Title: Economic Systems
1Economic Systems
2Economic Systems
- An economic system describes how a countrys
economy is organized - Because of the problem of scarcity, every country
needs a system to determine how to use its
productive resources - Scarcity not having enough of something
- An economic system must answer 3 questions
3The 3 Economic Questions (3E?s)
- WHAT TO PRODUCE? (What kinds of goods and
services should be produced?) - HOW TO PRODUCE? (What productive resources are
used to produce goods and services?) - FOR WHOM TO PRODUCE? (Who gets to have the goods
and services?
4Three Types of Economic Systems
- 1. Traditional Economy
- 2. Command Economy
- 3. Market Economy
- Most countries are Mixed Economies! (Market
Command)
5Traditional Economy
- An economic system in which economic decisions
are based on customs and beliefs - People will make what they always made will do
the same work their parents did - Exchange of goods is done through Bartering
trading without using money
6How a Traditional Economy answers the 3E?s
- Who decides what to produce?
- People follow their customs and make what their
ancestors made - Who decides how to produce goods services?
- People grow make things the same way that their
ancestors did - Who are the goods services produced for?
- People in the village who need them
7Traditional Economy
- Examples
- Villages in Africa and South America
- the Inuit tribes in Canada
- the caste system in parts of rural India
- the Aborigines in Australia
8Positives of a traditional economy
- Predictable
- Knowing what your job will be
- Knowing the way you will live
9Problems with a traditional economy
- Lack many resources
- Only produce enough to live on
10Command System
- Government makes all economic decisions owns
most of the property - Governmental planning groups determine such
things as the prices of goods/services the
wages of workers - This system has not been very successful more
and more countries are abandoning it
11How a Command Economy answers the 3E?s
- Who decides what to produce?
- Government makes all economic decisions
- Who decides how to produce goods and services?
- Government decides how to make goods/services
- Who are the goods and services produced for?
- Whoever the government decides to give them to
12Command System
- Countries with communist governments have
Command economies - Examples There are no truly pure command
economic systems, but close countries are
North Korea, former Soviet Union, Cuba -
- Germany and Russia have moved away from having
a Command economy since 1991. Now they have a
Mixed economy.
13Positives of a command economy
- Because the government makes the decisions,
people dont have to worry about employment,
housing, education, and healthcare
14Problems with a command economy
- Consumers get low priority
- Little freedom of choice
- All resources are owned by the government
15Market Economy
- An economic system in which production and
distribution questions are answered by prices and
profits (supply and demand) - Most of the resources are owned by private
citizens - Economic decisions are based on Free Enterprise
(competition between companies) - Important economic questions are not answered by
gov. but by individuals - Gov. does not tell a business what goods to
produce or what price to charge
16How a Market Economy answers the 3E?s
- Who decides what to produce?
- Businesses base decisions on supply and demand
and free enterprise (PRICE) - Who decides how to produce goods and services?
- Businesses decide how to produce goods
- Who are the goods and services produced for?
- consumers
17Market Economy
- There are no truly pure Market economies, but the
United States is close.
18- In a truly free market economy, the government
would not be involved at all - There would be no laws to protect workers form
unfair bosses - There would be no rules to make sure that credit
cards were properly protected - Many societies have chosen to have some rules to
protect consumers, workers, and businesses
(MIXED) - These rules reduce the freedoms that businesses
have, but they also protect the workers and
consumers
19Positives of a market economy
- People can start their own businesses
- People have choice
20Problems with a market economy
- The desire for money may lead to poor quality of
goods and services - Business owners have to risk losing money
21Mixed Economy
- Market Command Mixed
- Businesses own most resources and determine what
and how to produce, but the government regulates
certain industries - There are no pure command or market economies.
- To some degree, all modern economies exhibit
characteristics of both systems and are often
referred to as mixed economies. - Most economies are closer to one type of economic
system than another
22How a Mixed Economy answers the 3E?s
- Who decides what to produce?
- businesses
- Who decides how to produce goods and services?
- Businesses, but the government regulates certain
industries - Who are the goods and services produced for?
- consumers
23Mixed Economies
- Most democratic countries fall in this category
(there are no truly pure Market or Command
economies). - Examples Brazil, Mexico, Canada, UK, US,
Germany, Russia, Australia, etc.
24Continuum of Economies
Pure Command
Pure Market
MostIndividual freedom
NoIndividual freedom
Most economies fall in between a pure market and
a pure command economy on the continuum
25Economy Continuum
Command
Market
US
UK
Germany
Cuba
Russia
Australia
26Which Economic System Is Best?
- Market system has proven to be best because it
promotes the goals of growth, freedom,
efficiency - Citizens are free to own their own property and
use it in the most efficient and profitable way - Command and Traditional systems sometimes offer
more security, but are not nearly as strong in
efficiency, growth, freedom, and environmental
quality