6ss Economic Systems

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Economic

Systems

Essential Question:
How do economic
systems answer the
questions of what,
how, and for whom
to produce?

Standards:
SS6E1a, SS6E5a, SS6E8a.
Compare how traditional, command, and
market economies answer the economic
questions of (1) what to produce, (2)
how to produce, and (3) for whom to
produce
SS6E1b, SS6E5b, SS6E8b.
Explain how most countries have a
mixed economy located on a continuum
between pure market and pure
command.

Economic
Systems

A Country must decide how to


distribute its resources to meet
the needs of its people.

How a country makes these


decisions determines its type of
economic system.

An Economic System is
the way a society
organizes the production,
distribution, and
consumption of goods
and services.

Vocabular
y
Break
In small groups, sort the pictures
provided as examples of production,
distribution, or consumption

Economic
Systems

There are 3 basic types of


economic systems that have to
answer three basic questions:
(1) What to produce?
(2) How to produce?
(3) For Whom to produce?

Economic
Systems
WHAT TO PRODUCE? (What kinds of goods and
services should be produced?)
HOW TO PRODUCE? (What productive resources
are used to produce goods and services?)
FOR WHOM TO PRODUCE? (Who gets to have the
goods and services?
The way a society answers these questions
determines its economic system.

Types of Economic
Systems:
1. Traditional Economy
2. Command Economy
3. Market Economy

Follow teacher instructions to


create your Economic Systems
Foldable to use for note-taking

Traditional Economy
An economic system in which economic
decisions are based on customs and
beliefs
People will make what they always made
& will do the same work their parents
did
Exchange of goods is done through
Bartering: trading without using money

Traditional
Economy
Who decides what to produce?
People follow their customs and make only
what is needed to take care of oneself

Who decides how to produce goods &


services?
People grow & make things the same way
that their ancestors did

For Whom are the goods & services


produced for?
Self and trading purposes (people
in the village who need them)

Traditional
Economy

Examples:

Villages in Africa and South America; the


Inuit tribes in Canada; the caste system in
parts of rural India

Strengths: Predictable job and lifestyle


Weaknesses: Lack resources and
limited production

Distributed
Summarizing
Draw an illustration in
your foldable that
represents a
Traditional Economy.

Command Economy
Government makes all economic
decisions & owns most of the
property
Sometimes called communism
Examples: Cuba, former Soviet Union,
North Korea
This system has not been very
successful & more and more
countries are abandoning it

Command Economy
Who decides what to produce?
Government makes all economic decisions

Who decides how to produce goods and


services?
Government decides how to make
goods/services

For Whom are the goods and


services produced for?
Whoever the government decides to give
them to

Command
Economy

Strengths: people do not have to


worry about employment,
housing, education, and
healthcare
Weaknesses: consumers own
nothing, no choices/freedom,
limited innovation by individuals

Distributed
Summarizing
Draw an illustration
in your foldable that
represents a
Command Economy.

Market Economy
In a market economy, buyers and sellers
answer the three economic questions
All resources are privately owned
Who decides what to produce?
Whatever the market demands that will
produce a profit
Who decides how to produce goods and
services?
Private producers (businesses)
For Whom are the goods and services
produced for?
Consumers who demand the product and are
willing to pay

Market Economy
Strengths: People can start their
own businesses, more choice
Weaknesses: The desire for
money may lead to poor quality of
goods and services, business
owners have to risk losing money

Distributed
Summarizing:
Draw an illustration
in your foldable that
represents a Market
Economy.

Distributed
Summarizing:

Economic
System Quotes

Mixed Economy
Market + Command = Mixed
There are no pure command or market
economies. To some degree, all modern
economies show characteristics of both
systems and are often referred to as mixed
economies.
Most economies are closer to one type of
economic system than another
For example, businesses own resources and
determine what and how to produce, but the
Government regulates certain industries

Mixed Economy
Most democratic countries fall in this
category (there are no truly pure
Market or Command economies).
Examples: U.S., Brazil, Mexico,
Canada, UK, etc.

Continuum of Economies
Mixed

Pure
Command

Pure
Market

Name That
Economic
System
Activity

Summarizing
Strategy

Economic Systems
Continuum Activity

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