Command System
Market Economy
Introduction to Types of Economic Systems
The way a nation determines how to use its resources to satisfy its people’s needs and wants is called an economic system.
Economists have identified 4 types of economic systems.
1.
Traditional System
2.
Command System
Traditional System
3.
Market System
4.
Mixed System
In a traditional economy, the 3 economic questions are answered according to tradition.
Economic decisions are based on customs and beliefs that have been handed down by generation.
Parents teach children to perform the same tasks that they learned from their parents.
Examples: Inuit of North America, The Mbuti of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and the Aborigines of Australia.
Advantages: (1) You know what is expected of you. (2) Family and community ties are usually very strong.
Disadvantages: (1) Change is discouraged, making production inefficient.
(2) Choice among consumer goods is rare. (3) Accumulating wealth is not likely.
In a command economy government leaders control the factors of production and make all decisions about their use.
Through regulations about education the government guides people into certain jobs, which dictates what individuals earn.
Examples: North Korea and parts of the People’s Republic of China.
Advantages: (1) Little uncertainty of employment.
Disadvantages: (1) Lack of incentives to work hard. (2) Lack of consumer choices. (3) Government sets workers salaries.
In a market economy, also called capitalism , individuals own the factors of production and make economic decisions through free interaction (free market) while looking out for their own and their families best interests.
Prices in a market coordinate the interaction between buyers and sellers.
The freedom of prices to rise and fall results in a neutral, self-organizing, incentive-driven system.
Economists use a model called a circular flow of income and output to illustrate how a market system works.
The factors of production flow from individuals to businesses, who use those factors to produce goods/services that flow back to individuals.
Mixed Economy
Advantages: (1) People have freedom to choose a career, spend income, own property and take risks to earn profits. (2) Competition provides consumers with a wide variety of goods and services to choose from, as well as an efficient way of determining costs.
Disadvantages: (1) Because the pure market system is so driven by the individual looking out for their own interests, many fear that those too old, young, or sick to work will not survive unless churches, families or organizations step in to provide goods and services for them.
A mixed economy combines basic elements of a market economy and a command economy. Most countries have a mixed economy where private ownership of property and individual decision making are combined with government intervention and regulations
Examples : United States
Advantages : (1) Wide range of choice on the part of the individual. (2)
Regulations in place to protect environment, provide safety guidelines for workers, and laws to protect consumers.
Disadvantages : (1) Potential for profits might not be as great as in a pure market system.
Summary, Reflection, Analysis
Question : Which of the four economic systems would not be represented by the circular flow of income and output model ? Why? (There are 2 answers, use diagram on page 39 if necessary.)