fbpx
Wikipedia

Economic system

An economic system, or economic order,[1] is a system of production, resource allocation and distribution of goods and services within a society or a given geographic area. It includes the combination of the various institutions, agencies, entities, decision-making processes, and patterns of consumption that comprise the economic structure of a given community.

Circulation model of economic flows for a closed market economy. In this model the use of natural resources and the generation of waste (like greenhouse gases) is not included.

An economic system is a type of social system. The mode of production is a related concept.[2] All economic systems must confront and solve the four fundamental economic problems:

  • What kinds and quantities of goods shall be produced: This fundamental economic problem is anchored on the theory of pricing. The theory of pricing, in this context, has to do with the economic decision-making between the production of capital goods and consumer goods in the economy in the face of scarce resources. In this regard, the critical evaluation of the needs of the society based on population distribution in terms of age, sex, occupation, and geography is very pertinent.
  • How goods shall be produced: The fundamental problem of how goods shall be produced is largely hinged on the least-cost method of production to be adopted as gainfully peculiar to the economically decided goods and services to be produced. On a broad note, the possible production method includes labor-intensive and capital-intensive methods.
  • How the output will be distributed: Production is said to be completed when the goods get to the final consumers. This fundamental problem of how the output will be distributed seeks to identify the best possible medium through which bottlenecks and the clogs in the wheel of the chain of economic resources distributions can reduce to the barest minimum and optimize consumers' satisfaction.
  • When to produce:[3] Consumer satisfaction is partly a function of seasonal analysis as the forces of demand and supply have a lot to do with time. This fundamental economic problem requires an intensive study of time dynamics and seasonal variation vis-a-vis the satisfaction of consumers' needs. It is noteworthy to state that solutions to these fundamental problems can be determined by the type of economic system.

The study of economic systems includes how these various agencies and institutions are linked to one another, how information flows between them, and the social relations within the system (including property rights and the structure of management). The analysis of economic systems traditionally focused on the dichotomies and comparisons between market economies and planned economies and on the distinctions between capitalism and socialism.[4] Subsequently, the categorization of economic systems expanded to include other topics and models that do not conform to the traditional dichotomy.

Today the dominant form of economic organization at the world level is based on market-oriented mixed economies.[5] An economic system can be considered a part of the social system and hierarchically equal to the law system, political system, cultural and so on. There is often a strong correlation between certain ideologies, political systems and certain economic systems (for example, consider the meanings of the term "communism"). Many economic systems overlap each other in various areas (for example, the term "mixed economy" can be argued to include elements from various systems). There are also various mutually exclusive hierarchical categorizations.

List of economic systems

Academic field of study

Economic systems is the category in the Journal of Economic Literature classification codes that includes the study of such systems. One field that cuts across them is comparative economic systems, which includes the study of the following aspects of different systems:

  • Planning, coordination and reform.
  • Productive enterprises; factor and product markets; prices; population.
  • National income, product and expenditure; money; inflation.
  • International trade, finance, investment and aid.
  • Consumer economics; welfare and poverty.
  • Performance and prospects.
  • Natural resources; energy; environment; regional studies.
  • Political economy; legal institutions; property rights.[6]

Main types

Capitalism

Capitalism generally features the private ownership of the means of production (capital) and a market economy for coordination. Corporate capitalism refers to a capitalist marketplace characterized by the dominance of hierarchical, bureaucratic corporations.

Mercantilism was the dominant model in Western Europe from the 16th to 18th century. This encouraged imperialism and colonialism until economic and political changes resulted in global decolonization. Modern capitalism has favored free trade to take advantage of increased efficiency due to national comparative advantage and economies of scale in a larger, more universal market. Some critics[who?] have applied the term neo-colonialism to the power imbalance between multi-national corporations operating in a free market vs. seemingly impoverished people in developing countries.

Mixed economy

There is no precise definition of a "mixed economy". Theoretically, it may refer to an economic system that combines one of three characteristics: public and private ownership of industry, market-based allocation with economic planning, or free markets with state interventionism.

In practice, "mixed economy" generally refers to market economies with substantial state interventionism and/or sizable public sector alongside a dominant private sector. Actually, mixed economies gravitate more heavily to one end of the spectrum. Notable economic models and theories that have been described as a "mixed economy" include the following:

Socialist economy

Socialist economic systems (all of which feature social ownership of the means of production) can be subdivided by their coordinating mechanism (planning and markets) into planned socialist and market socialist systems. Additionally, socialism can be divided based on their property structures between those that are based on public ownership, worker or consumer cooperatives and common ownership (i.e. non-ownership). Communism is a hypothetical stage of socialist development articulated by Karl Marx as "second stage socialism" in Critique of the Gotha Program, whereby the economic output is distributed based on need and not simply on the basis of labor contribution.

The original conception of socialism involved the substitution of money as a unit of calculation and monetary prices as a whole with calculation in kind (or a valuation based on natural units), with business and financial decisions replaced by engineering and technical criteria for managing the economy. Fundamentally, this meant that socialism would operate under different economic dynamics than those of capitalism and the price system.[7] Later models of socialism developed by neoclassical economists (most notably Oskar Lange and Abba Lerner) were based on the use of notional prices derived from a trial-and-error approach to achieve market clearing prices on the part of a planning agency. These models of socialism were called "market socialism" because they included a role for markets, money, and prices.

The primary emphasis of socialist planned economies is to coordinate production to produce economic output to directly satisfy economic demand as opposed to the indirect mechanism of the profit system where satisfying needs is subordinate to the pursuit of profit; and to advance the productive forces of the economy in a more efficient manner while being immune to the perceived systemic inefficiencies (cyclical processes) and crisis of overproduction so that production would be subject to the needs of society as opposed to being ordered around capital accumulation.[8][9]

In a pure socialist planned economy that involves different processes of resource allocation, production and means of quantifying value, the use of money would be replaced with a different measure of value and accounting tool that would embody more accurate information about an object or resource. In practice, the economic system of the former Soviet Union and Eastern Bloc operated as a command economy, featuring a combination of state-owned enterprises and central planning using the material balances method. The extent to which these economic systems achieved socialism or represented a viable alternative to capitalism is subject to debate.[10]

In orthodox Marxism, the mode of production is tantamount to the subject of this article, determining with a superstructure of relations the entirety of a given culture or stage of human development.

Components

There are multiple components of an economic system. Decision-making structures of an economy determine the use of economic inputs (the factors of production), distribution of output, the level of centralization in decision-making and who makes these decisions. Decisions might be carried out by industrial councils, by a government agency, or by private owners.

An economic system is a system of production, resource allocation, exchange and distribution of goods and services in a society or a given geographic area. In one view, every economic system represents an attempt to solve three fundamental and interdependent problems:

  • What goods and services shall be produced and in what quantities?
  • How shall goods and services be produced? That is, by whom and with what resources and technologies?
  • For whom shall goods and services be produced? That is, who is to enjoy the benefits of the goods and services and how is the total product to be distributed among individuals and groups in the society?[11]

Every economy is thus a system that allocates resources for exchange, production, distribution and consumption. The system is stabilized through a combination of threat and trust, which are the outcome of institutional arrangements.[12]

An economic system possesses the following institutions:

  • Methods of control over the factors or means of production: this may include ownership of, or property rights to, the means of production and therefore may give rise to claims to the proceeds from production. The means of production may be owned privately, by the state, by those who use them, or be held in common.
  • A decision-making system: this determines who is eligible to make decisions over economic activities. Economic agents with decision-making powers can enter into binding contracts with one another.
  • A coordination mechanism: this determines how information is obtained and used in decision-making. The two dominant forms of coordination are planning and markets; planning can be either decentralized or centralized, and the two coordination mechanisms are not mutually exclusive and often co-exist.[13]
  • An incentive system: this induces and motivates economic agents to engage in productive activities. It can be based on either material reward (compensation or self-interest) or moral suasion (for instance, social prestige or through a democratic decision-making process that binds those involved). The incentive system may encourage specialization and the division of labor.
  • Organizational form: there are two basic forms of organization: actors and regulators. Economic actors include households, work gangs and production teams, firms, joint-ventures and cartels. Economically regulative organizations are represented by the state and market authorities; the latter may be private or public entities.
  • A distribution system: this allocates the proceeds from productive activity, which is distributed as income among the economic organizations, individuals and groups within society, such as property owners, workers and non-workers, or the state (from taxes).
  • A public choice mechanism for law-making, establishing rules, norms and standards and levying taxes. Usually, this is the responsibility of the state, but other means of collective decision-making are possible, such as chambers of commerce or workers’ councils.[14]

Typology

 
Common typology for economic systems categorized by resource ownership and resource allocation mechanism

There are several basic questions that must be answered in order for an economy to run satisfactorily. The scarcity problem, for example, requires answers to basic questions, such as what to produce, how to produce it and who gets what is produced. An economic system is a way of answering these basic questions and different economic systems answer them differently. Many different objectives may be seen as desirable for an economy, like efficiency, growth, liberty and equality.[15]

Economic systems are commonly segmented by their property rights regime for the means of production and by their dominant resource allocation mechanism. Economies that combine private ownership with market allocation are called "market capitalism" and economies that combine private ownership with economic planning are labelled "command capitalism" or dirigisme. Likewise, systems that mix public or cooperative ownership of the means of production with economic planning are called "socialist planned economies" and systems that combine public or cooperative ownership with markets are called "market socialism".[16] Some perspectives build upon this basic nomenclature to take other variables into account, such as class processes within an economy. This leads some economists to categorize, for example, the Soviet Union's economy as state capitalism based on the analysis that the working class was exploited by the party leadership. Instead of looking at nominal ownership, this perspective takes into account the organizational form within economic enterprises.[17]

In a capitalist economic system, production is carried out for private profit and decisions regarding investment and allocation of factor inputs are determined by business owners in factor markets. The means of production are primarily owned by private enterprises and decisions regarding production and investment are determined by private owners in capital markets. Capitalist systems range from laissez-faire, with minimal government regulation and state enterprise, to regulated and social market systems, with the aims of ameliorating market failures (see economic intervention) or supplementing the private marketplace with social policies to promote equal opportunities (see welfare state), respectively.

In socialist economic systems (socialism), production for use is carried out; decisions regarding the use of the means of production are adjusted to satisfy economic demand; and investment is determined through economic planning procedures. There is a wide range of proposed planning procedures and ownership structures for socialist systems, with the common feature among them being the social ownership of the means of production. This might take the form of public ownership by all of the society, or ownership cooperatively by their employees. A socialist economic system that features social ownership, but that it is based on the process of capital accumulation and utilization of capital markets for the allocation of capital goods between socially owned enterprises falls under the subcategory of market socialism.

By resource allocation mechanism

The basic and general "modern" economic systems segmented by the criterium of resource allocation mechanism are:

Other types:

By ownership of the means of production

By political ideologies

Various strains of anarchism and libertarianism advocate different economic systems, all of which have very small or no government involvement. These include:

By other criteria

Corporatism refers to economic tripartite involving negotiations between business, labor and state interest groups to establish economic policy, or more generally to assigning people to political groups based on their occupational affiliation.

Certain subsets of an economy, or the particular goods, services, techniques of production, or moral rules can also be described as an "economy". For example, some terms emphasize specific sectors or externalizes:

Others emphasize a particular religion:

The type of labour power:

Or the means of production:

Evolutionary economics

Karl Marx's theory of economic development was based on the premise of evolving economic systems. Specifically, in his view over the course of history superior economic systems would replace inferior ones. Inferior systems were beset by internal contradictions and inefficiencies that would make it impossible for them to survive long-term. In Marx's scheme, feudalism was replaced by capitalism, which would eventually be superseded by socialism.[18] Joseph Schumpeter had an evolutionary conception of economic development, but unlike Marx he de-emphasized the role of class struggle in contributing to qualitative change in the economic mode of production. In subsequent world history, many communist states run according to Marxist–Leninist ideologies arose during the 20th century, but by the 1990s they had either ceased to exist or gradually reformed their centrally planned economies toward market-based economies, for example with perestroika and the dissolution of the Soviet Union, Chinese economic reform and Đổi Mới in Vietnam.

Mainstream evolutionary economics continues to study economic change in modern times. There has also been renewed interest in understanding economic systems as evolutionary systems in the emerging field of complexity economics.

See also

References

  1. ^ Daniel J. Cantor, Juliet B. Schor, Tunnel Vision: Labor, the World Economy, and Central America, South End Press, 1987, p. 21: "By economic system or economic order, we mean the principles, laws, institutions, and understandings business is conducted."
  2. ^ Gregory and Stuart, Paul and Robert (February 28, 2013). The Global Economy and its Economic Systems. South-Western College Pub. p. 30. ISBN 978-1285055350. Economic system – A set of institutions for decision making and for the implementation of decisions concerning production, income, and consumption within a given geographic area.
  3. ^ Samuelson, P. Anthony., Samuelson, W. (1980). Economics. 11th ed. / New York: McGraw-Hill. p. 34
  4. ^ Rosser, Mariana V. and J Barkley Jr. (July 23, 2003). Comparative Economics in a Transforming World Economy. MIT Press. pp. 1. ISBN 978-0262182348. Chapter 1 presents definitions and basic examples of the categories used in this book: tradition, market, and command for allocative mechanisms and capitalism and socialism for ownership systems.
  5. ^ Paul A. Samuelson and William D. Nordhaus (2004). Economics, McGraw-Hill, Glossary of Terms, "Mixed economy"; ch. 1, (section) Market, Command, and Mixed Economies.
    Alan V. Deardorff (2006). Glossary of International Economics, Mixed economy.
  6. ^ JEL classification codes, Economic systems JEL: P Subcategories
  7. ^ Bockman, Johanna (2011). Markets in the name of Socialism: The Left-Wing origins of Neoliberalism. Stanford University Press. p. 20. ISBN 978-0-8047-7566-3. According to nineteenth-century socialist views, socialism would function without capitalist economic categories – such as money, prices, interest, profits and rent – and thus would function according to laws other than those described by current economic science. While some socialists recognized the need for money and prices at least during the transition from capitalism to socialism, socialists more commonly believed that the socialist economy would soon administratively mobilize the economy in physical units without the use of prices or money.
  8. ^ Socialism: Still Impossible After All These Years, on Mises.org. Retrieved February 15, 2010, from Mises.org https://mises.org/journals/scholar/Boettke.pdf, What Socialism means: " The ultimate end of socialism was the 'end of history', in which perfect social harmony would permanently be established. Social harmony was to be achieved by the abolition of exploitation, the transcendence of alienation, and above all, the transformation of society from the 'kingdom of necessity' to the 'kingdom of freedom.' How would such a world be achieved? The socialists informed us that by rationalizing production and thus advancing material production beyond the bounds reachable under capitalism, socialism would usher mankind into a post-scarcity world."
  9. ^ Socialism and Calculation, on worldsocialism.org. Retrieved February 15, 2010, from worldsocialism.org: http://www.worldsocialism.org/spgb/overview/calculation.pdf 2011-06-07 at the Wayback Machine: "Although money, and so monetary calculation, will disappear in socialism this does not mean that there will no longer be any need to make choices, evaluations and calculations...Wealth will be produced and distributed in its natural form of useful things, of objects that can serve to satisfy some human need or other. Not being produced for sale on a market, items of wealth will not acquire an exchange-value in addition to their use-value. In socialism their value, in the normal non-economic sense of the word, will not be their selling price nor the time needed to produce them but their usefulness. It is for this that they will be appreciated, evaluated, wanted. . . and produced."
  10. ^ "What was the USSR? Part I: Trotsky and state capitalism". Libcom.org. 2005-04-09. Retrieved 2014-08-15.
  11. ^ Paul A Samuelson, Economics: An Introductory Analysis, 1964, International Student Edition, New York: McGraw-Hill and Tokyo: Kōgakusha, p. 15
  12. ^ Kenneth E Boulding, Economics as a Science, 1970, New York: McGraw-Hill, pp. 12–15; Sheila C Dow, Economic Methodology: An Inquiry, Oxford: Oxford University Press, p.58
  13. ^ S. Douma & H. Schreuder (2013), Economic Approaches to Organizations, 5th edition, Harlow (UK): Pearson
  14. ^ Paul R Gregory and Robert C Stuart, The Global Economy and its Economic Systems, 2013, Independence, KY: Cengage Learning, pp. 21–47 ISBN 1-285-05535-7; Erik G Furubotn and Rudolf Richter, Institutions and Economic Theory: The Contribution of the New Institutional Economics, 2000, University of Michigan Press, pp. 6–15, 21 and 30–35 ISBN 0-472-08680-4; Warren J Samuels, in Joep T J M van der Linden and André J C Manders (editor), The Economics of Income Distribution: A Heterodox Approach, 1999, Cheltenham: Edward Elgar, p. 16 ISBN 1-84064-029-4
  15. ^ David W. Conklin (1991), Comparative Economic Systems, University of Calgary Press, p.1.
  16. ^ Rosser, Mariana V. and J Barkley Jr. (July 23, 2003). Comparative Economics in a Transforming World Economy. MIT Press. pp. 8. ISBN 978-0262182348. This leads us to describe two extreme categories: market capitalism and command socialism. But this simple dichotomization raises the possibility of "cross forms,", namely, market socialism and command capitalism. Although less common than the previous two, both have existed.
  17. ^ Rosser, Mariana V. and J Barkley Jr. (July 23, 2003). Comparative Economics in a Transforming World Economy. MIT Press. pp. 8. ISBN 978-0262182348. Indeed, aside from the variation of ownership forms, some follow certain ideas in Marx, saying that how one class relates to another is the crucial matter rather than specifically who owns what, with true socialism involving a lack of exploitation of one class by another. This kind of argument can lead to the position that the Soviet Union was not really socialist but a form of state capitalism in which the government leaders exploited the workers.
  18. ^ Comparing Economic Systems in the Twenty-First Century, 2003, by Gregory and Stuart. ISBN 0-618-26181-8.

Further reading

  • Richard Bonney (1995), Economic Systems and State Finance, 680 pp.
  • David W. Conklin (1991), Comparative Economic Systems, Cambridge University Press, 427 pp.
  • George Sylvester Counts (1970), Bolshevism, Fascism, and Capitalism: An Account of the Three Economic Systems.
  • Robert L. Heilbroner and Peter J. Boettke (2007). "Economic Systems". The New Encyclopædia Britannica, v. 17, pp. 908–915.
  • Harold Glenn Moulton, Financial Organization and the Economic System, 515 pp.
  • Jacques Jacobus Polak (2003), An International Economic System, 179 pp.
  • Frederic L. Pryor (1996), Economic Evolution and Structure: 384 pp.
  • Frederic L. Pryor (2005), Economic Systems of Foraging, Agricultural, and Industrial Societies, 332 pp.
  • Graeme Snooks (1999), Global Transition: A General Theory, PalgraveMacmillan, 395 pp.

External links

  • Economic system at Encyclopædia Britannica entry.
  • .
  • .
  • "Economic Systems", a refereed journal for the analysis of market and non-market solution by Elsevier since 2001.
  • by WebEc, 2007.

economic, system, economic, system, economic, order, system, production, resource, allocation, distribution, goods, services, within, society, given, geographic, area, includes, combination, various, institutions, agencies, entities, decision, making, processe. An economic system or economic order 1 is a system of production resource allocation and distribution of goods and services within a society or a given geographic area It includes the combination of the various institutions agencies entities decision making processes and patterns of consumption that comprise the economic structure of a given community Circulation model of economic flows for a closed market economy In this model the use of natural resources and the generation of waste like greenhouse gases is not included An economic system is a type of social system The mode of production is a related concept 2 All economic systems must confront and solve the four fundamental economic problems What kinds and quantities of goods shall be produced This fundamental economic problem is anchored on the theory of pricing The theory of pricing in this context has to do with the economic decision making between the production of capital goods and consumer goods in the economy in the face of scarce resources In this regard the critical evaluation of the needs of the society based on population distribution in terms of age sex occupation and geography is very pertinent How goods shall be produced The fundamental problem of how goods shall be produced is largely hinged on the least cost method of production to be adopted as gainfully peculiar to the economically decided goods and services to be produced On a broad note the possible production method includes labor intensive and capital intensive methods How the output will be distributed Production is said to be completed when the goods get to the final consumers This fundamental problem of how the output will be distributed seeks to identify the best possible medium through which bottlenecks and the clogs in the wheel of the chain of economic resources distributions can reduce to the barest minimum and optimize consumers satisfaction When to produce 3 Consumer satisfaction is partly a function of seasonal analysis as the forces of demand and supply have a lot to do with time This fundamental economic problem requires an intensive study of time dynamics and seasonal variation vis a vis the satisfaction of consumers needs It is noteworthy to state that solutions to these fundamental problems can be determined by the type of economic system The study of economic systems includes how these various agencies and institutions are linked to one another how information flows between them and the social relations within the system including property rights and the structure of management The analysis of economic systems traditionally focused on the dichotomies and comparisons between market economies and planned economies and on the distinctions between capitalism and socialism 4 Subsequently the categorization of economic systems expanded to include other topics and models that do not conform to the traditional dichotomy Today the dominant form of economic organization at the world level is based on market oriented mixed economies 5 An economic system can be considered a part of the social system and hierarchically equal to the law system political system cultural and so on There is often a strong correlation between certain ideologies political systems and certain economic systems for example consider the meanings of the term communism Many economic systems overlap each other in various areas for example the term mixed economy can be argued to include elements from various systems There are also various mutually exclusive hierarchical categorizations Contents 1 List of economic systems 2 Academic field of study 3 Main types 3 1 Capitalism 3 2 Mixed economy 3 3 Socialist economy 4 Components 5 Typology 5 1 By resource allocation mechanism 5 2 By ownership of the means of production 5 3 By political ideologies 5 4 By other criteria 6 Evolutionary economics 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksList of economic systems EditResource based economy Capitalism Communism Socialism Feudalism Distributism Statism Hydraulic despotism Inclusive democracy Market economy Mercantilism Mutualism Network economy Non property system Palace economy Potlatch Participatory economy Progressive utilization theory PROUTist economy Proprietism Social Credit Workers self managementAcademic field of study EditEconomic systems is the category in the Journal of Economic Literature classification codes that includes the study of such systems One field that cuts across them is comparative economic systems which includes the study of the following aspects of different systems Planning coordination and reform Productive enterprises factor and product markets prices population National income product and expenditure money inflation International trade finance investment and aid Consumer economics welfare and poverty Performance and prospects Natural resources energy environment regional studies Political economy legal institutions property rights 6 Main types EditCapitalism Edit Capitalism generally features the private ownership of the means of production capital and a market economy for coordination Corporate capitalism refers to a capitalist marketplace characterized by the dominance of hierarchical bureaucratic corporations Mercantilism was the dominant model in Western Europe from the 16th to 18th century This encouraged imperialism and colonialism until economic and political changes resulted in global decolonization Modern capitalism has favored free trade to take advantage of increased efficiency due to national comparative advantage and economies of scale in a larger more universal market Some critics who have applied the term neo colonialism to the power imbalance between multi national corporations operating in a free market vs seemingly impoverished people in developing countries Mixed economy Edit There is no precise definition of a mixed economy Theoretically it may refer to an economic system that combines one of three characteristics public and private ownership of industry market based allocation with economic planning or free markets with state interventionism In practice mixed economy generally refers to market economies with substantial state interventionism and or sizable public sector alongside a dominant private sector Actually mixed economies gravitate more heavily to one end of the spectrum Notable economic models and theories that have been described as a mixed economy include the following Georgism socialized rents on land Mixed economy It can be categorized under many titles American School Dirigisme Government directed capitalist economy Indicative planning also known as a planned market economy Japanese system Nordic model Social democrat economics of Nordic countries Progressive utilization theory Corporatism Basis of fascist economics Social market economy also known as Soziale Marktwirtschaft Mixed capitalist New Economic Policy Mixed socialist State capitalism Government dominated capitalist economy Socialist Market Economy Mixed socialist Socialist economy Edit Socialist economic systems all of which feature social ownership of the means of production can be subdivided by their coordinating mechanism planning and markets into planned socialist and market socialist systems Additionally socialism can be divided based on their property structures between those that are based on public ownership worker or consumer cooperatives and common ownership i e non ownership Communism is a hypothetical stage of socialist development articulated by Karl Marx as second stage socialism in Critique of the Gotha Program whereby the economic output is distributed based on need and not simply on the basis of labor contribution The original conception of socialism involved the substitution of money as a unit of calculation and monetary prices as a whole with calculation in kind or a valuation based on natural units with business and financial decisions replaced by engineering and technical criteria for managing the economy Fundamentally this meant that socialism would operate under different economic dynamics than those of capitalism and the price system 7 Later models of socialism developed by neoclassical economists most notably Oskar Lange and Abba Lerner were based on the use of notional prices derived from a trial and error approach to achieve market clearing prices on the part of a planning agency These models of socialism were called market socialism because they included a role for markets money and prices The primary emphasis of socialist planned economies is to coordinate production to produce economic output to directly satisfy economic demand as opposed to the indirect mechanism of the profit system where satisfying needs is subordinate to the pursuit of profit and to advance the productive forces of the economy in a more efficient manner while being immune to the perceived systemic inefficiencies cyclical processes and crisis of overproduction so that production would be subject to the needs of society as opposed to being ordered around capital accumulation 8 9 In a pure socialist planned economy that involves different processes of resource allocation production and means of quantifying value the use of money would be replaced with a different measure of value and accounting tool that would embody more accurate information about an object or resource In practice the economic system of the former Soviet Union and Eastern Bloc operated as a command economy featuring a combination of state owned enterprises and central planning using the material balances method The extent to which these economic systems achieved socialism or represented a viable alternative to capitalism is subject to debate 10 In orthodox Marxism the mode of production is tantamount to the subject of this article determining with a superstructure of relations the entirety of a given culture or stage of human development Components EditThere are multiple components of an economic system Decision making structures of an economy determine the use of economic inputs the factors of production distribution of output the level of centralization in decision making and who makes these decisions Decisions might be carried out by industrial councils by a government agency or by private owners An economic system is a system of production resource allocation exchange and distribution of goods and services in a society or a given geographic area In one view every economic system represents an attempt to solve three fundamental and interdependent problems What goods and services shall be produced and in what quantities How shall goods and services be produced That is by whom and with what resources and technologies For whom shall goods and services be produced That is who is to enjoy the benefits of the goods and services and how is the total product to be distributed among individuals and groups in the society 11 Every economy is thus a system that allocates resources for exchange production distribution and consumption The system is stabilized through a combination of threat and trust which are the outcome of institutional arrangements 12 An economic system possesses the following institutions Methods of control over the factors or means of production this may include ownership of or property rights to the means of production and therefore may give rise to claims to the proceeds from production The means of production may be owned privately by the state by those who use them or be held in common A decision making system this determines who is eligible to make decisions over economic activities Economic agents with decision making powers can enter into binding contracts with one another A coordination mechanism this determines how information is obtained and used in decision making The two dominant forms of coordination are planning and markets planning can be either decentralized or centralized and the two coordination mechanisms are not mutually exclusive and often co exist 13 An incentive system this induces and motivates economic agents to engage in productive activities It can be based on either material reward compensation or self interest or moral suasion for instance social prestige or through a democratic decision making process that binds those involved The incentive system may encourage specialization and the division of labor Organizational form there are two basic forms of organization actors and regulators Economic actors include households work gangs and production teams firms joint ventures and cartels Economically regulative organizations are represented by the state and market authorities the latter may be private or public entities A distribution system this allocates the proceeds from productive activity which is distributed as income among the economic organizations individuals and groups within society such as property owners workers and non workers or the state from taxes A public choice mechanism for law making establishing rules norms and standards and levying taxes Usually this is the responsibility of the state but other means of collective decision making are possible such as chambers of commerce or workers councils 14 Typology Edit Common typology for economic systems categorized by resource ownership and resource allocation mechanism There are several basic questions that must be answered in order for an economy to run satisfactorily The scarcity problem for example requires answers to basic questions such as what to produce how to produce it and who gets what is produced An economic system is a way of answering these basic questions and different economic systems answer them differently Many different objectives may be seen as desirable for an economy like efficiency growth liberty and equality 15 Economic systems are commonly segmented by their property rights regime for the means of production and by their dominant resource allocation mechanism Economies that combine private ownership with market allocation are called market capitalism and economies that combine private ownership with economic planning are labelled command capitalism or dirigisme Likewise systems that mix public or cooperative ownership of the means of production with economic planning are called socialist planned economies and systems that combine public or cooperative ownership with markets are called market socialism 16 Some perspectives build upon this basic nomenclature to take other variables into account such as class processes within an economy This leads some economists to categorize for example the Soviet Union s economy as state capitalism based on the analysis that the working class was exploited by the party leadership Instead of looking at nominal ownership this perspective takes into account the organizational form within economic enterprises 17 In a capitalist economic system production is carried out for private profit and decisions regarding investment and allocation of factor inputs are determined by business owners in factor markets The means of production are primarily owned by private enterprises and decisions regarding production and investment are determined by private owners in capital markets Capitalist systems range from laissez faire with minimal government regulation and state enterprise to regulated and social market systems with the aims of ameliorating market failures see economic intervention or supplementing the private marketplace with social policies to promote equal opportunities see welfare state respectively In socialist economic systems socialism production for use is carried out decisions regarding the use of the means of production are adjusted to satisfy economic demand and investment is determined through economic planning procedures There is a wide range of proposed planning procedures and ownership structures for socialist systems with the common feature among them being the social ownership of the means of production This might take the form of public ownership by all of the society or ownership cooperatively by their employees A socialist economic system that features social ownership but that it is based on the process of capital accumulation and utilization of capital markets for the allocation of capital goods between socially owned enterprises falls under the subcategory of market socialism By resource allocation mechanism Edit The basic and general modern economic systems segmented by the criterium of resource allocation mechanism are Market economy hands off systems such as laissez faire capitalism Mixed economy a hybrid that blends some aspects of both market and planned economies Planned economy hands on systems such as state socialism also known as command economy when referring to the Soviet model Other types Traditional economy a generic term for older economic systems opposed to modern economic systems Non monetary economy without the use of money opposed to monetary economy Subsistence economy without surplus exchange or market trade Gift economy where an exchange is made without any explicit agreement for immediate or future rewards and profits Barter economy where goods and services are directly exchanged for other goods or services Participatory economics a decentralized economic planning system where the production and distribution of goods is guided by public participation Post scarcity economy a hypothetical form where resources aren t scarce By ownership of the means of production Edit Capitalism private ownership of the means of production Mixed economy Socialist economy social ownership of the means of production By political ideologies Edit Various strains of anarchism and libertarianism advocate different economic systems all of which have very small or no government involvement These include Left wing Anarcho communism Anarcho syndicalism Anarcho socialism Right wing Anarcho capitalism Libertarianism Libertarian socialism SyndicalismBy other criteria Edit Corporatism refers to economic tripartite involving negotiations between business labor and state interest groups to establish economic policy or more generally to assigning people to political groups based on their occupational affiliation Certain subsets of an economy or the particular goods services techniques of production or moral rules can also be described as an economy For example some terms emphasize specific sectors or externalizes Circular economy Collectivist economy Digital economy Green economy Information economy Internet economy Knowledge economy Natural economy Virtual economyOthers emphasize a particular religion Arthashastra Hindu economics Buddhist economics Distributism Catholic ideal of a third way economy featuring more distributed ownership in a mixed economy Islamic economicsThe type of labour power Slave and serf based economy Wage labour based economyOr the means of production Agrarian economy Industrial economy Information economyEvolutionary economics EditSee also Evolutionary economics Karl Marx s theory of economic development was based on the premise of evolving economic systems Specifically in his view over the course of history superior economic systems would replace inferior ones Inferior systems were beset by internal contradictions and inefficiencies that would make it impossible for them to survive long term In Marx s scheme feudalism was replaced by capitalism which would eventually be superseded by socialism 18 Joseph Schumpeter had an evolutionary conception of economic development but unlike Marx he de emphasized the role of class struggle in contributing to qualitative change in the economic mode of production In subsequent world history many communist states run according to Marxist Leninist ideologies arose during the 20th century but by the 1990s they had either ceased to exist or gradually reformed their centrally planned economies toward market based economies for example with perestroika and the dissolution of the Soviet Union Chinese economic reform and Đổi Mới in Vietnam Mainstream evolutionary economics continues to study economic change in modern times There has also been renewed interest in understanding economic systems as evolutionary systems in the emerging field of complexity economics See also EditCapitalism Communism Economic ideology Economy Factors of production History of economic thought Mode of production Participatory economics Political economy Socialism Social relations of production Socialist calculation debate SuperstructureReferences Edit Daniel J Cantor Juliet B Schor Tunnel Vision Labor the World Economy and Central America South End Press 1987 p 21 By economic system or economic order we mean the principles laws institutions and understandings business is conducted Gregory and Stuart Paul and Robert February 28 2013 The Global Economy and its Economic Systems South Western College Pub p 30 ISBN 978 1285055350 Economic system A set of institutions for decision making and for the implementation of decisions concerning production income and consumption within a given geographic area Samuelson P Anthony Samuelson W 1980 Economics 11th ed New York McGraw Hill p 34 Rosser Mariana V and J Barkley Jr July 23 2003 Comparative Economics in a Transforming World Economy MIT Press pp 1 ISBN 978 0262182348 Chapter 1 presents definitions and basic examples of the categories used in this book tradition market and command for allocative mechanisms and capitalism and socialism for ownership systems Paul A Samuelson and William D Nordhaus 2004 Economics McGraw Hill Glossary of Terms Mixed economy ch 1 section Market Command and Mixed Economies Alan V Deardorff 2006 Glossary of International Economics Mixed economy JEL classification codes Economic systems JEL P Subcategories Bockman Johanna 2011 Markets in the name of Socialism The Left Wing origins of Neoliberalism Stanford University Press p 20 ISBN 978 0 8047 7566 3 According to nineteenth century socialist views socialism would function without capitalist economic categories such as money prices interest profits and rent and thus would function according to laws other than those described by current economic science While some socialists recognized the need for money and prices at least during the transition from capitalism to socialism socialists more commonly believed that the socialist economy would soon administratively mobilize the economy in physical units without the use of prices or money Socialism Still Impossible After All These Years on Mises org Retrieved February 15 2010 from Mises org https mises org journals scholar Boettke pdf What Socialism means The ultimate end of socialism was the end of history in which perfect social harmony would permanently be established Social harmony was to be achieved by the abolition of exploitation the transcendence of alienation and above all the transformation of society from the kingdom of necessity to the kingdom of freedom How would such a world be achieved The socialists informed us that by rationalizing production and thus advancing material production beyond the bounds reachable under capitalism socialism would usher mankind into a post scarcity world Socialism and Calculation on worldsocialism org Retrieved February 15 2010 from worldsocialism org http www worldsocialism org spgb overview calculation pdf Archived 2011 06 07 at the Wayback Machine Although money and so monetary calculation will disappear in socialism this does not mean that there will no longer be any need to make choices evaluations and calculations Wealth will be produced and distributed in its natural form of useful things of objects that can serve to satisfy some human need or other Not being produced for sale on a market items of wealth will not acquire an exchange value in addition to their use value In socialism their value in the normal non economic sense of the word will not be their selling price nor the time needed to produce them but their usefulness It is for this that they will be appreciated evaluated wanted and produced What was the USSR Part I Trotsky and state capitalism Libcom org 2005 04 09 Retrieved 2014 08 15 Paul A Samuelson Economics An Introductory Analysis 1964 International Student Edition New York McGraw Hill and Tokyo Kōgakusha p 15 Kenneth E Boulding Economics as a Science 1970 New York McGraw Hill pp 12 15 Sheila C Dow Economic Methodology An Inquiry Oxford Oxford University Press p 58 S Douma amp H Schreuder 2013 Economic Approaches to Organizations 5th edition Harlow UK Pearson Paul R Gregory and Robert C Stuart The Global Economy and its Economic Systems 2013 Independence KY Cengage Learning pp 21 47 ISBN 1 285 05535 7 Erik G Furubotn and Rudolf Richter Institutions and Economic Theory The Contribution of the New Institutional Economics 2000 University of Michigan Press pp 6 15 21 and 30 35 ISBN 0 472 08680 4 Warren J Samuels in Joep T J M van der Linden and Andre J C Manders editor The Economics of Income Distribution A Heterodox Approach 1999 Cheltenham Edward Elgar p 16 ISBN 1 84064 029 4 David W Conklin 1991 Comparative Economic Systems University of Calgary Press p 1 Rosser Mariana V and J Barkley Jr July 23 2003 Comparative Economics in a Transforming World Economy MIT Press pp 8 ISBN 978 0262182348 This leads us to describe two extreme categories market capitalism and command socialism But this simple dichotomization raises the possibility of cross forms namely market socialism and command capitalism Although less common than the previous two both have existed Rosser Mariana V and J Barkley Jr July 23 2003 Comparative Economics in a Transforming World Economy MIT Press pp 8 ISBN 978 0262182348 Indeed aside from the variation of ownership forms some follow certain ideas in Marx saying that how one class relates to another is the crucial matter rather than specifically who owns what with true socialism involving a lack of exploitation of one class by another This kind of argument can lead to the position that the Soviet Union was not really socialist but a form of state capitalism in which the government leaders exploited the workers Comparing Economic Systems in the Twenty First Century 2003 by Gregory and Stuart ISBN 0 618 26181 8 Further reading EditRichard Bonney 1995 Economic Systems and State Finance 680 pp David W Conklin 1991 Comparative Economic Systems Cambridge University Press 427 pp George Sylvester Counts 1970 Bolshevism Fascism and Capitalism An Account of the Three Economic Systems Robert L Heilbroner and Peter J Boettke 2007 Economic Systems The New Encyclopaedia Britannica v 17 pp 908 915 Harold Glenn Moulton Financial Organization and the Economic System 515 pp Jacques Jacobus Polak 2003 An International Economic System 179 pp Frederic L Pryor 1996 Economic Evolution and Structure 384 pp Frederic L Pryor 2005 Economic Systems of Foraging Agricultural and Industrial Societies 332 pp Graeme Snooks 1999 Global Transition A General Theory PalgraveMacmillan 395 pp External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Economic system Economic system at Encyclopaedia Britannica entry Social Studies VSC Glossary Glossary Cultural Anthropology Economic Systems a refereed journal for the analysis of market and non market solution by Elsevier since 2001 Economic Systems by WebEc 2007 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Economic system amp oldid 1133903053, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.