The central resource allocation questions, traditional, command, market, and mixed economic systems, their characteristics, merits, and demerits, and the distinction between goods and services.
Every society faces the same three fundamental questions arising from scarcity. How a society chooses to answer them determines what kind of economic system it operates.
Different economic systems answer these questions differently, based on who owns the factors of production and what role the government plays.
Before examining systems, two distinctions matter:
Goods vs services: Goods are tangible — they can be physically touched and stored (a car, a bag of rice). Services are intangible — they exist only at the moment of delivery and cannot be stored (a haircut, a medical consultation).
Producer goods vs consumer goods: Producer (capital) goods are used to make other goods (a tractor, a lathe). Consumer goods are purchased for direct use by households (food, clothing).
Direct vs indirect services: Direct services are consumed directly by a person (teaching, medical care). Indirect services support production but are not consumed directly (transport, banking).
In a traditional economy, the allocation of resources is determined by customs, habits, and traditions inherited from previous generations. Production methods and the distribution of output follow established patterns rather than price signals or government directives.
Characteristics:
Merits: Social stability and strong community bonds; every member knows their role; minimal waste from overproduction.
Demerits: Very low productivity; no mechanism to handle growth or change; cannot satisfy rising wants; vulnerable to crop failure or external shocks.
In a command economy, the government owns all or most of the factors of production and answers the three allocation questions through centralised planning. Sometimes called a socialist or centrally planned economy.
Characteristics:
Merits:
Demerits:
In a free market economy, the factors of production are privately owned and the price mechanism answers the three allocation questions. Sometimes called a capitalist or laissez-faire economy.
How the price mechanism allocates:
Characteristics:
Merits:
Demerits:
A mixed economy combines elements of both the free market and command systems. Both the private sector and the government allocate resources. Most economies in the world, including those of the Caribbean, are mixed economies.
Characteristics:
Merits:
Demerits:
CSEC Paper 02 commonly asks you to compare two economic systems. Structure your answer around: ownership of factors, how resource allocation happens, the role of government, and at least two merits and two demerits of each. Do not simply list features — explain what follows from each characteristic.
| Feature | Traditional | Command | Free Market | Mixed |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ownership of factors | Community/custom | State | Private | Both |
| How allocation is decided | Custom/tradition | Central planning | Price mechanism | Market + government |
| Role of government | Minimal | Dominant | Very limited | Active but partial |
| Profit motive | Absent | Absent/limited | Central | Present in private sector |
| Inequality | Low (subsistence level) | Low by design | High | Moderate |
| Efficiency | Very low | Low | High potential | Moderate |
| Examples | Subsistence villages | Historical USSR, Cuba | Theoretical ideal | Most Caribbean nations, UK, USA |
Caribbean economies are mixed economies — private firms dominate most markets, but governments provide healthcare, education, utilities, and regulate key industries. The exam often asks students to state the type of economic system in "most CARICOM countries" — the answer is mixed.