chapter 3, section 4 economic and political systems

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Chapter 3, Section 4 Economic and Political Systems

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Page 1: Chapter 3, Section 4 Economic and Political Systems

Chapter 3, Section 4

Economic and Political Systems

Page 2: Chapter 3, Section 4 Economic and Political Systems

Types of Industry

• An economy is a system for producing, distributing and consuming goods and services.

• Owners and workers are producers. They make products called goods or provide services for people.

• Consumers are people who buy the goods and use the services.

Page 3: Chapter 3, Section 4 Economic and Political Systems

• Cultures chose the way they organize their economies.

• There are three basic systems: traditional, market and command economies.

• In a traditional economy, the customs, traditions and habits of a group influence the producing, buying and selling of goods.

Economic Systems

Page 4: Chapter 3, Section 4 Economic and Political Systems

Economic Systems

• The Mandan Indians practiced a traditional economy before contacting whites. They hunted and farmed their food, and either produced their own goods or traded for what they did not make.

Page 5: Chapter 3, Section 4 Economic and Political Systems

Economic Systems• In a market economy

(also called capitalism), most businesses are privately owned. When a company sells its product, it earns money (or capital.)

• Company owners decide how much to sell their products for, how much to pay their employees and how to use their profits.

Page 6: Chapter 3, Section 4 Economic and Political Systems

Economic Systems• In addition to capitalism,

communism and socialism are also examples of economic systems.

• Communism and socialism are both types of command economies.

• In a command economy, almost all economic decisions are made by the government.

Page 7: Chapter 3, Section 4 Economic and Political Systems

Economic Systems• In a socialist system, the

government owns most basic industries and the government decides how much to pay workers and how much to charge for goods.

• The government uses the profits to pay for services like healthcare and education.

• All other businesses are privately owned like in a capitalist society.

Page 8: Chapter 3, Section 4 Economic and Political Systems

Economic Systems• In a communist system

the government owns all property, like farms and factories.

• The government controls the price of goods and services, how much is produced and how much the workers make.

• There are few communist economies left today.

Page 9: Chapter 3, Section 4 Economic and Political Systems

Developed and Developing Countries

• A culture can also be described by how many, or how advanced, their industries are.

• Only ¼ of the world’s population lives in a developed country with modern technology, commercial farms and stable governments.

Page 10: Chapter 3, Section 4 Economic and Political Systems

Types of Government• Government is the system

that sets up and enforces a society’s laws and institutions.

• Some are controlled by many people, others are controlled by a powerful few.

• Examples of government include monarchy, democracy and dictatorship.

Page 11: Chapter 3, Section 4 Economic and Political Systems

Direct Democracy• The very earliest

governments controlled few people and were simple.

• Everyone participated in government, which made it a direct democracy.

• Greek city-states were the first complex societies to try direct democracies (though only men could vote.)

Page 12: Chapter 3, Section 4 Economic and Political Systems

Monarchy

• Until the last century, monarchy was the most common form of government.

• In a monarchy, a king or queen ruled the government. The ruler inherited the throne by birth, and citizens had little or no say in government.

Page 13: Chapter 3, Section 4 Economic and Political Systems

Monarchy• Monarchies still exist today.

However, most monarchs have been forced to sign constitutions.

• Monarchs no longer have unlimited power. The citizens in monarchies now participate in government, and their rights are defined and protected in their constitutions.

Page 14: Chapter 3, Section 4 Economic and Political Systems

Representative Democracy• In a representative

democracy, the people vote for other citizens to run the government and create laws.

• If the people do not like their representative, they can refuse to re-elect that person.

• For a representative democracy to work, the citizens must be educated and informed about issues affecting the country.

Page 15: Chapter 3, Section 4 Economic and Political Systems

Dictatorship• In a dictatorship, one

person, the dictator, holds almost total power to govern.

• Dictators make laws and decide if there will be elections. Citizens have few rights.

• Dictators often take power in unstable countries, promising to bring order and prosperity.

Page 16: Chapter 3, Section 4 Economic and Political Systems

Dictatorship

• Like constitutional monarchs, dictators are the head of the government, and they hold powers that the people do not have.

• However, constitutional monarchs are limited by their country’s constitution, and do not have complete power over the government as dictators do.