1.1.7

Types of Economies

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Free Market vs Command Economy

Markets are where goods and services are exchanged. A free market and a command economy are 2 different types of market system:

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Free market

  • This type of market allocates scarce resources based on the price mechanism.
  • The benefits of this:
    • It is efficient - only the highest value products are in demand. So firms are incentivised to produce as efficiently as they can.
    • It rewards entrepreneurship.
    • Consumers have greater choice of products because of the increased levels of innovation.
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Negatives of the free market

  • Inequitable - what is fair in the free market may not necessarily be fair in reality.
  • Missing markets - goods we need in society may not be produced if they cannot generate a profit.
  • Monopolies may arise.
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Command economy

  • Government is in charge of resource allocation. North Korea has a command economy.
    • This can correct the inequalities that exist in the free market.
    • There could also be a possible reduction in unemployment.
    • They can break up monopolies.
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Negatives of command economies

  • Less efficient - the government is not a profit maximising entity. So the incentive for entrepreneurship and efficiency pushing activities is reduced.
  • Asymmetric information - the government may not actually know what is best because of asymmetric information.
  • Choice restriction.

Mixed Economy - Free Market Meets Government

Instead of a purely free market or command economy, most economies involve a mixture of the price mechanism and government intervention.

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The mixed economy

  • The government forms the public sector.
  • Firms form the private sector.
  • Together, they are responsible for the allocation of scarce resources.
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Adam Smith's view

  • Smith was an advocate of the free market and the power of the 'invisible hand'.
  • He thought consumers and producers were both driven by self-interest.
  • He believed that the interaction of profit maximising firms and consumers would lead to a mutually beneficial allocation of resources.
  • He believed that there should be no monopolies and low barriers to entry.
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Karl Marx's view

  • Marx argued that the free market creates inequality and a situation where the working class are exploited.
  • He said this would lead to a revolution where means of production would be seized.
  • Marx's theories gave rise to communism, even though they said little about how command economies could actually work. Communism started to lose popularity when communist states began collapsing towards the end of the 20th century.
Illustrative background for Friedrich Hayek's viewIllustrative background for Friedrich Hayek's view ?? "content

Friedrich Hayek's view

  • Hayek was skeptical of command economies. He argued that asymmetry of information stopped them from making good decisions about resource allocation.
  • He believed that firms and consumers know best, and they should use the price mechanism to interact effectively.
  • He thought the price mechanism was a means of communication between producers and consumers.

Jump to other topics

1Introduction to Markets

2Market Failure

3The UK Macroeconomy

4The UK Economy - Policies

5Business Behaviour

6Market Structures

7A Global Perspective

8Finance & Inequality

9Examples of Global Policy

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