Lecture 3: Free Markets, Voluntary Exchange, and Money Session ID: DDEE EC101 DD & EE / Manove Market System>Money p1 EC101 DD & EE / Manove Clicker Question p2 Economics Systems Different cultures have different economic systems… with different rules or codes of behavior. EC101 DD & EE / Manove Economic Concepts>Economic Systems p3 In some places, the entire economy works like the army: orders are passed down from the top. In other places, the economy is completely decentralized: families run their own businesses any way they want. Some standard examples are: Feudalism and Serfdom The Command Economy (former Soviet Union) Free Market System But many other economic systems have been described. [Read about the Incas in the course website.] EC101 DD & EE / Manove Economic Concepts>Economic Systems p4 Basic Economic Choices As a group, economic agents must make a number of important economic choices: What to produce Production decisions How to produce it Who gets the outputs Who provides the inputs Distribution decisions In different economic systems, these decisions are made in different ways. EC101 DD & EE / Manove Economic Concepts>Economic Choices p5 Free-Market System In the free-market economic system, most economic activity is voluntary— induced by economic incentives. Production voluntary activity of private firms. Distribution voluntary exchange EC101 DD & EE / Manove Free-Market System p6 Example: Shanu’s Pizza Palace Shanu opens a pizza restaurant (voluntary production). She leases space, buys ovens (voluntary exchange). She hires workers at $12/hour (voluntary exchange). They produce pizza (voluntary production). Shanu sells pizza to customers (voluntary exchange). EC101 DD & EE / Manove Free-Market System>Example p7 Real Free-Market Economies Most countries, even countries with communist governments, now have free-market economies. They rely mainly on the voluntary economic activities of households and private firms. But real free-market economies also include involuntary private exchange and production government production, induced by a combination of political and economic incentives EC101 DD & EE / Manove Free-Market System>EC101 p8 Involuntary Economic Activities Example: Shanu’s Pizza Palace (again) Shanu must pay taxes to the local government, … The local health authorities require her to keep her restaurant kitchen very clean…. She must not allow smoking in her restaurant …. EC101 DD & EE / Manove Free-Market System>Deviations p9 Government Production Example: Even in the US, governments operate many firms. universities schools ……. EC101 DD & EE / Manove Free-Market System>Countries p 10 EC101 DD & EE / Manove Clicker Question p 11 The Free-Market System and EC 101 Real free-market economies are difficult to analyze. So in EC101 we spend a lot of time on the free-market model. In the model, all economic activities are private and voluntary (arising from economic incentives). The model may help us understand the real world. But the results of the model aren’t always realistic. EC101 DD & EE / Manove Free-Market System>EC101 p 12 Voluntary Exchange Voluntary exchange is usually used in freemarket economies to distribute outputs and inputs. Households, firms and governments sell and buy (exchange) goods and services. Voluntary exchange usually increases the welfare of both parties, or, at least, doesn’t normally decrease it, because people don’t tend to do things voluntarily that make them worse off. Most voluntary exchange takes place in markets. EC101 DD & EE / Manove Market System>Voluntary Exchange p 13 Markets Markets are “meeting places” for voluntary exchange. Traditional markets Supermarkets NASDAQ: a virtual meeting place EC101 DD & EE / Manove Market System>Voluntary Exchange>Markets p 14 Some markets are diffuse and exist in many places simultaneously. market for petroleum US labor market (one market or many?) EC101 DD & EE / Manove Market System>Voluntary Exchange>Markets p 15 Voluntary Exchange Examples Example 1: You have I have but prefer but prefer Outcome: We trade voluntarily. We are both better off. EC101 DD & EE / Manove Market System>Voluntary Exchange>Examples p 16 Example 2: You have and prefer I have and prefer Outcome: We do not trade. Our welfare … EC101 DD & EE / Manove Market System>Voluntary Exchange>Examples p 17 Example 3: You have I have and prefer and prefer Outcome: You want to trade,… But I say no. We don’t trade…. ….??? EC101 DD & EE / Manove Market System>Voluntary Exchange>Examples p 18 Example 4: You have I have and prefer and prefer Outcome: You want to trade,… But I don’t want to. So you tell me that oranges are better for my health. …??? EC101 DD & EE / Manove Market System>Voluntary Exchange>Examples p 19 Voluntary Exchange: Moral Voluntary exchange tends to make agents better off, because it is voluntary. It never makes agents worse off (well, almost never). Important exceptions: EC101 DD & EE / Manove Market System>Voluntary Exchange>Moral p 20 Voluntary Exchange and Trust In most markets, the seller has a lot more information about the product or service than the buyer has. Examples: There are laws that “protect the unsuspecting from the unscrupulous.” But voluntary exchange always requires trust, a form of social capital. EC101 DD & EE / Manove Market System>Voluntary Exchange>Moral p 21 Voluntary-Exchange Mechanisms Voluntary exchange is a fundamental aspect of the free market system. But how is voluntary exchange conducted? Two primary mechanisms: Barter Selling and Buying EC101 DD & EE / Manove Market System>Money p 22 Exchange Mechanisms: Barter Accomplished in one step Direct Exchange: you have oranges and want apples. “Double Coincidence of Wants.” You must find a market with people who… have what you want… and want what you have. EC101 DD & EE / Manove Market System>Voluntary Exchange>Barter p 23 Exchange Mechanisms: Selling & Buying Two steps (rather than one) Selling what you have: Buying what you want EC101 DD & EE / Manove Market System>Voluntary Exchange>Selling&Buying p 24 Selling and Buying requires two steps and a special tool (money). But searching for the right market is easier. When you sell, you must find a market with people who want what you have,… but they don’t have to have what you want. When you buy, you must find a market with people who have what you want,… but they don’t have to want what you have. EC101 DD & EE / Manove Market System>Voluntary Exchange>Selling&Buying p 25 Advantages of Selling and Buying Being able to find the right market easily is very important in complex economies with millions of goods and services. That’s why barter is uncommon in advanced economic systems. EC101 DD & EE / Manove Market System>Voluntary Exchange>Selling&Buying p 26 Money Barter requires no special tools,… But selling and buying require a medium of exchange: Money Selling means obtaining money in exchange for goods. Buying means obtaining goods in exchange for money. EC101 DD & EE / Manove Market System>Money p 27 Types of Money Commodity money Salt Gold Fiat money declared to be money by the state or other institution often exists only as paper (currency),… or as intangible notations in computer memory banks (checkable deposits). Fiat money has no value of its own. EC101 DD & EE / Manove Market System>Money>Types of Money p 28 Acceptance of Money Why do people accept paper money in return for valuable goods and services? We accept paper money from others, because we know that …. We can then use the money to buy what we want. The role of “legal tender” ? Bitcoin ? EC101 DD & EE / Manove Market System>Acceptance of Money p 29 What would happen if I told you… “Don’t accept US dollars—they’re worthless.” But suppose Fed Governor Janet Yellen went on television with President Obama and said… What would happen then? EC101 DD & EE / Manove Market System>Acceptance of Money p 30 EC101 DD & EE / Manove Clicker Question p 31 End of File EC101 DD & EE / Manove End of File p 32
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