Market economy

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market economy
capitalism, free economy in which most of the economic activity is generated by private businesses rather than by the government


Wikipedia English The Free EncyclopediaDownload this dictionary
Market economy
A market economy (also called a free market economy or a free enterprise economy) is an economic system in which the production and distribution of goods and services take place through the mechanism of free markets guided by a free price system. In a market economy, businesses and consumers decide of their own volition what they will purchase and produce. Technically this means that the producer gets to decide what to produce, how much to produce, what to charge customers for those goods, what to pay employees, etc., and not the government. These decisions in a free-market economy are influenced by the pressures of competition, supply, and demand. This is often contrasted with a planned economy, in which a central government decides what will be produced and in what quantities.
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WordNet 2.0 DictionaryDownload this dictionary
market economy
Noun
1. an economy that relies chiefly on market forces to allocate goods and resources and to determine prices
(synonym) free enterprise, laissez-faire economy
(antonym) non-market economy
(hypernym) economy, economic system
(hyponym) capitalism, capitalist economy


Raynet Business | Marketing DictionaryDownload this dictionary
Market Economy
economic system where the allocation of resources are based on the free play of supply and demand, competition and ultimate customer choice.

Copyright © 2001, Ray Wright
Political Economy Terms DictionaryDownload this dictionary
Market economy
An economy in which scarce resources are all (or nearly all) allocated by the interplay of supply and demand in free markets , largely unhampered by government rationing, price-fixing or other coercive interference. In classifying real historical economies, the level of "marketization" is not primarily an either/or issue but rather a matter of degree. The greater the proportion of the goods and services produced in the society that are allocated by market processes (rather than by government edict or the operation of unchangeable custom), the more meaningful it is to refer to its economy as a market economy -- and the more useful is the abstract economic theory of the operation of markets likely to be for understanding and even predicting economic behavior within that society.
Probably the most critical single distinction between "basically market" and "basically non-market" (socialist , feudal, hunter-gatherer, etc.) economies is whether or not the determinations of what is to be produced and of the corresponding allocation of producers' goods (land, raw materials, machinery, and other "capital," as well as the services of labor) are accomplished primarily through free markets rather than primarily through government command or unalterable custom.
The concept of a market presupposes the existence of certain sorts of property relations in the society involved. At least some goods and services must be legally or socially regarded as alienable property -- that is, there must be ascertainable individuals (or group representatives) who are recognized as having not just the right to use particular scarce economic resources for their own purposes but also the discretionary authority permanently to transfer such rights of use to someone else in exchange for some mutually agreeable quid pro quo, such as money or other goods or services. Not all human societies have recognized any such rights to transfer ownership, and most historical human societies have forbidden or placed stringent limits on the transferability of at least certain kinds of recognized property rights. In many societies (including most of Europe during the Middle Ages), individual or family rights to the perpetual use of particular plots of land were well established and protected by law -- but such rights only rarely could legally be sold to someone else because the land was socially regarded as fundamentally the inalienable property of either the local community as a whole or of the tribe or clan or church or perhaps of the reigning royal family. And even in the USA since 1865, while each person's ownership of his or her own body is well established, the law will still not allow you to make a binding contract to sell yourself into slavery or even to auction off your spare bodily organs for purposes of a surgical transplant.)
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