Ivolgina M.
PhD Zhukova O.S.
PhD Petrachkova O.S.
Donetsk State University of Management
Chery and basic features of a market economic system
A society may attempt to deal with the basic economic problems by
allowing free play to what are known as market forces. The state plays little
or no part in economic activity. Most of the people in the non-communist world
earn and spend in societies which are still fundamentally market economies.
The market system of economic
organization is also commonly described as a free enterprise or liaises-faire,
or capitalist system. We shall use all
these terms to stand for a market economy. Strictly speaking the pure market of
liaises-faire system has never existed. Whenever there has been some form of
political organization, the political authority has exercised some economic
functions (e.g. controlling prices or levying taxation). It is useful, however,
to consider the way in which a true market system would operate because it
provides us with a simplified model, and by making modifications to the model
we can approach the more realistic situations step by step.
The framework of a market or capitalist
system contains six essential features. They are:
1. private property
2. freedom of choice and enterprise
3. self-interest as the dominating
motive
4. competition
5. a reliance on the price system
6. a very limited role for government
Private property. The institution of private property is a major feature of
capitalism. It means that individuals have the right to own, control and
dispose of land, buildings, machinery, and other natural and man-made
resources. Man-made aids to production such as machines, factories, docks, oil
refineries and road networks are known as capital. Private property not only
confirms the right to own and dispose of real assets, it provides the owners of
property with the right to income from that property in the form of rent,
interest and profits.
Freedom of choice and enterprise.
Freedom of enterprise means that individuals are free to buy and hire economic
resources, to organize these resources for production, and to sell their
products in the markets of their own
choice. Persons who undertake these activities are known as entrepreneurs and such
people are free to enter and leave the industry.
Freedom of choice means that owners of
land and capital may use these resources as they see fit. It also means that
workers are free to enter (and leave) any occupations for which they are
qualified. Finally it means that consumers are free to spend their incomes in
any way they wish. The freedom of consumer choice is usually held to be the
most important of these economic ‘freedoms’. In the models of
capitalism, producers respond to consumers preferences — they produce whatever
consumers demand.
Self-interest. Since
capitalism is based on the principle that individuals should be free, to do as
they wish, it is not surprising to find that the motive for economic activity
is self – interest. Each unit in the
economy attempts to do what is best for itself. Firms will act in ways which,
they believe, will lead to maximum profits (or minimum losses). Owners of land
and capital will employ these assets so as to obtain the highest possible
rewards. Workers will tend to move to those occupations and locations which
offer the highest wages. Consumers will spend their incomes on those things
which yield the maximum satisfaction.
Competition. Economic rivalry or competition is another essential feature of a
free enterprise economy. Competition, as economists see it, is essentially
price competition. The model of the market economy envisages a situation where,
in the market for each commodity, there are large numbers of buyers and
sellers. Each buyer and seller accounts for an insignificant share of the
business transacted and hence has an influence on the market demand or market
supply. It is the forces of total demand and total supply which determine the
market price, and each participant, whether buyer or seller, must take this
price as given since it is beyond his or her influence or control. In theory at
least, competition is the regulatory mechanism of capitalism. It limits the use
of economic power since no single firm or individual is large enough or strong
enough to control a market and exploit the other buyers or sellers.
Markets and Prices. Perhaps the most
basic feature of the market economy is the use of the price mechanism for
allocating resources to various uses. The price system is an elaborate system
of communications in which innumerable free choices are aggregated and balanced
against each other. The decisions of producers determine the supply of a
commodity; the decisions of buyers determine the price. Changes in demand and
supply cause changes in market prices and it is these movements in market
prices which bring about the changes in the ways in which society uses its
economic resources.
References:
1.Debreu
Gerard (1987). "mathematical economics";
2.Friedman
Milton (1953). "The Methodology of Positive Economics";
3.Charles
Robert McCann, Jr., 2003. The Elgar Dictionary of Economic Quotations, Edward
Elgar;
4.Keynes,
J. M. (September 1924). "Alfred Marshall 1842–1924".