Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Economic Systems and Development. © Prentice Hall, 2006International Business 3e Chapter 4 - 2 Chapter Preview Discuss the decline of centrally planned.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Economic Systems and Development. © Prentice Hall, 2006International Business 3e Chapter 4 - 2 Chapter Preview Discuss the decline of centrally planned."— Presentation transcript:

1 Economic Systems and Development

2 © Prentice Hall, 2006International Business 3e Chapter 4 - 2 Chapter Preview Discuss the decline of centrally planned economic systems Describe mixed economies and privatization Explain how a market economy functions and the role of each primary feature Identify ways to measure economic development Describe economic transition and the remaining obstacles to companies

3 © Prentice Hall, 2006International Business 3e Chapter 4 - 3 Economic Systems Centrally Planned - Government ownership of economic resources and state planning Mixed - Government and private ownership of economic resoures split rather evenly Market - Mostly private (individual or business) ownership of economic resources

4 © Prentice Hall, 2006International Business 3e Chapter 4 - 4 Centrally Planned Economy Government owns most land, factories and other economic resources and plans nearly all economic activity - Welfare of the group is paramount - Economic and social equality is the goal - “Communist” system is needed Asia Central Europe Eastern Europe Latin America - Russia (1917) - China (1949) - Cuba (1959)

5 © Prentice Hall, 2006International Business 3e Chapter 4 - 5 Decline of Central Planning Central planning failed to: -Create economic value -Provide incentives -Achieve rapid growth -Satisfy consumer needs

6 © Prentice Hall, 2006International Business 3e Chapter 4 - 6 Focus on China Socialism with Chinese characteristics - Communist after civil war ended in 1949 - Agricultural reforms began in 1979 - Township and Village Enterprises legal in 1984 - Aggressive reform since that time Challenges ahead - Political problems and social unrest - Unemployment and migrant labor - Eventual(?) reunification with Taiwan - Advanced entrepreneurial and management skills

7 © Prentice Hall, 2006International Business 3e Chapter 4 - 7 Mixed Economy Government and private parties share ownership of land, factories and other economic resources rather evenly Noble goals - Low unemployment and poverty - Steady economic growth - Equitable distribution of wealth But stagnant - State-owned businesses uncompetitive - Prices and taxes higher, living standards mixed - Privatized state firms to boost competitiveness

8 © Prentice Hall, 2006International Business 3e Chapter 4 - 8 Market Economy Private parties (individuals or businesses) own vast majority of land, factories and other economic resources Supply - Quantity of a good or service that producers are willing to provide at a specific selling price Demand - Quantity of a good or service that buyers are willing to purchase at a specific selling price

9 © Prentice Hall, 2006International Business 3e Chapter 4 - 9 Laissez-Faire Economics Less government interference in commerce - Free choice Consumers choose freely from alternative purchase options - Free enterprise Firms decide which products to sell and markets to enter - Price flexibility Most prices follow the forces of supply and demand

10 © Prentice Hall, 2006International Business 3e Chapter 4 - 10 Government’s Role in a Market Economy Enforce antitrust laws Preserve property rights Provide fiscal and monetary stability Preserve political stability

11 © Prentice Hall, 2006International Business 3e Chapter 4 - 11 Enforce Antitrust Laws Encourages development of industries with as many competing businesses as market will sustain - Keeps consumer prices in check - Prevents growth-stunting monopolies

12 © Prentice Hall, 2006International Business 3e Chapter 4 - 12 Preserve Property Rights Encourages risk-taking by people and business as claims to assets and future earnings are protected - Market economy needs strong property rights - Entrepreneurs start new businesses - Firms create new technologies and products

13 © Prentice Hall, 2006International Business 3e Chapter 4 - 13 Provide Fiscal & Monetary Stability Encourages commerce in a nation because it improves its reputation as a place to do business - Fiscal policies (taxation, government spending) - Monetary policies (money supply, interest rates) - Reduces overall uncertainty - Improves business forecasts - Holds inflation and unemployment low

14 © Prentice Hall, 2006International Business 3e Chapter 4 - 14 Preserve Political Stability Encourages businesses to engage in activities without fear of disrupted future operations - Promotes economic growth generally - Reduces worries of terrorism / kidnapping - Improves chances for business survival

15 © Prentice Hall, 2006International Business 3e Chapter 4 - 15 Economic Development Economic well-being of one nation’s people relative to another nation’s people -Economic output (agricultural,industrial, service) -Infrastructure (communications,transportation, power) -People (physical health, education level) Productivity is key - Ratio of outputs (that created) to inputs (resources used to create output)

16 © Prentice Hall, 2006International Business 3e Chapter 4 - 16 National Production GDP is the value of goods and services that a nation produces during a one-year period (GNP adds international activities) Potential problems - Overlooks certain transactions - Ignores economic growth rates - Averages disguise regions - May ignore purchasing power Purchasing power parity - Relative ability of two countries’ currencies to buy the same “basket” of goods in those two countries

17 © Prentice Hall, 2006International Business 3e Chapter 4 - 17 National Wealth at PPP PPP Estimate of GDP per Capita Country (U.S. $) (U.S. = 100) United States36,10036,100 Switzerland37,40030,500 Canada23,10030,300 Australia20,70028,100 United Kingdom26,40028,000 Japan31,30027,000 Czech Republic 6,80015,100 Hungary 6,40013,900 Mexico 6,300 9,200 Turkey 2,600 6,400

18 © Prentice Hall, 2006International Business 3e Chapter 4 - 18 Classifying Countries Developed Country - Highly industrialized, highly efficient and whose people enjoy a high quality of life Emerging Market - Newly industrialized countries plus those with potential to be newly industrialized Newly Industrialized Country - Recently greater national production and exports from industrial operations Developing Country - Poor infrastructure and extremely low personal income

19 © Prentice Hall, 2006International Business 3e Chapter 4 - 19 Economic Transition Fundamental reorganization of an economy and the creation of new free-market institutions Reforms include -Reduce budget deficits and expand credit -Allow the “price mechanism” to determine prices and economic activity -Legalize private firms and privatize state-owned assets within a property rights framework -Remove barriers to trade and investment and eliminate currency controls -Ensure social-welfare system to ease transition

20 © Prentice Hall, 2006International Business 3e Chapter 4 - 20 Obstacles to Transition Lack of managerial expertise Capital shortage Environmental degradation Cultural differences

21 © Prentice Hall, 2006International Business 3e Chapter 4 - 21 Focus on Russia Operated under a staunchly communist system for about 75 years Underwent a rough transition of simultaneous economic and political reform But government tax revenues are increasing and foreign investment is returning Challenges include developing managerial talent and fostering political and social stability


Download ppt "Economic Systems and Development. © Prentice Hall, 2006International Business 3e Chapter 4 - 2 Chapter Preview Discuss the decline of centrally planned."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google