Economic Systems
Economic Systems
Economic Systems
ECONOMIC SYSTEMS
OBJECTIVES
SCARCITY
• THERE ARE NEVER ENOUGH RESOURCES
• SOCIETY MUST FIND WAYS TO DIVIDE WHAT IT HAS BASED ON ITS NEEDS
• A market economy is the opposite of a command economy. In a market economy, people decide on their
own how to utilize the factors of production. They can choose from whom they buy, for whom they work for,
and what businesses they own and operate. If you want to invest your own capital or be an entrepreneur and
start your own company, you're free to do so. Buyers and sellers are brought together in markets.
• The fundamental economic problem of what, how and for whom to produce is solved by the market
mechanism of supply and demand.
• A market economy, also known as a capitalistic or free market economy, relies on capitalism, free
enterprise, and freedom of choice.
ADVANTAGES OF A MARKET ECONOMY
Markets allocate resources and for that reason a market system is more
effective in the allocation of resources and the distribution of goods and
services than any other system.
Consumers use ‘money votes’ to dictate to producers, through the market,
what to produce.
Businesses are motivated by profits and respond quickly to changes in
consumer preferences.
Individuals have economic freedom: the freedom of consumption,
production or occupation, the freedom to invest or save and the freedom of
private ownership.
Under a market system there are more technological innovations than under
other systems.
DISADVANTAGES OF A MARKET ECONOMY
• A command economy is one in which the government decides how the factors of production
are used. For example, the government determines who owns the businesses, who buys and
sells to whom, and who makes the ultimate decisions regarding businesses, including who
works for them.
• Communism is a primary example of a command economy in that the government makes all
business decisions and handles all factors of production. In a communist country, the
government decides if you're going to college and chooses your field of study; they can also
designate you as a laborer. In this type of economic system, you'd have very few free choices.
B) COMMAND ECONOMY
WHAT TO PRODUCE?
In a command or centrally planned economic system the government owns all the
productive resources as well as the businesses and decides what the local people will
produce and sell.
HOW TO PRODUCE?
Government decides how much to produce
A government planning office decides how to allocate the resources. It estimates the
types of products individuals may want and decides on the distribution of finished
products. By doing this, they avoid wasteful competition.
There may be a more equal distribution of income as the state controls all the factors of
production.
It is possible to control inflation. If shortages are experienced, there may be queues at
shops or rationing of goods rather than price increases.
DISADVANTAGES OF A COMMAND ECONOMY
WHAT TO PRODUCE?
In a mixed economic system, the market is allowed to operate, that means most production decisions take
place in the market between buyers and sellers and businesses decide what to produce based on supply
and demand and incentive for profit. Government will intervene where the market fails and provide things
like law and order, education and health services.
HOW TO PRODUCE?
Businesses decide how much to produce, but the government regulates some industries.
The four main participants in the economy are the household sector, the
business sector, the government sector and the foreign sector.
• Households
Household is an economic unit of one or more persons living under one
roof that has a source of income and spends it.
Also known as consumers because they consume goods and services to
satisfy their needs.
They sell their labour and use the income they earn to buy consumer
goods and services.
When consumers spend money on goods and services, we refer to it as
consumption expenditures (C). Households represent the demand for
goods and services.
THE FOUR SECTORS OF THE ECONOMY
(CONT….
• The business sector
Represent the supply side of the product market and employ factors of
production to produce the goods and services that they sell to other businesses,
the government and households. They all want to make profits.
The expenditure by businesses on new buildings and inventories is referred to as
investment expenditure (I).
The government sector
It is a function of the government to provide public and merit goods that the
private sector cannot handle, such as defence, health and education.
Public goods are consumed collectively such as national defence, law and order and street lights.
Merit goods are under-provided by the market, such as health and education services.
The government receives revenues from businesses and households in the form of various direct
and indirect taxes. These revenues are used to cover the government’s expenditure (G).
THE FOUR SECTORS OF THE ECONOMY (CONT….
The foreign sector
No country can exist in isolation and economic welfare and growth often
depend on a country’s ability to export to other countries and to import
consumer goods, capital goods and technical know-how from other countries.
Goods produced in Namibia and sold in other countries are called exports (X)
while goods produced in other countries and sold in Namibia are called imports
(M).
Net exports are exports minus imports.
We can summarise the components of total spending by using the
following equation: GDP = C + I + G + (X-M)
CLASS ACTIVITY 1
• 1–G
• 2–I
• 3–C
• 4–M
• 5–X
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