive from
individuals who, while pursuing self interest may
pursue objectives different than those
established by the organization. For example,
employees objectives and employer objectives, and
Board and CEOs objectives and shareholders'
objectives.
20First Attribute Structure
- To handle these two problems, the organization
must establish a set of rules which set up
subgroups within the organization assigning
tasks, coordinating activities, monitoring
activities, and describing the nature of
incentive arrangements. - Rules of the organization along with external
factors such as culture, history, politics, etc.
determine the nature of the organization and lead
to basic and important distinctions among
economic systems.
21First Attribute Structure
- Rules of the organization are written, codified,
and preempted by societys culture and laws. - Procedures are less formal than rules, the day to
day running. Less formal forces than laws, and
easily change but more enduring, for example,
employment practices, promotions, ways of
purchasing and produce. - Culture (traditions, customs, values, beliefs,
norms) also determine economic outcomes, do
things different ways and have particular values,
beliefs, norms, prejudices, and traditions, for
example, high trust societies like Japan and
Germany, flexible institutions in USA, and low
trust such as France, China, and Italy.
22First Attribute Structure
- Rules of the Organization (structure) determine
how activities are carry out by organization
within two extremes - Hierarchy where the superiors/principals
establish objectives and issue orders to the
subordinates/agents who carry out assigned tasks
leading to achievement of organizational
objectives and goals. - Association where the decision making occurs
among individuals where there is not
superior-subordinate relationship but, rather
equality among individuals, i.e., corporate
stockholders/shareholders.
23First Attribute Structure
- Rules of the Organization (structure) most common
is hierarchy but with different degrees - Number of levels of the hierarchy.
- Allocation of tasks among the levels.
- Span of control and number of subordinates
directed by superior. - Changes of hierarchy roles, i.e., agents becoming
superiors.
24First Attribute Structure
- Organizational hierarchy
- Technology systems require team production
because team efforts produces output but it is
difficult to access individuals contribution. - However, this may slack production unless
superior monitors work and rewards efforts. - There are two reasons for hierarchy in
organization - Risk takers/risk avoiders.
- Costs.
25First Attribute Structure
- Reason - risk takers/risk avoiders
- Employees (as FOP) work for the owner and obey
instructions. - Employer rips rewards of profit and success.
- But employer risks losses if business fails.
- Production is hierarchical because management
problems are complicated to organize production
through markets.
26First Attribute Structure
- Reason for structure of organization Costs
- Coordination and decision making in markets have
costs such as capital, legal, financial,
objective and subjective, fixed and variable
costs. - Costs can be decrease and avoid through market
coordination and managerial cooperation. - Market coordination is the coordination of
economic activities using the price system
mechanism to allocate resources and transmit
information or provide incentives. - Managerial Cooperation is the coordination or
direction from managers to subordinates to
coordinate the economic activities of the
organization. - Coordination of decision making activities have
costs with respect to market cooperation and
managerial coordination. - Examples of managerial costs are contract costs,
directing and training employees to fulfill
required tasks, or hiring subcontractors.
27First Attribute Structure
- Structure of the organization of (economic)
systems can be characterized by the level at
which resource allocation decisions are made and
executed - Centralized decisions are made at the high
levels of the organization. - Decentralized decisions are made at the lower
levels of the organization.
28First Attribute Structure
- Centralization is characterized by a single plan
governing the utilization of economic resources
and production of output which are prepared ,
codified, and formalized as law. - Problems with centralization
- Quantity of information gathered.
- Accuracy of information gathered.
- Only planners are well informed and resources are
usually not use right. - System of quotas is use to avoid overestimation
of capital and raw materials.
29First Attribute Structure
- Decentralization important decisions are taken by
individuals rationally and self interest
motivated or private institutions. - The government functions are largely to provide a
framework and stability within which the markets
can operate. - Decentralization does not necessarily mean
non-planning.
30First Attribute Structure
- Differences between centralization and
decentralization are important to use to know how
the organization achieve objectives in the
decision making. - Decision making within an economic system are
made or assessed in terms of organizational
structure which is the way in which the
organization generates and utilizes information
and the way in which organizations structure
allocates authority and responsibility for the
decision making among the levels of the
organization.
31First Attribute Structure
- Hierarchical organizational structure Superior
subordinate - Agents are organized in groups, subunits, and
smaller organizations, i.e., branch,
global/multinational, conglomerate companies,
government enterprise to a department, state
government to a ministry of the federal
government. - Structural organizations enter into contracts via
the principal who has controlling authority and
engages an agent to act subject to the
principals control and instructions (scope of
employment). - Agent is the party that acts for or on behalf or
as a representative of the principal. - Co. X (principal) contracts with Co. Y whereby
agent of Y supplies principle of X.
32First Attribute Structure
- The principal allocation of resources takes place
in the enterprise (economic coordination) yet the
decision (authority) may be below or above. - Lower level decisions (enterprise - plant).
- Intermediate decisions (corporation or branch
department - CEOs/Mgt.). - High level decisions (conglomerate or ministry
Board of Directors)
33First Attribute Structure
- Two factors determine the level of resource
allocation - Authority (distribute within the organization).
- Information (way of resource utilization).
- Examples of Authority
- In a perfectly centralized economy authority is a
single central command and lowers to lower units
of the organization. - In perfectly decentralized economy all the
decision making authority rests within the lower
subunits ( HH /Business) independent of superior
authority. - In the real world authority is spread through
different levels of hierarchy.
34First Attribute Structure
- Example of information
- Perfect centralization the information means that
a single decision maker possess all information
about all participants, their actions, and their
environments. - Perfectly decentralized decision makers possess
and utilize information . - Informationally decentralized economy generates,
process, and utilizes information at the lowest
level without exchanging information to higher
levels of the organization, for example, prices
are exchange only at the lower levels. - Informationally centralized economy involves the
generating, processing, and utilization of
information by superiors and subsequent
transmission to only limited lower units.
35First Attribute Structure
- Perfectly centralized information is almost
impossible because information on prices,
locations, outputs, and technology is too
overwhelming to centralized. - The lower levels have advantage on this
information and have opportunistic behavior,
meaning that lower level units can use the
information advantage against the interest of its
superior. - Agents hold information back to use against
authority (blackmail and leverage weapon).
36First Attribute Structure
- Types of opportunistic behavior
- Moral hazard.
- Adverse selection.
- 1. Moral hazard type of opportunistic behavior
- Occurs when the level unit exploits information
advantage to alter its behavior and relationship
in its contract with superiors. - For example, buyer offers seller steady supply at
a fixed price if seller acquires equipment
specialized to buyer.
37First Attribute Structure
- 2. Adverse selection as to opportunistic behavior
in decentralization of information - Occurs when agents (lower units) conceal
information from superior (principal) making
impossible for the principal to distinguish among
them. - For example
- - all enterprises tell a government agency that
they can not adopt to new technology or
regulation. - - company conceal costs to avoid taxes.
- - strikes and riots by lower levels.
- - Headquarters absorbed costs to subsidiaries
such as tariffs,
taxes, or
show records with lower costs.
38First Attribute Structure
CENTER
CENTER
SUBUNITS
INTERMEDIATE AUTHORITY
SUBUNITS
39Second Attribute Market Vs. Plan
- Another dimension or attribute to compare
economic systems and their economic activities
may be coordinated based on reliance to planning
or market. - Both are mechanisms for providing decisions in
economic systems. - Market economies are usually associated with
decentralization. - Market economies can combine concentration of
decision making authority and information in few
large corporations with substantial state
involvement without being a planned economy. - Planned economies vary from centralized planning
of former Soviet Union to indicative planning of
France and a combination of them. - Planned economies reveal different levels of
coordination mechanism such as Norway in one
extreme and Japan on the other.
40Second Attribute Plan Economies
- The government determines or at least seeks to
influence the answers the coordinating economic
questions. - Command Planning
- Government controls of production.
- Government controls all enterprises and
institutions. - Government controls the flow of resources,
materials, and finished commodities (circular
flow). - Plans are formalized and endowed with the force
of law. - All actors and players are required to follow
procedures and achieve targets prescribed under
treat of sanction. - It is compulsive and coerced.
- The planning is done at the top.
41Second Attribute Plan Economies
- Subunits are subordinated by specific
instructions or directives formulated by a
superior agency Planning Board and
disseminated through a planned document
Directive Planning. - Participants are induced to carry out the
directives via appropriate incentives or threats
designed by planning authorities which specifics
differ from economy to economy. - Economic activities are guided by instructions or
directives from higher units and transmitted to
lower units. - Rewards and threats depend on the achievement of
plan directives.
42Second Attribute Plan Economies
- Resources are allocated according to instructions
and commands of planners who thereby usurp the
role of the market as allocators of the factors
of production. - Society's desires and preferences dominate the
political system but in reality is only some
consumers. - Decisions are made by the planners and
therefore, planners preferences prevail.
43Second Attribute Plan Economies
- Indicative planning
- Government relies primarily on voluntary and
uncoerced. - Response to the private sector with a set of
guidelines produced as a result of discussions
among the government, industry, and labor. - The objective of planning is to provide
information base on consensus on the broad
direction of the economy. - Expertise of the government on marshalling/maneuve
r statistics, producing forecasts, provide
forums, formalize outcomes, and initiate remedial
actions. - The main purpose is to plan and lay out functions
of the economic system parallel to the market. - Western Europe (France) and Japan are examples.
44Second Attribute Market
- Market forces of demand and supply, buyers and
sellers, provide signals that trigger
organization to make decisions on resource
utilization through the price system mechanism. - There is freedom and no coercion and the outcomes
are determine by the voluntary actions of
individuals, - therefore, absence of bureaucratic constraints
and maximization of the role of choice. - Power is concentrated on individuals in the form
of wealth (ownership of resources) or groups
formed voluntarily, for example, corporations.
45Second Attribute Market
- Market coordinates the activities of decision
making units. - Households earn income by providing the FOP
(land, labor, capital, and entrepreneurship). - Households buy goods and services with their
income that business supply. - Households and firms respond to the market.
- There are many mechanisms of information.
- Authority is vested at lower levels of the
economic activities. - Government can exercise influence over what goods
and services are produced. - Factors such as public goods and externalities,
and market power of large concentrations of firms
(monopoly and oligopolies) abridge the consumers
ability to dictate resource allocation. - Consumers vote and exercise consumers
sovereignty. - A vote cast indicate what goods and services are
desire/wanted by the market.
46The Circular Flow
Factors of Production services
47Second Attribute Plan
- Indicative Planning
- Market serves as principal instrument for
resource allocation but a plan is prepared to
guide decision making. - Planners seek to project aggregate or sectoral
trends and to provide information beyond that
normally supplied by market. - It is not broken into directives or instructions
for individual production units. - Enterprises are free to apply information in the
plan as they see fit though indirect means are
use to influence.
48Third Attribute Property Rights
- Property rights as attribute or characteristic
means control and income power (control and
return on control income). - Ownership refers to the various property rights
that individuals may have over objects or claims
on objects or services. - ownership rights affect disposition and
utilization of resources.
49Third Attribute Property Rights
- Nature and extend of individual rights
- All economic systems (through the government)
impose some constraints on individual rights of
their economic matters. - The type or character of society is determined by
the extend of rights and freedoms of the
individuals. - The right to own property such as food, clothing,
shelter, furniture, etc. and the rights to have
the means of production such as enterprises,
tools and machinery, organizations, inventories,
and the rights to use goods and services varies
in the different economic and cultural systems.
50Third Attribute Property Rights
- Distinction of property rights under different
IMS - 1. Socialism the means of production are owned
by the state. - 2. Capitalism free enterprise, resources are
owned by individuals or freely associated groups,
the rights to property are restrictive. - Capitalism government may oversee the
environment, imposed, zones, licenses, prevent
profiteering from disasters, law of waste, rent
and wage controls, grant monopolies (utilities),
regulated commodities and prices gasoline,
firearms, tobacco, and alcohol. - Few laissez faire Hong Kong, Macau, Singapore.
51Third Attribute Property Rights
- Property Rights
- Extend beyond merely physical property such as
clean air, right to quiet enjoyment, right to
access, right to earn income from invention,
right to write and broadcast. - In the West
- developed incrementally, adapted and extended
both by precedent and by laws. - New technology and new circumstances have
required new rights be defined, for example,
environmental property rights, intellectual
rights, right to use and access waves and
frequencies, and right to quiet enjoyment. - Physical property rights ensure forms of market
relations but does not go as far as stimulate
efficiency. - Property rights is a bazaar not a market Yalsin
on Russian reform economics. - Legal systems function to promote efficiency and
utilization of scare FOP. - Laws protect property rights
52Third Attribute Property Rights
- Categories of property rights (ownership rights)
- 1. right of disposition
- 2. right to transfer the ownership rights to
others within or outside the organization - 3. right of utilization
- use the good or service as the owner deems
appropriate - rights to use the product
- right to protect property
53Third Attribute Property Rights
- 1. Disposition of goods and services
- The transfer of ownership to others within or
without organization or system. - Right to sell or exchange property at a price
deem appropriate by the seller (efficiency
through the price system). - 2. Ownership is the right to utilization
whereby the owner can use goods and services as
deem appropriate . - It is the right to earn income (cash flow
rights). - 3. Right to use goods and services generated by
the goods and services in question. - Control right privatization versus
nationalization.
54Third Attribute Property Rights
- Ownership refers to various property rights
individuals may have over objects or claims on
objects or services. - May be rest within more than one individual at
different times. - Example rent a car. You have utilization but not
disposition and stockholders owned the companys
profits but not operation of the company. - may be temporary or permanent
- may be de jure - rightful and legitimate
ownership. Has actual possession and rightful
title of property (by law). - may be de facto - equity not actual possession
nor rightful and legitimate ownership
established by custom and usage.
55Third Attribute Property Rights
- Forms of property rights
- 1. Private
- 2. Public
- 3. Collective cooperative.
56Third Attribute Property Rights
- type of ownership
- 1. private
- right to possess, utilize, and dispose of
property rests on the individual owner(s) - owners maximize the lifetime income of property
- capital will yield the highest rate of return
- property yields income to individuals
- time preferences of ownership determined by the
individual - use revenue/cost analysis - profit maximized -
where MRMC - no risk --gt market allocation mechanism
57Third Attribute Property Rights
- Type of ownership
- 2. public
- right to utilize and dispose belongs to the state
(collective) - use benefit/cost analysis
- society determines lifetime income
- no risk
- time preferences determined by the state
- 2. cooperative/coolective
- the right does not belong to the individual nor
state - property belongs to the group
58Fourth Attribute Incentives
- The fourth attribute or characteristic is the
mechanism for setting goals and objectives, and
for including and inducing people to act. - encourage people and therefore, incentives and
rewards which change peoples behavior. - important in the transformation, ownership, and
organization of property rights. - incentive mechanisms induce participants from
lower hierarchical levels to fulfill the
directives of higher level participants - can be
material or moral.
59Fourth Attribute Incentives
- Conditions of Incentives (three)
- 1. The person who is to receive the reward must
be able to influence the outcomes for which the
reward will be given - 2. Superior (principals) must be able to check on
subordinates (agents) to see whether tasks have
been executed properly - 3. Potential reward must matter to subordinates
- General comments
- In hierarchy, incentives are important if there
is perfect information to know if tasks are
carried our properly - Principal needs to develop incentives for agent
to act on interests of principal - The way that the system is organized affects the
information incentives of principals and agents
60Fourth Attribute Incentives
- Incentives may be material or moral
- 1. Material Incentives
- typical of modern economical societies
- promote desirable behavior by giving the
recipient a greater claim over material goods - give recipient cash bonuses
- neoclassical those who provide inputs to system
are rewarded according to productivity - Therefore, rewards are offered for higher
productivity - can be done when property isnt private
- 2. Moral Incentives
- Rewards desirable behavior by appealing to
recipients responsibility to society or company
and raises the recipients societal stature within
the community - doesnt give recipients command over material
goods - bestows a medal or trophy
- moral incentives are more important under public
ownership because it builds into future
organizations
61Evaluation of economic outcomes
- General Comments
- Economic outcomes can be systematically related
to variations of economic systems which is the
central factor of comparative economic systems. - The central focus of comparative economic systems
is the characterization of the differences in
economic systems and the influence of those
differences on outcomes. - The field of comparative cultural economic
systems sustains comparative analysis using both
the theoretical and abstract models and real
world variants. - Models serve to make comparisons in simple ways
and provide a means for production outcomes to
establish a norm for assessing ultimate real
world outcomes. - Theoretical models compare and assess theoretical
variants - In the real world, complicated measurement
problems limit the ability to relate observed
outcomes to theoretical ideas.
62Determination of economic outcomes
- Influence by culture, history, freedoms, and
classifications. - Outcomes means measurable consequences like per
capita income, distribution of income, business
cycles inflation and unemployment, demographics,
standard of living, life expectancy, education,
consumption, health index, sex. Etc. - Outcomes are the result of interactions among the
available resources, the institutions, culture,
and the rules that govern the system.
63Determination of economic outcomes
- Comparative cultural economics is concern with
how the goals and objectives of different
economic systems vary because of culture and how
the system of different economies contrast such
that wealth endowments result in different
outcomes. - Outcomes
- Leave a 50.00 dollar bill on sidewalk and see
who picks up and what people do, - The parable of the talents ( Mathew
2514)servants given talentss by master and how
all used the fortune differently. - Some nations rich and other poor.
- Egalatitarian versus discriminative.
- Human capital development
- Environmentally sound.
- Fast depletion of resources.
- Healthy life expectancy.
64Determination of priorities
- Priorities are different from system to system.
- If power is centralized then authority determine
priorities. - If power is democratic then individuals can
express priorities by voting (dollars). - A vote cast in the marketplace indicate what
goods and services are desire/want. - Pressure groups (unions, associations, groups,
partes) can exert influence on priorities. - Pluralistic democratic societies the power is
concentrated on the individuals in the form of
wealth or in the hands of lobby groups or
corporations.
65Outcome of Goals and objectives of society
- Can only be achieve by sacrificing other less
important goals and objectives (trade-offs and
opportunity costs). - Scarcity of resources forces choices when
pursuing goals and objectives therefore,
preventing the production of unlimited quantities
of goods and services. - Nature of trade-offs is never clear, for example
inflation and unemployment (Phillips curve)
economic welfare in Europe and economic growth
Chinas open economy and trade and political
dictatorship military power and environmental
quality. - Performance depends on outcomes economic growth,
efficiency, income distribution (fair), stability
(inflation and unemployment, and viability of
system.
66Force influencing economic outcomes
Economic systems
- OUTCOMES
- Econ. Growth
- Econ. Development
- efficiency
- Income distribution
- Stability
- Trade-offs
Cultural/environmental factors
Operational Factors
Functional Factors
Policies
67Forces influencing economic outcomes
- Forces Influencing Economic Outcomes
- Outcomes
- Economic Growth
- Economic Development
- Efficiency
- Income Distribution
- Stability
- Trade Offs
- Forces that Influence these Outcomes
- Economic systems
- Policies
- Environmental Factors
- Operational Factors
- Functional Factors
- O f (ES, Pol, Env, O.F., F.F.)O F(ES, C/Env,
Pol, OF, FF) - In addition to economic systems (ES), outcomes
are influence by variety of forces conveniently
aggregated as cultural, policy, functional and
operational factors. - It is difficult to isolate them and know their
real impact even when ceteris paribus applies
68Evaluation of economic outcomes
- Problems of Factors
- Labor Productivity as outcome low in Russia,
India, and China compared to the EU and United
States. - Economic Development level in China and India is
low if measured per capita. GDA compared to US
and EU. - Agricultural Performance in Russia and England -
grain yields were low in Russia compared to
England - Other Elements also affect this The difference
is not only on economic systems but fertility of
land, supply of labor, fertilizer, and multiple
crop systems - As outcomes of economic activity of different
economic systems will be studied and evaluated,
it is important to identify clear performance
criteria and develop some generally subjective
weighting criteria to aggrandize this criterion - Although the result of such an exercise is mainly
subjective, there is a considerable measure of
agreement on the criteria that might be used to
assess economic performance - must recognize the importance on the economic and
non-economic criteria when observing stability,
trade off, efficiency, and income distribution
69Evaluation of economic outcomes
- Performance criteria Economic Growth, Economic
Development, and Efficiency - Economic Growth refers to increases in the output
of goods and services in a system and or
increases in output per capita - Economic Development is societal changes and
improvements on the well being of the population
through innovation and technology - Efficiency is the effectiveness in which a system
uses its resources at a point in time (static) or
through time (dynamic).
70Evaluation of economic outcomes Efficiency
- Extensive and Intensive Economic Growth
- Extensive Economic Growth - growth achieved
through the expanded use of resources - ability
to produce more output through innovation and
invention - Intensive Economic Growth - growth achieved
through the better use of resources - Through difficult to measure with precision, the
concept of efficiency is frequently related to
extensive economic growth (growth achieved
through the expanded use of resources) and the
concept of intensive economic growth (growth
achieved through the better use of resources)
71Evaluation of economic outcomes Efficiency
- Economic and Technological Efficiency
- Economic or Allocative Efficiency - ability to
use resources in the right places to get the most
efficient output - uses Intensive Economic Growth - Technological Efficiency - ability to produce
more output through innovation and invention -
Uses Extensive Economic Growth - Efficiency and the Production Possibilities
Frontier - Static Inefficiency - operating within the
Production Possibilities Frontier - Static Efficiency - operating on the Production
Possibilities Frontier - Dynamic Efficiency - operating outside the
Production Possibilities Frontier
72Evaluation of economic outcomes Efficiency
P1 static efficiency P2 statically
inefficiency P3 dynamic efficiency
Consumer goods
Convex b/c law of increasing costs, trade-offs,
and opportunity costs. All possible combinations
of c/er and p/er g/s that a particular econ.
System is capable of producing at aprticular time
using all available limited resources at maximun
efficiency
P3
P2
P1
Producer goods
73Evaluation of economic outcomes income
distribution
- Income Distribution
- Can be measured with the Lorenz Curve ( of total
income vs. of householders) - Perfect equality would be a straight line on the
Lorenz Curve - The Gini Coefficient measures the differences in
equality and inequality - Income Inequality Reflects
- efforts in the provision of labor
- frugality - provision of capital
- ownership of resources
- fortune (luck)
- inheritance of physical or mental
capabilities - taxes
- provision of social services
74Income distribution Lorenz curve and Gini
coefficient
Gini coefficient difference between equality and
inequality curves
Perfect/absolute equality
Perfect inequality
of total income
Gini coefficient
Brazil
England
Imperfect inequality
of households
75Evaluation of economic outcomes stability and
trade-offs
- Stability
- ability of an economic system to grow without
significant cyclical fluctuations such as
inflation and unemployment - also does not have
fluctuations in economic growth. - instability leads to losses in output.
- Trade-offs
- military power, environmental quality, health,
education, infrastructure, democratic political
institutions, higher or lower taxes - we must
sacrifice something to obtain something else. - possibly the ultimate test for an economic.
- Levels of income
- Nations can be compare regarding income levels.
76Evaluation of economic outcomes level of income
- Levels of income
- Nations can be compare regarding income levels.
- GDP adjusted to money using exchange rates.
- Few economies have very high levels of income
(less than 15) but account for 80 of the
worlds product - 56 of world population lives in relative poverty
with no hope and accounts for less than 5 of the
worlds GDP. - Developed market economic systems account for 23
richest countries.
77Evaluation of economic outcomes
- Performance means high economic growth.
- Chile due to privatization
- China and India due to open economy to foreign
investment and trade. - Singapore and Hong Kong due to market oriented
economic system through non democratic
governments. - United States due to market system and high level
of technology.
78COMPARATIVE CULTURAL ECONOMICS Definitions,
Classifications, outcomes
end
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