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What are the four important distinctives of free-enterprise economies?

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  1. all private ownership and control

    no government intervention

    consumer sovereignty

    market failure


  2. Most free enterprise systems consist of four components: households, businesses, markets and governments.

    Households—the Owners. In a free enterprise system, households—not the government—own most of the country’s economic resources and decide how to use them. One of the resources that households possess is their labor, which they sell to existing firms or use to form new businesses. In addition to selling their resources where they can get the highest price or largest profit, households also act as consumers. The wages and salaries of households purchase about two-thirds of all the production in the United States. Consumers vote with their dollars, thereby directing production toward the goods and services they want businesses to provide. This is called consumer sovereignty.

    Businesses—the Organizers. Businesses organize economic resources to produce a good or service. The people who start businesses are called entrepreneurs. They are the organizers and innovators, constantly discovering new and better ways to bring resources together in the hopes of making a profit. Profit fuels the engine of business. Entrepreneurs, lured by the potential for profits, create new businesses to satisfy consumers’ needs and desires. The inability to make profits signals businesses to close or to reorganize their resources more efficiently. Efficiency means that resources are being used to produce the goods and services that society most desires at the lowest economic cost. In a competitive industry, the presence or absence of profits sends an important signal about the industry’s economic efficiency.

    Markets—the Brokers. How and where do buying and selling activities take place? The answer is, in markets. Although markets are not necessarily people, they act as agents—something like a stockbroker or a real estate agent—to bring buyers and sellers together. Over time, markets have become increasingly complex. Now, buying and selling can occur 24 hours a day from anywhere in the world via the Internet. A market is any place or any way that buyers and sellers

    can exchange goods, services, resources or money. There are three categories of markets in a free enterprise society: resource markets, product markets and financial markets. Households go through resource markets to sell their labor to businesses. Businesses go through product markets to sell goods and services to households. And both households and businesses use financial markets to borrow and save money. Typically, businesses borrow money that households save, using financial institutions as the intermediary.

    Governments—the Protectors. The cornerstone of a truly free enterprise economy is the absence of government interference in economic matters. However, the government still plays an important role in any free enterprise system. This is because unlimited freedom is impossible: one person’s freedom may sometimes conflict with another’s. As Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas once put it, “My freedom to move my fist must be limited by the proximity of your chin.” The main role of government in a free society, then, is to define and enforce the rules of society. Government has the coercive power to maintain law and order, protect people’s right to own property and enforce voluntary contracts people enter into. In essence, government provides the umbrella under which the free enterprise system operates. Governments also provide goods, such as national defense, that the private market alone would have a hard time producing.

    Free enterprise is the freedom of individuals and businesses to operate and compete with a minimum of government interference or regulation. It enables individuals and businesses to create, produce, transform, develop, innovate and compete in the marketplace. As they are able and willing, enterprising people produce goods and services for profit, offer their labor for wages and own the resources needed to produce and sell goods and services. In this system, no one forces people to be creative, productive or enterprising. Instead, they pursue what they believe to be best for them. By producing the goods and services that society values most highly, a free enterprise system results in the greatest efficiency, or lowest costs, of any economic system. It is the system most compatible with individual freedom and political democracy.

    Free enterprise means men and women have the opportunity to own economic resources, such as land, minerals, manufacturing plants and computers, and to use those tools to create goods and services for sale.

    What prompts people to take the financial and emotional risk of starting a business? The main motivator is the potential to earn a profit. People also go into business for personal reasons, such as the desire for independence and the drive to be creative.

    Others have no intention of starting a business. If they choose, they can offer their labor, another economic resource, for wages and salaries. The key to free enterprise is that all these people, whether they start a business of their own or work for someone else, do so voluntarily. By allowing people to pursue their own interests, a free enterprise system can produce phenomenal results. Running shoes, walking shoes, mint toothpaste, gel toothpaste, skim milk, chocolate milk, cellular phones and BlackBerrys are just a few of the millions of products created as a result of economic freedom.

    In a free enterprise system, entrepreneurs, or risk-takers, have a strong incentive to pay attention to the votes consumers register with their dollars. This is because entrepreneurs profit by meeting consumers’ wants and needs. Entrepreneurs continually strive to improve established products and discover new ones. In the end, both the producers and the consumers benefit. Producers can earn a profit, and consumers can obtain the goods and services they want.

    Free markets do not cater solely to the majority. They also provide products and services that appeal to individual tastes. Societies in which one group of leaders makes all the economic decisions probably do not produce the things that groups with special interests would like to have. For example, it is doubtful that one central authority would think to produce both rap music and classical music, Super Mario Brothers and Trivial Pursuit, pizza and sushi, and Bran Flakes and Cap’n Crunch. But free markets provide all these things and much, much more. Free markets provide a vehicle for serving the individual needs of an entire spectrum of interests, whether they represent the majority or only a small percentage of people.

    Adam Smith, in The Wealth of Nations, showed us more than 200 years ago that people pursuing their own self-interests in a free enterprise economy, as if led by some “invisible hand,” end up promoting the public interest. But with all these people looking out for themselves, how does free enterprise result in such beneficial outcomes for society? That’s where competition enters the picture. For example, when computers first came on the market, they had great value but were extremely costly to produce. Relatively few businesses could afford them. But the lure of profits prompted other companies to start producing computers. This added competition had two results. It prompted computer companies to cut costs in order to compete, and it led them to look harder and faster for innovations that could give their computers an edge over the others. Now, computers are much less expensive, more powerful and much more userfriendly than they used to be. Competition and the lure of profits, combined with ingenuity, continue to drive the market forward.

    The benefits of competition and free enterprise are not limited to one country. If free enterprise between people in Texas and California makes those individuals better off, then free enterprise between people in Texas and Mexico must make those individuals better off as well. The larger the marketplace, the greater the choice available and the greater the competition. Competition results in greater efficiency and lower prices, whether it be between two companies in the same country or two companies on opposite sides of the globe.

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