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Chapter 2
Economic Systems, Resource
Allocation, and Social Well-Being:
Lessons From China’s Transition
McGraw-Hill/Irwin
Copyright © 2010 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Economic Systems
• Pure Market Economy
Private property rights
Decentralized decision making coordinated
through markets
• Pure Command Economy
State ownership and/or control of economic
resources
Centralized planning
• Mixed Systems
Transitional economy
2-2
Resource Allocation in a
Market Economy
• Market Structure
Purely Competitive Markets
Large number of buyers and sellers
Each seller offers standardized product
Product prices free to move up or down
Buyers and sellers must be mobile
Freedom of entry and exit
Purely Monopolistic Markets
One seller
Imperfectly Competitive Markets
2-3
Demand
Price$
Price Quantity
($)
(SixPacks
per
Week)
3.00
• Law of Demand
• Other Things Being Equal
D
2.50
2.00
1.50
D
$1.50
1,500
1.00
2.00
1,00
.50
2.50
500
5
10
15
20
Quantity
2-4
Quantity Demanded versus Demand
Price $
D2
3.00
2.50
D
D1
2.00
D2
1.50
•Consumer Income
•Prices of Related
Goods
•Substitutes
•Complements
•Tastes
•Expectations
•Number of
Consumers
D
1.00
D1
.50
5
10
15
20
Quantity
2-5
Supply
Price $
Price
($)
Quantity
(Cars per
year)
$5,000
250,000
20
10,000
500,000
15
15,000
750,000
10
S
5
S
250
500
750
20
Quantity
2-6
Quantity Supplied versus Supply
Price $
•Cost of Production
•Prices of Related
Goods
•Seller’s Expectations
•Number of Sellers
S1
S
20
S2
15
10
5
S1
S
S2
250
500
750
20
Quantity
2-7
Equilibrium
Price $
Surplus
9
8
S
D
7
6
5
4
Shortage
S
D
3
5
6
7
8
9
10
Quantity
2-8
Resource Allocation
in a Command Economy
• Centralized Planning
The Communist Revolution in China
Establishment of a Command Economy
• Problems with Centralized Planning
Initial Phase
Great Leap Forward
State Planning Commission
Cultural Revolution
2-9
Shortcomings of Central Planning
• Informational Requirements
• Incentives for Efficient Production
• Heavy Industry versus Consumer
Goods
2-10
China’s Transition to a
Market-Oriented Economy
• Agricultural Reform
• Industrial Reform
• Lessons for Other Economies
2-11
China’s Transition to Markets: What
Are the Facts?
China’s Comparative Economic Performance Since Reform
Real GDP
China
Crop Production
8.92%
China
6.45%
South Korea
3.31
South Korea
0.05
Singapore
7.66
Singapore
10.55
Vietnam
7.53
Vietnam
4.63
Low-income
4.68
Low-income
4.10
United States
2.57
United States
1.52
Real Per Capita GDP
China
Industrial Production
8.00%
China
11.42%
South Korea
2.38
South Korea
5.13
Singapore
6.65
Singapore
8.50
Vietnam
6.43
Vietnam
10.29
Low-income
2.53
Low-income
5.76
United States
1.61
United States
0.76
2-12
Problems of Transition in China
•
•
•
•
•
Unemployment and inflation
Corruption
Population pressures
Pollution problems
The desire for democracy
2-13