MARKETS, PRICES, AND MONEY
We know now that the basic coordinating mechanism of a capitalist economy is the market system. Without a market economy, there is no capitalism. Decisions made by buyers and sellers of products and resources become effective through a system of markets. We already know that a market is a mechanism or arrangement which brings buyers (demanders) and sellers (suppliers) into contact with one another. The preferences of sellers and buyers are reflected in their choices, and the outcome of these choices is a set of prices. These prices are guideposts on which resource owners, entrepreneurs, and consumers make and revise their free choices as they pursue their self-interests. Just as competition is the controlling mechanism, so a system of markets and prices is the basic organizing force. The market system is an elaborate communication system through which innumerable individual free choices are recorded, summarized, and balanced against one another. Those who obey the dictates of the market system are rewarded; those who ignore them are penalized by the system. Through this communication system, society decides what the economy should produce, how production can be efficiently organized, and how the fruits of productive effort are distributed among the individual economic units which make up capitalism. The «interaction» between demand and supply in markets influences prices. Market-determined prices — that is, prices determined by producers and consumers acting in their own best interest — are the signals that help define the trade-offs we face and that ultimately lead society as a whole to allocate resources efficiently. Understanding how changes in supply and demand affect prices is an important component of economic literacy. When a prospective college student, for example, contemplates majors, she might speculate about where demand for workers is increasing fastest, because wages and job opportunities will probably be greatest in those occupations. When prices change then trade-offs change, and people's decisions change. Our college student might discover, for example, that the demand for software engineers has increased and, subsequently, that wages for those jobs have also risen. Also, many public policy decisions, such as changes in the tax code, involve changing incentives with the hope of changing behaviour. Many times people are unhappy with the prices that markets produce, but an economically literate person realizes that prices are important signals that reflect underlying changes in supply and demand. Consumers and producers respond to these signals in ways that make society better off. When governments interfere with these market adjustments, society is usually worse off. When people hear the word «price» they usually associate it with the word «money». Virtually all economies, advanced or primitive, use money. Money performs several functions, but first and foremost it is a medium of exchange: it makes trade easier. The use of money facilitates the exchange of goods and services which specialization requires. Exchange can, and sometimes does, occur on the basis of barter, that is, swapping goods for goods. But barter can pose serious problems for the economy because it requires a coincidence of wants between the two transactors. If this coincidence of wants does not exist, trade is blocked. To overcome such a stalemate, economies use money, which is simply a convenient social invention to facilitate exchanges of goods and services. Historically, cattle, cigarettes, shells, stones, pieces of metal, and many other commodities have been used, with varying degrees of success, as a medium for facilitating exchange. But to be money, an item needs to pass only one test: it must be generally acceptable to sellers in exchange for goods and services. Money is socially defined: whatever society accepts as a medium of exchange is money. Most economies use pieces of paper as money. On a global basis the fact that different nations have different currencies complicates international specialization and exchange. However, foreign exchange markets permit US residents, Japanese, Germans, Britons, and Mexicans to exchange dollars, yen, euros, pounds, and pesos for one another to complete international exchanges of goods and services.
Vocabulary
Vocabulary exercises 1. Which of the following statements are true/false according to the text? Correct the false sentences:
2. Fill in the gaps with the words and expressions given below: 1. Without a market economy, there is no capitalism and ________ made by buyers and sellers of products and resources become effective through a system of markets. 2. The _________ of sellers and buyers are reflected in their choices. 3. _________ is the process of identifying and starting a new business venture, sourcing and organizing the required resources. 4. Just as _______ is the controlling mechanism, so a system of markets and prices is the basic organizing force. 5. Those who obey the dictates of the ________ are rewarded; those who ignore them are penalized by the system. 6. The fruits of productive effort ________ the individual economic units. 7. The ________ between demand and supply in markets _______ prices. 8. An economically literate person realizes that prices are important signals that reflect underlying changes in _______ and demand. 9. When prices change then trade-offs change, and people's _______ change. 10. The ______ for software engineers has increased lately and, subsequently, that wages for those jobs have also risen. 11. When governments interfere with these_________, society is usually worse off. 12. When people hear the word «price» they usually associate it with the word «_______». 13. But barter can pose serious problems for the economy because it requires a coincidence of wants between the two ________. 14. Historically, cattle, cigarettes, shells, stones, pieces of metal, and many other _________ have been used, with varying degrees of success, as a medium for facilitating exchange. 15. On a global basis the fact that different nations have different _______ complicates international specialization and ________. Entrepreneurship, market adjustments, commodities, interaction, decisions, affect prices, influences, transactors, supply, market system, exchange, competition, money, decisions, preferences, demand, currencies, are distributed among.
3. Find in the text English equivalents for the following:
4. What do definition in A column correspond to? Fill in Column B:
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