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Market economy

A market economy is an economic system in which the decisions regarding investment, production and distribution to the consumers are guided by the price signals created by the forces of supply and demand. The major characteristic of a market economy is the existence of factor markets that play a dominant role in the allocation of capital and the factors of production.[1][2]

Pike Place Market, Economy Market arcade, 1968

Market economies range from minimally regulated free-market and laissez-faire systems where state activity is restricted to providing public goods and services and safeguarding private ownership,[3] to interventionist forms where the government plays an active role in correcting market failures and promoting social welfare. State intervention can happen at the production, distribution, trade and consumption areas in the economy. The distribution of basic need services and goods like health care may be entirely regulated by an egalitarian public health care policy (while having the production provided by private enterprise), effectively eliminating the forces of supply and demand.

State-directed or dirigist economies are those where the state plays a directive role in guiding the overall development of the market through industrial policies or indicative planning—which guides yet does not substitute the market for economic planning—a form sometimes referred to as a mixed economy.[4][5]

Market economies are contrasted with planned economies where investment and production decisions are embodied in an integrated economy-wide economic plan. In a centrally planned economy, economic planning is the principal allocation mechanism between firms rather than markets, with the economy's means of production being owned and operated by a single organizational body.[6][better source needed]

Characteristics

Property rights

For market economies to function efficiently, governments must establish clearly defined and enforceable property rights for assets and capital goods. However, property rights does not specifically mean private property rights and market economies do not logically presuppose the existence of private ownership of the means of production. Market economies can and often do include various types of cooperatives or autonomous state-owned enterprises that acquire capital goods and raw materials in capital markets. These enterprises utilize a market-determined free price system to allocate capital goods and labor.[7] In addition, there are many variations of market socialism where the majority of capital assets are socially owned with markets allocating resources between socially owned firms. These models range from systems based on employee-owned enterprises based on self-management to a combination of public ownership of the means of production with factor markets.[8]

Supply and demand

Market economies rely upon a price system to signal market actors to adjust production and investment. Price formation relies on the interaction of supply and demand to reach or approximate an equilibrium where unit price for a particular good or service is at a point where the quantity demanded equals the quantity supplied.

Governments can intervene by establishing price ceilings or price floors in specific markets (such as minimum wage laws in the labor market), or use fiscal policy to discourage certain consumer behavior or to address market externalities generated by certain transactions (Pigovian taxes). Different perspectives exist on the role of government in both regulating and guiding market economies and in addressing social inequalities produced by markets. Fundamentally, a market economy requires that a price system affected by supply and demand exists as the primary mechanism for allocating resources irrespective of the level of regulation.

Capitalism

Capitalism is an economic system where the means of production are largely or entirely privately owned and operated for a profit, structured on the process of capital accumulation. In general, in capitalist systems investment, distribution, income and prices are determined by markets, whether regulated or unregulated.

There are different variations of capitalism with different relationships to markets. In laissez-faire and free-market variations of capitalism, markets are utilized most extensively with minimal or no state intervention and minimal or no regulation over prices and the supply of goods and services. In interventionist, welfare capitalism and mixed economies, markets continue to play a dominant role, but they are regulated to some extent by government in order to correct market failures or to promote social welfare. In state capitalist systems, markets are relied upon the least, with the state relying heavily on either indicative planning and/or state-owned enterprises to accumulate capital.

Capitalism has been dominant in the Western world since the end of feudalism. However, it is argued that the term mixed economies more precisely describes most contemporary economies due to their containing both private-owned and state-owned enterprises. In capitalism, prices determine the demand-supply scale. Higher demand for certain goods and services lead to higher prices and lower demand for certain goods lead to lower prices.

Free-market capitalism

A capitalist free-market economy is an economic system where prices for goods and services are set freely by the forces of supply and demand and are expected by its supporters to reach their point of equilibrium without intervention by government policy. It typically entails support for highly competitive markets, private ownership of productive enterprises. Laissez-faire is a more extensive form of free-market economy where the role of the state is limited to protecting property rights and enforcing contracts.

Laissez-faire

Laissez-faire is synonymous with what was referred to as strict free-market economy during the early and mid-19th century[citation needed] as a classical liberal ideal to achieve. It is generally understood that the necessary components for the functioning of an idealized free market include the complete absence of government regulation, subsidies, artificial price pressures and government-granted monopolies (usually classified as coercive monopoly by free market advocates) and no taxes or tariffs other than what is necessary for the government to provide protection from coercion and theft, maintaining peace and property rights and providing for basic public goods. Right-libertarian advocates of anarcho-capitalism see the state as morally illegitimate and economically unnecessary and destructive. Although laissez-faire has been commonly associated with capitalism, there is a similar left-wing laissez-faire system called free-market anarchism, also known as free-market anti-capitalism and free-market socialism to distinguish it from laissez-faire capitalism.[9][10][11] Thus, critics of laissez-faire as commonly understood argues that a truly laissez-faire system would be anti-capitalist and socialist.[12][13]

Welfare capitalism

Welfare capitalism is a capitalist economy that includes public policies favoring extensive provisions for social welfare services. The economic mechanism involves a free market and the predominance of privately owned enterprises in the economy, but public provision of universal welfare services aimed at enhancing individual autonomy and maximizing equality. Examples of contemporary welfare capitalism include the Nordic model of capitalism predominant in Northern Europe.[14]

Regional models

Anglo-Saxon model

Anglo-Saxon capitalism is the form of capitalism predominant in Anglophone countries and typified by the economy of the United States. It is contrasted with European models of capitalism such as the continental social market model and the Nordic model. Anglo-Saxon capitalism refers to a macroeconomic policy regime and capital market structure common to the Anglophone economies. Among these characteristics are low rates of taxation, more open financial markets, lower labor market protections and a less generous welfare state eschewing collective bargaining schemes found in the continental and northern European models of capitalism.[15]

East Asian model

The East Asian model of capitalism involves a strong role for state investment and in some instances involves state-owned enterprises. The state takes an active role in promoting economic development through subsidies, the facilitation of "national champions" and an export-based model of growth. The actual practice of this model varies by country. This designation has been applied to the economies of China, Japan, Singapore, South Korea, Taiwan and Vietnam.

A related concept in political science is the developmental state.

Social market economy

The social market economy was implemented by Alfred Müller-Armack and Ludwig Erhard after World War II in West Germany. The social market economic model, sometimes called Rhine capitalism, is based upon the idea of realizing the benefits of a free-market economy, especially economic performance and high supply of goods while avoiding disadvantages such as market failure, destructive competition, concentration of economic power and the socially harmful effects of market processes. The aim of the social market economy is to realize greatest prosperity combined with best possible social security. One difference from the free market economy is that the state is not passive, but instead takes active regulatory measures.[16] The social policy objectives include employment, housing and education policies, as well as a socio-politically motivated balancing of the distribution of income growth. Characteristics of social market economies are a strong competition policy and a contractionary monetary policy. The philosophical background is neoliberalism or ordoliberalism.[17]

Socialism

Market socialism is a form of market economy where the means of production are socially owned. In a market socialist economy, firms operate according to the rules of supply and demand and operate to maximize profit; the principal difference between market socialism and capitalism being that the profits accrue to society as a whole as opposed to private owners.[18]

The distinguishing feature between non-market socialism and market socialism is the existence of a market for factors of production and the criteria of profitability for enterprises. Profits derived from publicly owned enterprises can variously be used to reinvest in further production, to directly finance government and social services, or be distributed to the public at large through a social dividend or basic income system.[19]

Advocates of market socialism such as Jaroslav Vaněk argue that genuinely free markets are not possible under conditions of private ownership of productive property. Instead, he contends that the class differences and inequalities in income and power that result from private ownership enable the interests of the dominant class to skew the market to their favor, either in the form of monopoly and market power, or by utilizing their wealth and resources to legislate government policies that benefit their specific business interests. Additionally, Vaněk states that workers in a socialist economy based on cooperative and self-managed enterprises have stronger incentives to maximize productivity because they would receive a share of the profits (based on the overall performance of their enterprise) in addition to receiving their fixed wage or salary. The stronger incentives to maximize productivity that he conceives as possible in a socialist economy based on cooperative and self-managed enterprises might be accomplished in a free-market economy if employee-owned companies were the norm as envisioned by various thinkers including Louis O. Kelso and James S. Albus.[20]

Models of market socialism

Market socialism traces its roots to classical economics and the works of Adam Smith, the Ricardian socialists and mutualist philosophers.[21]

In the 1930s, the economists Oskar Lange and Abba Lerner developed a model of socialism that posited that a public body (dubbed the Central Planning Board) could set prices through a trial-and-error approach until they equaled the marginal cost of production in order to achieve perfect competition and pareto optimality. In this model of socialism, firms would be state-owned and managed by their employees and the profits would be disbursed among the population in a social dividend. This model came to be referred to as market socialism because it involved the use of money, a price system and simulated capital markets, all of which were absent from traditional non-market socialism.

A more contemporary model of market socialism is that put forth by the American economist John Roemer, referred to as economic democracy. In this model, social ownership is achieved through public ownership of equity in a market economy. A Bureau of Public Ownership would own controlling shares in publicly listed firms, so that the profits generated would be used for public finance and the provision of a basic income.

Some anarchists and libertarian socialists promote a form of market socialism in which enterprises are owned and managed cooperatively by their workforce so that the profits directly remunerate the employee-owners. These cooperative enterprises would compete with each other in the same way private companies compete with each other in a capitalist market. The first major elaboration of this type of market socialism was made by Pierre-Joseph Proudhon and was called mutualism.

Self-managed market socialism was promoted in Yugoslavia by economists Branko Horvat and Jaroslav Vaněk. In the self-managed model of socialism, firms would be directly owned by their employees and the management board would be elected by employees. These cooperative firms would compete with each other in a market for both capital goods and for selling consumer goods.

Socialist market economy

Following the 1978 reforms, China developed what it calls a socialist market economy in which most of the economy is under state ownership, with the state enterprises organized as joint-stock companies with various government agencies owning controlling shares through a shareholder system. Prices are set by a largely free-price system and the state-owned enterprises are not subjected to micromanagement by a government planning agency. A similar system called socialist-oriented market economy has emerged in Vietnam following the Đổi Mới reforms in 1986. This system is frequently characterized as state capitalism instead of market socialism because there is no meaningful degree of employee self-management in firms, because the state enterprises retain their profits instead of distributing them to the workforce or government and because many function as de facto private enterprises. The profits neither finance a social dividend to benefit the population at large, nor do they accrue to their employees. In China, this economic model is presented as a preliminary stage of socialism to explain the dominance of capitalistic management practices and forms of enterprise organization in both the state and non-state sectors.

In religion

A wide range of philosophers and theologians have linked market economies to concepts from monotheistic religions. Michael Novak described capitalism as being closely related to Catholicism, but Max Weber drew a connection between capitalism and Protestantism. The economist Jeffrey Sachs has stated that his work was inspired by the healing characteristics of Judaism. Chief Rabbi Lord Sacks of the United Synagogue draws a correlation between modern capitalism and the Jewish image of the Golden Calf.[22]

Christianity

In the Christian faith, the liberation theology movement advocated involving the church in labor market capitalism. Many priests and nuns integrated themselves into labor organizations while others moved into the slums to live among the poor. The Holy Trinity was interpreted as a call for social equality and the elimination of poverty. However, the Pope was highly active in his criticism of liberation theology. He was particularly concerned about the increased fusion between Christianity and Marxism. He closed Catholic institutions that taught liberation theology and dismissed some of its activists from the church.[23]

Buddhism

The Buddhist approach to the market economy was dealt with in E. F. Schumacher’s 1966 essay "Buddhist Economics". Schumacher asserted that a market economy guided by Buddhist principles would more successfully meet the needs of its people. He emphasized the importance or pursuing occupations that adhered to Buddhist teachings. The essay would later become required reading for a course that Clair Brown offered at University of California, Berkeley.[24]

Criticism

The economist Joseph Stiglitz argues that markets suffer from informational inefficiency and the presumed efficiency of markets stems from the faulty assumptions of neoclassical welfare economics, particularly the assumption of perfect and costless information and related incentive problems. Neoclassical economics assumes static equilibrium and efficient markets require that there be no non-convexities, even though nonconvexities are pervasive in modern economies. Stiglitz's critique applies to both existing models of capitalism and to hypothetical models of market socialism. However, Stiglitz does not advocate replacing markets, but instead states that there is a significant role for government intervention to boost the efficiency of markets and to address the pervasive market failures that exist in contemporary economies.[25] A fair market economy is in fact a martingale or a Brownian motion model and for a participant competitor in such a model there is no more than 50% of success chances at any given moment. Due to the fractal nature of any fair market and being market participants subject to the law of competition which impose reinvesting an increasing part of profits, the mean statistical chance of bankruptcy within the half life of any participant is also 50%[26] and 100% whether an infinite sample of time is considered.

Robin Hahnel and Michael Albert claim that "markets inherently produce class division".[27] Albert states that even if everyone started out with a balanced job complex (doing a mix of roles of varying creativity, responsibility and empowerment) in a market economy, class divisions would arise, arguing:

Without taking the argument that far, it is evident that in a market system with uneven distribution of empowering work, such as Economic Democracy, some workers will be more able than others to capture the benefits of economic gain. For example, if one worker designs cars and another builds them, the designer will use his cognitive skills more frequently than the builder. In the long term, the designer will become more adept at conceptual work than the builder, giving the former greater bargaining power in a firm over the distribution of income. A conceptual worker who is not satisfied with his income can threaten to work for a company that will pay him more. The effect is a class division between conceptual and manual laborers, and ultimately managers and workers, and a de facto labor market for conceptual workers.[27]

David McNally argues in the Marxist tradition that the logic of the market inherently produces inequitable outcomes and leads to unequal exchanges, arguing that Adam Smith's moral intent and moral philosophy espousing equal exchange was undermined by the practice of the free markets he championed. The development of the market economy involved coercion, exploitation and violence that Smith's moral philosophy could not countenance. McNally also criticizes market socialists for believing in the possibility of fair markets based on equal exchanges to be achieved by purging parasitical elements from the market economy such as private ownership of the means of production. McNally argues that market socialism is an oxymoron when socialism is defined as an end to wage-based labor.[28]

See also

References

  1. ^ Gregory and Stuart, Paul & Robert (2004). Comparing Economic Systems in the Twenty-First Century (7th ed.). George Hoffman. p. 538. ISBN 0618261818. Market Economy: Economy in which fundamentals of supply and demand provide signals regarding resource utilization.
  2. ^ Altvater, E. (1993). The Future of the Market: An Essay on the Regulation of Money and Nature After the Collapse of "Actually Existing Socialism. Verso. p. 57.
  3. ^ Yu-Shan Wu (1995). Comparative Economic Transformations: Mainland China, Hungary, the Soviet Union, and Taiwan. Stanford University Press. p. 8. In laissez-faire capitalism, the state restricts itself to providing public goods and services that the economy cannot generate by itself and to safeguarding private ownership and the smooth operation of the self-regulating market.
  4. ^ Altvater, E. (1993). The Future of the Market: An Essay on the Regulation of Money and Nature After the Collapse of "Actually Existing Socialism. Verso. pp. 237–238.
  5. ^ Tucker, Irvin B., Macroeconomics for Today. West Publishing. p. 491[ISBN missing]
  6. ^ Chappelow, Jim (29 January 2020). "Centrally Planned Economy". Investopedia. Scott, Gordon, rev. Retrieved 9 April 2020.
  7. ^ Paul M. Johnson (2005). . Auburn University. Archived from the original on 27 December 2012. Retrieved 28 December 2012.
  8. ^ Bock man, Johanna (2011). Markets in the name of Socialism: The Left-Wing origins of Neoliberalism. Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-0804775663.[page needed]
  9. ^ Chartier, Gary; Johnson, Charles W. (2011). Markets Not Capitalism: Individualist Anarchism Against Bosses, Inequality, Corporate Power, and Structural Poverty. Brooklyn, NY: Minor Compositions/Autonomedia[page needed]
  10. ^ "It introduces an eye-opening approach to radical social thought, rooted equally in libertarian socialism and market anarchism." Chartier, Gary; Johnson, Charles W. (2011). Markets Not Capitalism: Individualist Anarchism Against Bosses, Inequality, Corporate Power, and Structural Poverty. Brooklyn, NY: Minor Compositions/Autonomedia. p. back cover.
  11. ^ "But there has always been a market-oriented strand of libertarian socialism that emphasizes voluntary cooperation between producers. And markets, properly understood, have always been about cooperation. As a commenter at Reason magazine's Hit&Run blog, remarking on Jesse Walker's link to the Kelly article, put it: "every trade is a cooperative act." In fact, it's a fairly common observation among market anarchists that genuinely free markets have the most legitimate claim to the label "socialism." "Socialism: A Perfectly Good Word Rehabilitated" by Kevin Carson at website of Center for a Stateless Society.
  12. ^ Nick Manley, "Brief Introduction To Left-Wing Laissez Faire Economic Theory: Part One".
  13. ^ Nick Manley, "Brief Introduction To Left-Wing Laissez Faire Economic Theory: Part Two".
  14. ^ "The surprising ingredients of Swedish success – free markets and social cohesion" (PDF). Institute of Economic Affairs. June 25, 2013. (PDF) from the original on 2012-10-22. Retrieved January 15, 2014.
  15. ^ Anglo-Saxon capitalism, Business Dictionary on BusinessDictionary.com: http://www.businessdictionary.com/definition/Anglo-Saxon-capitalism.html 2020-09-27 at the Wayback Machine
  16. ^ keyword "social market economy" = “Soziale Marktwirtschaft” Duden Wirtschaft von A bis Z. Grundlagenwissen für Schule und Studium, Beruf und Alltag. 2. Aufl. Mannheim: Bibliographisches Institut & F.A. Brockhaus 2004. Lizenzausgabe Bonn: Bundeszentrale für politische Bildung 2004.
  17. ^ Duden Wirtschaft von A bis Z. "Eintrag: keyword "social market economy" = Soziale Marktwirtschaft".
  18. ^ Comparing Economic Systems in the Twenty-First Century, 2003, by Gregory and Stuart. ISBN 0618261818. (p. 142): "It is an economic system that combines social ownership of capital with market allocation of capital...The state owns the means of production, and returns accrue to society at large."
  19. ^ Social Dividend versus Basic Income Guarantee in Market Socialism, by Marangos, John. 2004. International Journal of Political Economy, vol. 34, no. 3, Fall 2004.
  20. ^ "Cooperative Economics: An Interview with Jaroslav Vanek". Interview by Albert Perkins. Retrieved March 17, 2011.
  21. ^ McNally, David (1993). Against the Market: Political Economy, Market Socialism and the Marxist Critique. Verso. p. 44. ISBN 978-0860916062. ...by the 1820s, 'Smithian' apologists for industrial capitalism confronted 'Smithian' socialists in a vigorous, and often venomous, debate over political economy.
  22. ^ Lord Sacks, "Rediscovering Religious Values in the Market Economy", HuffPost, February 11, 2012
  23. ^ "Liberation theology", BBC, July 18, 2011
  24. ^ Kathleen Maclay, "Buddhist economics: oxymoron or idea whose time has come?", Berkeley News, March 13, 2014
  25. ^ Michie, Jonathan (2001). Reader's Guide to the Social Sciences. Routledge. p. 1012. ISBN 978-1579580919. Stiglitz criticizes the first and second welfare theorems for being based on the assumptions of complete markets (including a full set of futures and risk markets) and perfect and costless information, which are simply not true. Incentives are dubious too. Thus, capitalist markets are also not efficient and there is some role for government intervention. The ability to decentralize using the price system requires that there be no nonconvexities, but nonconvexities are pervasive.
  26. ^ Podobnik, Boris; Horvatic, Davor; Petersen, Alexander M.; Urošević, Branko; Stanley, H. Eugene (2010-10-26). "Bankruptcy risk model and empirical tests". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 107 (43): 18325–18330. arXiv:1011.2670. Bibcode:2010PNAS..10718325P. doi:10.1073/pnas.1011942107. ISSN 0027-8424. PMC 2972955. PMID 20937903.
  27. ^ a b Weiss, Adam (2005-05-04). . ZMag. Archived from the original on 2009-04-02. Retrieved 2008-06-26.
  28. ^ McNally, David (1993). Against the Market: Political Economy, Market Socialism and the Marxist Critique. Verso. ISBN 978-0860916062.[page needed]

Further reading

  • Åslund, Anders. “The Rise of State Capitalism.” Russia’s Crony Capitalism: The Path from Market Economy to Kleptocracy, Yale University Press, 2019, pp. 97–131, doi:10.2307/j.ctvgc61tr.8.
  • Beckert, J. and Aspers, P. (2011). The Worth of Goods: Valuation and Pricing in the Economy. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780191618680.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Boudreaux, Donald J. (2008). "Free-Market Economy". In Hamowy, Ronald (ed.). The Encyclopedia of Libertarianism. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage; Cato Institute. pp. 187–189. doi:10.4135/9781412965811.n114. ISBN 978-1412965804. LCCN 2008009151. OCLC 750831024.
  • Boushey, Heather. “Market Structure.” Unbound: How Inequality Constricts Our Economy and What We Can Do about It, Harvard University Press, 2019, pp. 114–138, JSTOR j.ctv24trb7p.11.
  • Chari, Anusha. “The International Market for Corporate Control.” Global Goliaths: Multinational Corporations in the 21st Century Economy, edited by C. FRITZ FOLEY et al., Brookings Institution Press, 2021, pp. 129–182, JSTOR 10.7864/j.ctv11hpt7b.7.
  • Cochoy, Franck. “Another Discipline for the Market Economy: Marketing as a Performative Knowledge and Know-How for Capitalism.” The Sociological Review 46, no. 1_suppl (May 1998): 194–221. doi:10.1111/j.1467-954X.1998.tb03475.x
  • Cordier, S., Pareschi, L. & Toscani, G. On a Kinetic Model for a Simple Market Economy. Journal of Statistical Physics 120, 253–277 (2005). doi:10.1007/s10955-005-5456-0
  • Corneo, Giacoma and Daniel Steuer. “Market Economy Plus Welfare State.” Is Capitalism Obsolete?: A Journey through Alternative Economic Systems, Harvard University Press, 2017, pp. 225–248, JSTOR j.ctv24w62sr.14.
  • Cowen, T. (2009). In Praise of Commercial Culture. Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0674029934.
  • Cox, H. (2016). The Market as God. Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0674973152.
  • Cronin, James E. “Market Rules and the International Economy.” Global Rules: America, Britain and a Disordered World, Yale University Press, 2014, pp. 121–147, JSTOR j.ctt1bhkp54.8.
  • Cyndecka, Małgorzata Agnieszka. “The Applicability and Application of the Market Economy Investor Principle: Lessons Learnt from the Financial Crisis.” European State Aid Law Quarterly, vol. 16, no. 4, Lexxion Verlagsgesellschaft mbH, 2017, pp. 512–526, JSTOR stable/26694186.
  • Doti, J. and Lee, D. (1991). The Market Economy: A Reader. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0195332582.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Ebner, Alexander. “Continuity and Change in Germany’s Social Market Economy: A Matter of Economic Style?” Contesting Deregulation: Debates, Practices and Developments in the West since the 1970s, edited by Knud Andresen and Stefan Müller, 1st ed., vol. 31, Berghahn Books, 2017, pp. 41–56, doi:10.2307/j.ctvw04gps.7.
  • Finn, Daniel k. “What Can Be Done about Market Injustice?” Consumer Ethics in a Global Economy: How Buying Here Causes Injustice There, Georgetown University Press, 2019, pp. 143–153, doi:10.2307/j.ctvswx7rz.14.
  • Hall, P.A. and Soskice, D. (2001). Varieties of Capitalism: The Institutional Foundations of Comparative Advantage. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0191647703.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Hirschfeld, Mary L. “Toward a Humane Economy: A Pragmatic Approach.” Aquinas and the Market: Toward a Humane Economy, Harvard University Press, 2018, pp. 191–218, JSTOR j.ctvsf1p3x.10.
  • Isachsen, A.J. and Gylfason, T. and Hamilton, C. and Hamilton, P.E.I.I.E.S.C.B. and Isachsen, P.I.E.A.J. (1992). Understanding the Market Economy. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0198773573. LCCN lc92024790.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Johansson, P.O. (1991). An Introduction to Modern Welfare Economics. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0521356954. LCCN 90020420.
  • Kamien, M.I. and Schwartz, N.L. and Pencavel, J. (1982). Market Structure and Innovation. Cambridge Surveys of Economic Literature. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0521293853. LCCN 81012254.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Ngo, Tak-Wing. “Asia and the Historicity of the Market Economy.” Verge: Studies in Global Asias, vol. 1, no. 1, University of Minnesota Press, 2015, pp. 44–50, doi:10.5749/vergstudglobasia.1.1.0044.
  • Pomeranz, Kenneth. “Market Economies in Europe and Asia.” The Great Divergence: China, Europe, and the Making of the Modern World Economy, NED-New edition, vol. 117, Princeton University Press, 2021, pp. 69–108, doi:10.2307/j.ctv161f3dr.7.
  • Ramanna, K. (2015). Political Standards: Corporate Interest, Ideology, and Leadership in the Shaping of Accounting Rules for the Market Economy. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0226210742. LCCN 2015011503.
  • Robin, Ron. “Castrophobia and the Free Market: The Wohlstetters’ Moral Economy.” The Cold World They Made: The Strategic Legacy of Roberta and Albert Wohlstetter, Harvard University Press, 2016, pp. 118–138, JSTOR j.ctv253f7gh.8.
  • Rodgers, Daniel T. “Moralizing the Market Economy.” As a City on a Hill: The Story of America’s Most Famous Lay Sermon, Princeton University Press, 2018, pp. 96–106, doi:10.2307/j.ctvc778b0.10.
  • Root, H.L. (2020). Networking History: East vs. West in a Complex Systems Perspective. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1108488990. LCCN 2019033289.
  • Rosser, J.B.; Rosser, M.V. (2004). Comparative Economics in a Transforming World Economy. The MIT Press. MIT Press. ISBN 978-0262182348. LCCN 2003059363.
  • Shapiro, C. and Varian, H.R. (1998). Information Rules: A Strategic Guide to the Network Economy. Harvard Business Review Press. ISBN 978-1422154625.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Skidelsky, R. (2018). Money and Government: The Past and Future of Economics. Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0300244243.
  • Stiglitz, J.E. (1996). Whither Socialism?. Wicksell Lectures. MIT Press. ISBN 978-0262691826. LCCN lc93043188.
  • Sumner, S. (2021). The Money Illusion: Market Monetarism, the Great Recession, and the Future of Monetary Policy. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0226773681. LCCN 2020056573.
  • Sundararajan, Arun. “The Sharing Economy, Market Economies, and Gift Economies.” The Sharing Economy: The End of Employment and the Rise of Crowd-Based Capitalism, The MIT Press, 2016, pp. 23–46, JSTOR j.ctt1c2cqh3.5.
  • Tanzi, V. (2011). Government versus Markets: The Changing Economic Role of the State. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1139499736.
  • Temin, Peter. “The Labor Market.” The Roman Market Economy, Princeton University Press, 2013, pp. 114–138, JSTOR j.ctt1r2g35.11.
  • Tomlinson, Jim. “The Failures of Neoliberalism in Britain since the 1970s: The Limits on ‘Market Forces’ in a Deindustrialising Economy and a ‘New Speenhamland.’” The Neoliberal Age?: Britain since the 1970s, edited by Aled Davies et al., UCL Press, 2021, pp. 94–111, JSTOR j.ctv1smjwgq.12.
  • Ulrich, P. and Fearns, J. (2010). Integrative Economic Ethics: Foundations of a Civilized Market Economy. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0521172424.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • von Stackelberg, H. and Von, S.H. and Peacock, A.T. (1952). The Theory of the Market Economy. Oxford University Press. LCCN 52004949.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Weiss, Hadas. “Capital’s Fidelity: Financialization in the German Social Market Economy.” Financialization: Relational Approaches, edited by Chris Hann and Don Kalb, 1st ed., vol. 6, Berghahn Books, 2020, pp. 177–195, doi:10.2307/j.ctv21hrft2.12.
  • Widerquist, Karl and Grant S. McCall. “The Negative Freedom Argument for the Market Economy.” The Prehistory of Private Property: Implications for Modern Political Theory, Edinburgh University Press, 2021, pp. 79–99, JSTOR 10.3366/j.ctv1hm8h0j.9.
  • Wolf, M. (2005). Why Globalization Works. Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0300251739.

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This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Market economy news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message A market economy is an economic system in which the decisions regarding investment production and distribution to the consumers are guided by the price signals created by the forces of supply and demand The major characteristic of a market economy is the existence of factor markets that play a dominant role in the allocation of capital and the factors of production 1 2 Pike Place Market Economy Market arcade 1968 Market economies range from minimally regulated free market and laissez faire systems where state activity is restricted to providing public goods and services and safeguarding private ownership 3 to interventionist forms where the government plays an active role in correcting market failures and promoting social welfare State intervention can happen at the production distribution trade and consumption areas in the economy The distribution of basic need services and goods like health care may be entirely regulated by an egalitarian public health care policy while having the production provided by private enterprise effectively eliminating the forces of supply and demand State directed or dirigist economies are those where the state plays a directive role in guiding the overall development of the market through industrial policies or indicative planning which guides yet does not substitute the market for economic planning a form sometimes referred to as a mixed economy 4 5 Market economies are contrasted with planned economies where investment and production decisions are embodied in an integrated economy wide economic plan In a centrally planned economy economic planning is the principal allocation mechanism between firms rather than markets with the economy s means of production being owned and operated by a single organizational body 6 better source needed Contents 1 Characteristics 1 1 Property rights 1 2 Supply and demand 2 Capitalism 2 1 Free market capitalism 2 2 Laissez faire 2 3 Welfare capitalism 2 4 Regional models 2 4 1 Anglo Saxon model 2 4 2 East Asian model 2 4 3 Social market economy 3 Socialism 3 1 Models of market socialism 3 2 Socialist market economy 4 In religion 4 1 Christianity 4 2 Buddhism 5 Criticism 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksCharacteristics EditProperty rights Edit For market economies to function efficiently governments must establish clearly defined and enforceable property rights for assets and capital goods However property rights does not specifically mean private property rights and market economies do not logically presuppose the existence of private ownership of the means of production Market economies can and often do include various types of cooperatives or autonomous state owned enterprises that acquire capital goods and raw materials in capital markets These enterprises utilize a market determined free price system to allocate capital goods and labor 7 In addition there are many variations of market socialism where the majority of capital assets are socially owned with markets allocating resources between socially owned firms These models range from systems based on employee owned enterprises based on self management to a combination of public ownership of the means of production with factor markets 8 Supply and demand Edit Market economies rely upon a price system to signal market actors to adjust production and investment Price formation relies on the interaction of supply and demand to reach or approximate an equilibrium where unit price for a particular good or service is at a point where the quantity demanded equals the quantity supplied Governments can intervene by establishing price ceilings or price floors in specific markets such as minimum wage laws in the labor market or use fiscal policy to discourage certain consumer behavior or to address market externalities generated by certain transactions Pigovian taxes Different perspectives exist on the role of government in both regulating and guiding market economies and in addressing social inequalities produced by markets Fundamentally a market economy requires that a price system affected by supply and demand exists as the primary mechanism for allocating resources irrespective of the level of regulation Capitalism EditMain article Capitalism Capitalism is an economic system where the means of production are largely or entirely privately owned and operated for a profit structured on the process of capital accumulation In general in capitalist systems investment distribution income and prices are determined by markets whether regulated or unregulated There are different variations of capitalism with different relationships to markets In laissez faire and free market variations of capitalism markets are utilized most extensively with minimal or no state intervention and minimal or no regulation over prices and the supply of goods and services In interventionist welfare capitalism and mixed economies markets continue to play a dominant role but they are regulated to some extent by government in order to correct market failures or to promote social welfare In state capitalist systems markets are relied upon the least with the state relying heavily on either indicative planning and or state owned enterprises to accumulate capital Capitalism has been dominant in the Western world since the end of feudalism However it is argued that the term mixed economies more precisely describes most contemporary economies due to their containing both private owned and state owned enterprises In capitalism prices determine the demand supply scale Higher demand for certain goods and services lead to higher prices and lower demand for certain goods lead to lower prices Free market capitalism Edit See also Free market A capitalist free market economy is an economic system where prices for goods and services are set freely by the forces of supply and demand and are expected by its supporters to reach their point of equilibrium without intervention by government policy It typically entails support for highly competitive markets private ownership of productive enterprises Laissez faire is a more extensive form of free market economy where the role of the state is limited to protecting property rights and enforcing contracts Laissez faire Edit Main article Laissez faire See also Economic liberalism Laissez faire is synonymous with what was referred to as strict free market economy during the early and mid 19th century citation needed as a classical liberal ideal to achieve It is generally understood that the necessary components for the functioning of an idealized free market include the complete absence of government regulation subsidies artificial price pressures and government granted monopolies usually classified as coercive monopoly by free market advocates and no taxes or tariffs other than what is necessary for the government to provide protection from coercion and theft maintaining peace and property rights and providing for basic public goods Right libertarian advocates of anarcho capitalism see the state as morally illegitimate and economically unnecessary and destructive Although laissez faire has been commonly associated with capitalism there is a similar left wing laissez faire system called free market anarchism also known as free market anti capitalism and free market socialism to distinguish it from laissez faire capitalism 9 10 11 Thus critics of laissez faire as commonly understood argues that a truly laissez faire system would be anti capitalist and socialist 12 13 Welfare capitalism Edit Main article Welfare capitalism Welfare capitalism is a capitalist economy that includes public policies favoring extensive provisions for social welfare services The economic mechanism involves a free market and the predominance of privately owned enterprises in the economy but public provision of universal welfare services aimed at enhancing individual autonomy and maximizing equality Examples of contemporary welfare capitalism include the Nordic model of capitalism predominant in Northern Europe 14 Regional models Edit Anglo Saxon model Edit Main article Anglo Saxon model Anglo Saxon capitalism is the form of capitalism predominant in Anglophone countries and typified by the economy of the United States It is contrasted with European models of capitalism such as the continental social market model and the Nordic model Anglo Saxon capitalism refers to a macroeconomic policy regime and capital market structure common to the Anglophone economies Among these characteristics are low rates of taxation more open financial markets lower labor market protections and a less generous welfare state eschewing collective bargaining schemes found in the continental and northern European models of capitalism 15 East Asian model Edit Main article East Asian model The East Asian model of capitalism involves a strong role for state investment and in some instances involves state owned enterprises The state takes an active role in promoting economic development through subsidies the facilitation of national champions and an export based model of growth The actual practice of this model varies by country This designation has been applied to the economies of China Japan Singapore South Korea Taiwan and Vietnam A related concept in political science is the developmental state Social market economy Edit Main article Social market economy The social market economy was implemented by Alfred Muller Armack and Ludwig Erhard after World War II in West Germany The social market economic model sometimes called Rhine capitalism is based upon the idea of realizing the benefits of a free market economy especially economic performance and high supply of goods while avoiding disadvantages such as market failure destructive competition concentration of economic power and the socially harmful effects of market processes The aim of the social market economy is to realize greatest prosperity combined with best possible social security One difference from the free market economy is that the state is not passive but instead takes active regulatory measures 16 The social policy objectives include employment housing and education policies as well as a socio politically motivated balancing of the distribution of income growth Characteristics of social market economies are a strong competition policy and a contractionary monetary policy The philosophical background is neoliberalism or ordoliberalism 17 Socialism EditMain article Market socialism Market socialism is a form of market economy where the means of production are socially owned In a market socialist economy firms operate according to the rules of supply and demand and operate to maximize profit the principal difference between market socialism and capitalism being that the profits accrue to society as a whole as opposed to private owners 18 The distinguishing feature between non market socialism and market socialism is the existence of a market for factors of production and the criteria of profitability for enterprises Profits derived from publicly owned enterprises can variously be used to reinvest in further production to directly finance government and social services or be distributed to the public at large through a social dividend or basic income system 19 Advocates of market socialism such as Jaroslav Vanek argue that genuinely free markets are not possible under conditions of private ownership of productive property Instead he contends that the class differences and inequalities in income and power that result from private ownership enable the interests of the dominant class to skew the market to their favor either in the form of monopoly and market power or by utilizing their wealth and resources to legislate government policies that benefit their specific business interests Additionally Vanek states that workers in a socialist economy based on cooperative and self managed enterprises have stronger incentives to maximize productivity because they would receive a share of the profits based on the overall performance of their enterprise in addition to receiving their fixed wage or salary The stronger incentives to maximize productivity that he conceives as possible in a socialist economy based on cooperative and self managed enterprises might be accomplished in a free market economy if employee owned companies were the norm as envisioned by various thinkers including Louis O Kelso and James S Albus 20 Models of market socialism Edit Market socialism traces its roots to classical economics and the works of Adam Smith the Ricardian socialists and mutualist philosophers 21 In the 1930s the economists Oskar Lange and Abba Lerner developed a model of socialism that posited that a public body dubbed the Central Planning Board could set prices through a trial and error approach until they equaled the marginal cost of production in order to achieve perfect competition and pareto optimality In this model of socialism firms would be state owned and managed by their employees and the profits would be disbursed among the population in a social dividend This model came to be referred to as market socialism because it involved the use of money a price system and simulated capital markets all of which were absent from traditional non market socialism A more contemporary model of market socialism is that put forth by the American economist John Roemer referred to as economic democracy In this model social ownership is achieved through public ownership of equity in a market economy A Bureau of Public Ownership would own controlling shares in publicly listed firms so that the profits generated would be used for public finance and the provision of a basic income Some anarchists and libertarian socialists promote a form of market socialism in which enterprises are owned and managed cooperatively by their workforce so that the profits directly remunerate the employee owners These cooperative enterprises would compete with each other in the same way private companies compete with each other in a capitalist market The first major elaboration of this type of market socialism was made by Pierre Joseph Proudhon and was called mutualism Self managed market socialism was promoted in Yugoslavia by economists Branko Horvat and Jaroslav Vanek In the self managed model of socialism firms would be directly owned by their employees and the management board would be elected by employees These cooperative firms would compete with each other in a market for both capital goods and for selling consumer goods Socialist market economy Edit Following the 1978 reforms China developed what it calls a socialist market economy in which most of the economy is under state ownership with the state enterprises organized as joint stock companies with various government agencies owning controlling shares through a shareholder system Prices are set by a largely free price system and the state owned enterprises are not subjected to micromanagement by a government planning agency A similar system called socialist oriented market economy has emerged in Vietnam following the Đổi Mới reforms in 1986 This system is frequently characterized as state capitalism instead of market socialism because there is no meaningful degree of employee self management in firms because the state enterprises retain their profits instead of distributing them to the workforce or government and because many function as de facto private enterprises The profits neither finance a social dividend to benefit the population at large nor do they accrue to their employees In China this economic model is presented as a preliminary stage of socialism to explain the dominance of capitalistic management practices and forms of enterprise organization in both the state and non state sectors In religion EditA wide range of philosophers and theologians have linked market economies to concepts from monotheistic religions Michael Novak described capitalism as being closely related to Catholicism but Max Weber drew a connection between capitalism and Protestantism The economist Jeffrey Sachs has stated that his work was inspired by the healing characteristics of Judaism Chief Rabbi Lord Sacks of the United Synagogue draws a correlation between modern capitalism and the Jewish image of the Golden Calf 22 Christianity Edit In the Christian faith the liberation theology movement advocated involving the church in labor market capitalism Many priests and nuns integrated themselves into labor organizations while others moved into the slums to live among the poor The Holy Trinity was interpreted as a call for social equality and the elimination of poverty However the Pope was highly active in his criticism of liberation theology He was particularly concerned about the increased fusion between Christianity and Marxism He closed Catholic institutions that taught liberation theology and dismissed some of its activists from the church 23 Buddhism Edit The Buddhist approach to the market economy was dealt with in E F Schumacher s 1966 essay Buddhist Economics Schumacher asserted that a market economy guided by Buddhist principles would more successfully meet the needs of its people He emphasized the importance or pursuing occupations that adhered to Buddhist teachings The essay would later become required reading for a course that Clair Brown offered at University of California Berkeley 24 Criticism EditThe economist Joseph Stiglitz argues that markets suffer from informational inefficiency and the presumed efficiency of markets stems from the faulty assumptions of neoclassical welfare economics particularly the assumption of perfect and costless information and related incentive problems Neoclassical economics assumes static equilibrium and efficient markets require that there be no non convexities even though nonconvexities are pervasive in modern economies Stiglitz s critique applies to both existing models of capitalism and to hypothetical models of market socialism However Stiglitz does not advocate replacing markets but instead states that there is a significant role for government intervention to boost the efficiency of markets and to address the pervasive market failures that exist in contemporary economies 25 A fair market economy is in fact a martingale or a Brownian motion model and for a participant competitor in such a model there is no more than 50 of success chances at any given moment Due to the fractal nature of any fair market and being market participants subject to the law of competition which impose reinvesting an increasing part of profits the mean statistical chance of bankruptcy within the half life of any participant is also 50 26 and 100 whether an infinite sample of time is considered Robin Hahnel and Michael Albert claim that markets inherently produce class division 27 Albert states that even if everyone started out with a balanced job complex doing a mix of roles of varying creativity responsibility and empowerment in a market economy class divisions would arise arguing Without taking the argument that far it is evident that in a market system with uneven distribution of empowering work such as Economic Democracy some workers will be more able than others to capture the benefits of economic gain For example if one worker designs cars and another builds them the designer will use his cognitive skills more frequently than the builder In the long term the designer will become more adept at conceptual work than the builder giving the former greater bargaining power in a firm over the distribution of income A conceptual worker who is not satisfied with his income can threaten to work for a company that will pay him more The effect is a class division between conceptual and manual laborers and ultimately managers and workers and a de facto labor market for conceptual workers 27 David McNally argues in the Marxist tradition that the logic of the market inherently produces inequitable outcomes and leads to unequal exchanges arguing that Adam Smith s moral intent and moral philosophy espousing equal exchange was undermined by the practice of the free markets he championed The development of the market economy involved coercion exploitation and violence that Smith s moral philosophy could not countenance McNally also criticizes market socialists for believing in the possibility of fair markets based on equal exchanges to be achieved by purging parasitical elements from the market economy such as private ownership of the means of production McNally argues that market socialism is an oxymoron when socialism is defined as an end to wage based labor 28 See also Edit Capitalism portal Economics portal Law portal Libertarianism portalCapitalism Classical economics Co determination Economic freedom Economic liberalism Free market Free market anarchism Gift economy Grey market Keynesian economics Laissez faire Market socialism Market structure Mixed economy Neoclassical economics Planned economy Price system Regulated market Social market economy Socialist market economy Social ownershipReferences Edit Gregory and Stuart Paul amp Robert 2004 Comparing Economic Systems in the Twenty First Century 7th ed George Hoffman p 538 ISBN 0618261818 Market Economy Economy in which fundamentals of supply and demand provide signals regarding resource utilization Altvater E 1993 The Future of the Market An Essay on the Regulation of Money and Nature After the Collapse of Actually Existing Socialism Verso p 57 Yu Shan Wu 1995 Comparative Economic Transformations Mainland China Hungary the Soviet Union and Taiwan Stanford University Press p 8 In laissez faire capitalism the state restricts itself to providing public goods and services that the economy cannot generate by itself and to safeguarding private ownership and the smooth operation of the self regulating market Altvater E 1993 The Future of the Market An Essay on the Regulation of Money and Nature After the Collapse of Actually Existing Socialism Verso pp 237 238 Tucker Irvin B Macroeconomics for Today West Publishing p 491 ISBN missing Chappelow Jim 29 January 2020 Centrally Planned Economy Investopedia Scott Gordon rev Retrieved 9 April 2020 Paul M Johnson 2005 A Glossary of Political Economy Terms Market economy Auburn University Archived from the original on 27 December 2012 Retrieved 28 December 2012 Bock man Johanna 2011 Markets in the name of Socialism The Left Wing origins of Neoliberalism Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0804775663 page needed Chartier Gary Johnson Charles W 2011 Markets Not Capitalism Individualist Anarchism Against Bosses Inequality Corporate Power and Structural Poverty Brooklyn NY Minor Compositions Autonomedia page needed It introduces an eye opening approach to radical social thought rooted equally in libertarian socialism and market anarchism Chartier Gary Johnson Charles W 2011 Markets Not Capitalism Individualist Anarchism Against Bosses Inequality Corporate Power and Structural Poverty Brooklyn NY Minor Compositions Autonomedia p back cover But there has always been a market oriented strand of libertarian socialism that emphasizes voluntary cooperation between producers And markets properly understood have always been about cooperation As a commenter at Reason magazine s Hit amp Run blog remarking on Jesse Walker s link to the Kelly article put it every trade is a cooperative act In fact it s a fairly common observation among market anarchists that genuinely free markets have the most legitimate claim to the label socialism Socialism A Perfectly Good Word Rehabilitated by Kevin Carson at website of Center for a Stateless Society Nick Manley Brief Introduction To Left Wing Laissez Faire Economic Theory Part One Nick Manley Brief Introduction To Left Wing Laissez Faire Economic Theory Part Two The surprising ingredients of Swedish success free markets and social cohesion PDF Institute of Economic Affairs June 25 2013 Archived PDF from the original on 2012 10 22 Retrieved January 15 2014 Anglo Saxon capitalism Business Dictionary on BusinessDictionary com http www businessdictionary com definition Anglo Saxon capitalism html Archived 2020 09 27 at the Wayback Machine keyword social market economy Soziale Marktwirtschaft Duden Wirtschaft von A bis Z Grundlagenwissen fur Schule und Studium Beruf und Alltag 2 Aufl Mannheim Bibliographisches Institut amp F A Brockhaus 2004 Lizenzausgabe Bonn Bundeszentrale fur politische Bildung 2004 Duden Wirtschaft von A bis Z Eintrag keyword social market economy Soziale Marktwirtschaft Comparing Economic Systems in the Twenty First Century 2003 by Gregory and Stuart ISBN 0618261818 p 142 It is an economic system that combines social ownership of capital with market allocation of capital The state owns the means of production and returns accrue to society at large Social Dividend versus Basic Income Guarantee in Market Socialism by Marangos John 2004 International Journal of Political Economy vol 34 no 3 Fall 2004 Cooperative Economics An Interview with Jaroslav Vanek Interview by Albert Perkins Retrieved March 17 2011 McNally David 1993 Against the Market Political Economy Market Socialism and the Marxist Critique Verso p 44 ISBN 978 0860916062 by the 1820s Smithian apologists for industrial capitalism confronted Smithian socialists in a vigorous and often venomous debate over political economy Lord Sacks Rediscovering Religious Values in the Market Economy HuffPost February 11 2012 Liberation theology BBC July 18 2011 Kathleen Maclay Buddhist economics oxymoron or idea whose time has come Berkeley News March 13 2014 Michie Jonathan 2001 Reader s Guide to the Social Sciences Routledge p 1012 ISBN 978 1579580919 Stiglitz criticizes the first and second welfare theorems for being based on the assumptions of complete markets including a full set of futures and risk markets and perfect and costless information which are simply not true Incentives are dubious too Thus capitalist markets are also not efficient and there is some role for government intervention The ability to decentralize using the price system requires that there be no nonconvexities but nonconvexities are pervasive Podobnik Boris Horvatic Davor Petersen Alexander M Urosevic Branko Stanley H Eugene 2010 10 26 Bankruptcy risk model and empirical tests Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 107 43 18325 18330 arXiv 1011 2670 Bibcode 2010PNAS 10718325P doi 10 1073 pnas 1011942107 ISSN 0027 8424 PMC 2972955 PMID 20937903 a b Weiss Adam 2005 05 04 A Comparison of Economic Democracy and Participatory Economics ZMag Archived from the original on 2009 04 02 Retrieved 2008 06 26 McNally David 1993 Against the Market Political Economy Market Socialism and the Marxist Critique Verso ISBN 978 0860916062 page needed Further reading EditAslund Anders The Rise of State Capitalism Russia s Crony Capitalism The Path from Market Economy to Kleptocracy Yale University Press 2019 pp 97 131 doi 10 2307 j ctvgc61tr 8 Beckert J and Aspers P 2011 The Worth of Goods Valuation and Pricing in the Economy Oxford University Press ISBN 9780191618680 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Boudreaux Donald J 2008 Free Market Economy In Hamowy Ronald ed The Encyclopedia of Libertarianism Thousand Oaks CA Sage Cato Institute pp 187 189 doi 10 4135 9781412965811 n114 ISBN 978 1412965804 LCCN 2008009151 OCLC 750831024 Boushey Heather Market Structure Unbound How Inequality Constricts Our Economy and What We Can Do about It Harvard University Press 2019 pp 114 138 JSTOR j ctv24trb7p 11 Chari Anusha The International Market for Corporate Control Global Goliaths Multinational Corporations in the 21st Century Economy edited by C FRITZ FOLEY et al Brookings Institution Press 2021 pp 129 182 JSTOR 10 7864 j ctv11hpt7b 7 Cochoy Franck Another Discipline for the Market Economy Marketing as a Performative Knowledge and Know How for Capitalism The Sociological Review 46 no 1 suppl May 1998 194 221 doi 10 1111 j 1467 954X 1998 tb03475 x Cordier S Pareschi L amp Toscani G On a Kinetic Model for a Simple Market Economy Journal of Statistical Physics 120 253 277 2005 doi 10 1007 s10955 005 5456 0 Corneo Giacoma and Daniel Steuer Market Economy Plus Welfare State Is Capitalism Obsolete A Journey through Alternative Economic Systems Harvard University Press 2017 pp 225 248 JSTOR j ctv24w62sr 14 Cowen T 2009 In Praise of Commercial Culture Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0674029934 Cox H 2016 The Market as God Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0674973152 Cronin James E Market Rules and the International Economy Global Rules America Britain and a Disordered World Yale University Press 2014 pp 121 147 JSTOR j ctt1bhkp54 8 Cyndecka Malgorzata Agnieszka The Applicability and Application of the Market Economy Investor Principle Lessons Learnt from the Financial Crisis European State Aid Law Quarterly vol 16 no 4 Lexxion Verlagsgesellschaft mbH 2017 pp 512 526 JSTOR stable 26694186 Doti J and Lee D 1991 The Market Economy A Reader Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195332582 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Ebner Alexander Continuity and Change in Germany s Social Market Economy A Matter of Economic Style Contesting Deregulation Debates Practices and Developments in the West since the 1970s edited by Knud Andresen and Stefan Muller 1st ed vol 31 Berghahn Books 2017 pp 41 56 doi 10 2307 j ctvw04gps 7 Finn Daniel k What Can Be Done about Market Injustice Consumer Ethics in a Global Economy How Buying Here Causes Injustice There Georgetown University Press 2019 pp 143 153 doi 10 2307 j ctvswx7rz 14 Hall P A and Soskice D 2001 Varieties of Capitalism The Institutional Foundations of Comparative Advantage Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0191647703 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Hirschfeld Mary L Toward a Humane Economy A Pragmatic Approach Aquinas and the Market Toward a Humane Economy Harvard University Press 2018 pp 191 218 JSTOR j ctvsf1p3x 10 Isachsen A J and Gylfason T and Hamilton C and Hamilton P E I I E S C B and Isachsen P I E A J 1992 Understanding the Market Economy Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0198773573 LCCN lc92024790 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Johansson P O 1991 An Introduction to Modern Welfare Economics Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521356954 LCCN 90020420 Kamien M I and Schwartz N L and Pencavel J 1982 Market Structure and Innovation Cambridge Surveys of Economic Literature Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521293853 LCCN 81012254 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Kratz Agatha et al Time s Up China s Coming Battle for Market Economy Status European Council on Foreign Relations 2016 JSTOR resrep21581 Kunde Meg Making the Free Market Moral Ronald Reagan s Covenantal Economy Rhetoric and Public Affairs vol 22 no 2 Michigan State University Press 2019 pp 217 252 doi 10 14321 rhetpublaffa 22 2 0217 Lavigne M 1999 The Economics of Transition From Socialist Economy to Market Economy Macmillan Education ISBN 978 1349273133 Lazonick W 1993 Business Organization and the Myth of the Market Economy Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521447881 LCCN 91008865 Leshem Dotan From Ecclesiastical to Market Economy The Origins of Neoliberalism Modeling the Economy from Jesus to Foucault Columbia University Press 2016 pp 153 182 JSTOR 10 7312 lesh17776 11 Lothian Tamara The Democratized Market Economy in Latin America and Elsewhere An Exercise in Institutional Thinking Within Law and Political Economy Law and the Wealth of Nations Finance Prosperity and Democracy Columbia University Press 2017 pp 138 196 JSTOR 10 7312 loth17466 8 Lothian Tamara The Democratized Market Economy Law and the Wealth of Nations Finance Prosperity and Democracy Columbia University Press 2017 pp 113 137 JSTOR 10 7312 loth17466 7 Malinvaud E and United Nations 2000 Development Strategy and Management of the Market Economy Development Strategy and Management of the Market Economy Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0199241347 Malloy R P 2000 Law and Market Economy Reinterpreting the Values of Law and Economics Law and Market Economy Reinterpreting the Values of Law and Economics Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521787314 LCCN 00711747 McKinnie M 2021 Theatre in Market Economies Theatre and Performance Theory Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1107000391 LCCN 2020039520 McKinnon R I 1993 1991 The Order of Economic Liberalization Financial Control in the Transition to a Market Economy The Johns Hopkins Studies in Development Johns Hopkins University Press doi 10 1257 jep 5 4 107 ISBN 978 0801847431 LCCN 93021886 Mirowski P and Plehwe D 2015 The Road from Mont Pelerin The Making of the Neoliberal Thought Collective With a New Preface Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0674088344 LCCN 2016303988 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Mittermaier Karl and Isabella Mittermaier Free Market Dogmatism and Pragmatism In The Hand Behind the Invisible Hand Dogmatic and Pragmatic Views on Free Markets and the State of Economic Theory 1st ed 23 26 Bristol University Press 2020 doi 10 2307 j ctv186grks 10 Murphy Kevin M Andrei Shleifer Robert W Vishny The Transition to a Market Economy Pitfalls of Partial Reform The Quarterly Journal of Economics Volume 107 Issue 3 August 1992 pp 889 906 doi 10 2307 2118367 Nee Victor The Role of the State in Making a Market Economy Journal of Institutional and Theoretical Economics JITE Zeitschrift Fur Die Gesamte Staatswissenschaft vol 156 no 1 Mohr Siebeck GmbH amp Co KG 2000 pp 64 88 JSTOR 40752185 Nee V and Opper S 2012 Capitalism from Below Markets and Institutional Change in China Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0674065390 LCCN 2011042367 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Nelson Richard B 2004 The market economy and the scientific commons Research Policy 33 3 455 471 doi 10 1016 j respol 2003 09 008 ISSN 0048 7333 Ngo Tak Wing Asia and the Historicity of the Market Economy Verge Studies in Global Asias vol 1 no 1 University of Minnesota Press 2015 pp 44 50 doi 10 5749 vergstudglobasia 1 1 0044 Pomeranz Kenneth Market Economies in Europe and Asia The Great Divergence China Europe and the Making of the Modern World Economy NED New edition vol 117 Princeton University Press 2021 pp 69 108 doi 10 2307 j ctv161f3dr 7 Ramanna K 2015 Political Standards Corporate Interest Ideology and Leadership in the Shaping of Accounting Rules for the Market Economy University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0226210742 LCCN 2015011503 Robin Ron Castrophobia and the Free Market The Wohlstetters Moral Economy The Cold World They Made The Strategic Legacy of Roberta and Albert Wohlstetter Harvard University Press 2016 pp 118 138 JSTOR j ctv253f7gh 8 Rodgers Daniel T Moralizing the Market Economy As a City on a Hill The Story of America s Most Famous Lay Sermon Princeton University Press 2018 pp 96 106 doi 10 2307 j ctvc778b0 10 Root H L 2020 Networking History East vs West in a Complex Systems Perspective Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1108488990 LCCN 2019033289 Rosser J B Rosser M V 2004 Comparative Economics in a Transforming World Economy The MIT Press MIT Press ISBN 978 0262182348 LCCN 2003059363 Schebesta Martin Climate Change Digitisation and Globalisation Does the Social Market Economy Need Renewal Konrad Adenauer Stiftung 2020 JSTOR resrep25282 Sedgwick P H 1999 The Market Economy and Christian Ethics New studies in Christian ethics Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1107112483 Shapiro C and Varian H R 1998 Information Rules A Strategic Guide to the Network Economy Harvard Business Review Press ISBN 978 1422154625 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Skidelsky R 2018 Money and Government The Past and Future of Economics Yale University Press ISBN 978 0300244243 Stiglitz J E 1996 Whither Socialism Wicksell Lectures MIT Press ISBN 978 0262691826 LCCN lc93043188 Sumner S 2021 The Money Illusion Market Monetarism the Great Recession and the Future of Monetary Policy University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0226773681 LCCN 2020056573 Sundararajan Arun The Sharing Economy Market Economies and Gift Economies The Sharing Economy The End of Employment and the Rise of Crowd Based Capitalism The MIT Press 2016 pp 23 46 JSTOR j ctt1c2cqh3 5 Tanzi V 2011 Government versus Markets The Changing Economic Role of the State Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1139499736 Temin Peter The Labor Market The Roman Market Economy Princeton University Press 2013 pp 114 138 JSTOR j ctt1r2g35 11 Tomlinson Jim The Failures of Neoliberalism in Britain since the 1970s The Limits on Market Forces in a Deindustrialising Economy and a New Speenhamland The Neoliberal Age Britain since the 1970s edited by Aled Davies et al UCL Press 2021 pp 94 111 JSTOR j ctv1smjwgq 12 Ulrich P and Fearns J 2010 Integrative Economic Ethics Foundations of a Civilized Market Economy Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521172424 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link von Stackelberg H and Von S H and Peacock A T 1952 The Theory of the Market Economy Oxford University Press LCCN 52004949 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Weiss Hadas Capital s Fidelity Financialization in the German Social Market Economy Financialization Relational Approaches edited by Chris Hann and Don Kalb 1st ed vol 6 Berghahn Books 2020 pp 177 195 doi 10 2307 j ctv21hrft2 12 Widerquist Karl and Grant S McCall The Negative Freedom Argument for the Market Economy The Prehistory of Private Property Implications for Modern Political Theory Edinburgh University Press 2021 pp 79 99 JSTOR 10 3366 j ctv1hm8h0j 9 Wolf M 2005 Why Globalization Works Yale University Press ISBN 978 0300251739 Yeazell S C 2018 Lawsuits in a Market Economy The Evolution of Civil Litigation University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0226546421 Zakim M 2018 Accounting for Capitalism The World the Clerk Made University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0226545899 LCCN 2017035753 External links EditMarket Systems at Encyclopaedia Britannica Online Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Market economy amp oldid 1133390408, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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