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Different Economic Systems• Scarcity refers to the limited supply of
something.– Every country must deal with the
problem of scarcity since no country has everything that its people need/want.
• Every country must develop an economic system to determine how to use its limited resources to answer the three basic economic questions:– What goods/services will be produced?– How will goods/services be produced?– For whom will the goods/services be
produced?• The way a country answers these
questions determines its economic system.
Traditional Economy
• an economic system in which economic decisions are based on customs and beliefs
• People will make what they always have made & will do the same work their parents did.
• exchange of goods is done through bartering - trading without using money
Traditional Economy
• 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.
• For whom are the goods & services produced?– people in the village who need them
Traditional Economies
• Examples:– villages in Africa and South America – the Inuit tribes in Canada– the caste system in parts of rural India– the Aborigines in Australia
Command Economy
• The 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.
Command EconomyCountries with communist governments have command economies.– Examples: Cuba, former Soviet Union,
North Korea
• The government of Australia controlled one part of the economy in the past -- government-owned companies controlled telecommunications.– The government set the price for having a
phone, the cost of calls, and wages were the same in all parts of the country.
– In 1989, the company was made into a private business with stockholders owning the company.
Command Economy• Who decides what to produce?
– The government makes all economic decisions.
• Who decides how to produce goods and services?– The government decides how to make
goods/services.
• For whom are the goods and services produced?– whomever the government decides to
give them to
Market Economy• An economic system in which
economic decisions are guided by the changes in prices that occur as individual buyers and sellers interact in the market place.– 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 government but by individuals.
– The government does not tell a business what goods to produce or what price to charge.
Market Economy
• Who decides what to produce?– Businesses base decisions on supply
and demand and free enterprise.
• Who decides how to produce goods and services?– Businesses decide how to produce
goods.
• For whom are the goods and services produced?– consumers
Market Economy
• There are no truly pure market economies, but Australia’s is close.– It is considered one of the most free
economies in the world.– Businesses operate without too many
rules from the government.– People are free to start a business and
can do so quickly.– Courts use the laws of Australia to
protect the property rights of citizens.
• 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.
Mixed Economy
• Market + Command = Mixed• 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.
• Businesses own most resources and determine what and how to produce, but the government regulates certain industries.
Mixed Economy
• Who decides what to produce?– businesses
• Who decides how to produce goods and services?– businesses, but the government
regulates certain industries
• For whom are the goods and services produced ?– consumers
Mixed 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
Australia’s Economy
• one of the freest economies in the world
• It is technically a mixed economy, but it’s close to market because there are very few rules to restrict the market.
• government does not own major industry or business– prices are set by the agreement of
buyers and sellers rather than by government rules
Australia’s Economy• People are free to own their own
businesses and property.– They decide what they want to produce.
• Buyers and sellers are able to agree on prices, and competition between sellers helps to keep the prices good for buyers.
• Business owners and consumers can depend on good laws to protect them.– The courts are considered fair and honest.
• It is very easy to start a business in Australia – the paperwork usually takes less than a week!