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Published byZoe Hawkins Modified over 5 years ago
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MIXED ECONOMIES Mixed economies – some combination of market, command, and even traditional – are the norm throughout the modern world → mixed economies can take many forms, but a basic classification of an economic system is based on the amount and degree of government control vs. individual freedom
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MIXED MARKET ECONOMIES
Though they have many advantages, markets can’t always meet the needs of the population → for example, during the Great Depression the USA created unemployment insurance, minimum wage, Social Security, and the FDIC, all government programs, thus becoming a mixed market economy
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MIXED MARKET ECONOMIES
→ when a country moves from a socialist model in the direction of the market, it is said to be in transition (this is done by privatizing: turning government ownership over to the private sector) * Beginning in the late 1970s China began a transition (“capitalism with Chinese characteristics), but as we’ll see, still has a large degree of gov’t control
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MIXED MARKET ECONOMIES
** Like China, many countries today such as North Korea and Cuba have begun to allow elements of capitalism because it generates wealth, satisfies the population, secures their leadership
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MIXED SOCIALIST ECONOMIES
Many countries have adopted elements of capitalism, but the government still owns and controls most of the resources → China is controlled by the communist party and its gov’t owns the factors of production, but it has also embraced markets, competition, profit and international trade
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MIXED SOCIALIST ECONOMIES
→ when a country moves from a market model towards a socialist one, it does so by nationalizing (the gov’t takes over) private industry * See Cuba under Castro and Venezuela under Chavez
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ECONOMIC TRANSITIONS The dominant trend in modern times has been the transition from communist/socialist economies towards capitalism → many different forms of capitalism exist because countries have different social and cultural values
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ECONOMIC TRANSITIONS Countries such as those from the former Soviet Union have had a long, difficult transitioning process, but have come a long way → when a country transitions, the population is not used to competition and many lose formerly secure jobs
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ECONOMIC TRANSITIONS → compared to command economies, these countries have a higher GDP per capita, but not as high as those of market-based economies such as the U.S. * GDP per capita refers to GDP per person; GDP measures a country’s economic size and dividing its population into its GDP gives you its GDP per capita
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