If you study basic economics, you will learn that there are
4 economic systems: traditional, free market, command and mixed. Without getting too bogged down in the
details here’s a quick rundown of them.
A traditional economy
is one that places a huge priority on tradition and customs. They are uninterested in innovation and
growth and are more concerned with keeping things the same.
A free market economy
is one in which there is no outside control on what you do. You are 100% free to decide what you want to
do with your time, money, resources, possession and anything else.
A command economy
is the opposite of that. You have no
freedom to decide. Every decision is
made by some form of central authority, probably the government. They control
everything.
A mixed economy
lies between a free market and a command economy with some freedom to decide
and some control by an authority.
Three of the four lay on a nice, simple spectrum. We have free markets on one side, command on the other and mixed in the middle.
Traditional economies sit off to the side. Because of their unwillingness to engage in
other markets and their insular nature, they can often be effectively ignored.
It seems a pretty simple system. Except it has always nagged me that
traditional economies are sitting off on their own like some sort of unwanted
leftover. It makes things not so pretty
or simple.
I don’t want to digress into a long discussion on political
ideologies, but bear with me for a second.
A lot of people look at political ideologies in a similar
way. We have a nice precise
spectrum. Liberals on the left,
conservatives on the right, and the moderates are in the middle.
Instead of a line, a better diagram is a diamond. Because there isn’t just one axis. The left-right axis is still liberal and
conservative, but there’s a second axis with libertarians at the top and big
government or statists at the bottom. It
looks like this.
This isn’t a post about government ideology, so I’m not
going to into it any more than that. If
you’ve never seen this before, search a bit on the internet. It’s easy to find. The point is that what seems to a lot of
people to be a spectrum on a line, actually exists on a plane.
Okay, back to econ.
What if there’s a second axis for economic spectrums?
What if traditional economies are not some weird outlier
that don’t mesh with the others, but are just another cardinal point? What if instead of a line, the diagram for
economic systems should also look like this?
The question then becomes, what goes opposite traditional
economies?
The definition of a traditional economy says it is a system
in which tradition and custom are most important. They aren’t interested in innovation, but
instead in continuing on doing things the same way they have always been done.
Perhaps then a working definition for the opposite would be
an economy that is constantly looking for new ways to replace the
outmoded. In which a tradition, custom
or method only lasts as long as it is useful.
An economy in which we are always seeking a better alternative and once
it is found we abandon the old.
Except that doesn’t take it far enough.
I’m sure there are some who will disagree, but the optimal
spots on both the political ideology diagram and the economic systems diagram
are not in the corners.
An economy with 100% government control or 100% freedom is
not desirable. There are huge negatives
to both. Instead we want something in
between. There’s a lot of ground in the
definition of a mixed economy, and we can argue about just how far to the left
or right of center is optimal, but mixed is where we want to be.
Similarly, nobody wants to be all the way in the corner of
traditional. In truth, there are no true
free markets or true command economies.
Every economy has at least some government control and everywhere has at
least a small amount of freedom.
Similarly, I doubt there are any true traditional economies out there
either.
But if we use the working definition we just created of what
lies opposite traditional and place that in the opposite corner, I can not only
envision such an economic system, I can see it working. It looks like a solid plan. The problem with our working definition of
what lies opposite traditional is that it’s too perfect. If it was the opposite corner, everyone would
want to be there.
Given all that, it seems the opposite would need to be an
economy in which we favor innovation to the extreme. It would be an economy in which doing things
the same way would be discouraged.
Tradition, custom and old methods would have no value.
In fact, doing things the same way twice would be
discouraged.
“No economy could work like that!” you declare. “It couldn’t sustain itself.”
Exactly.
There are no true free markets or command economies because
in the long run they don’t work. They
can’t sustain themselves. Somewhere in
the middle is best.
There are no true traditional economies either. Thus there also wouldn’t be a true opposite
of traditional in existence either. The
ideal is somewhere in the middle.
Thus the opposite corner has to be the Novel Economy. The economy in which new is best and old is
always bad.
I was tempted to call this opposite corner an innovative
economy. But that won’t work. Innovation implies making things better. This economy wouldn’t be worried about making
things better, it would be worried about making things different and new.
Sometimes new is better.
But sometimes the old way is the better way.
Thus our diagram should look like this:
The left-right axis is the personal freedom axis. The further left you go, the more freedom you
have and the less control anyone else (including the government) has on
you. The further right you go, the less
freedom you have and the more control someone else (probably the government)
has on you.
The up-down axis is the change axis. The further up you go, the more you are
concerned with keeping things the same and the less you want to find something
new. The further down you go, the less
you are concerned with keeping things the same and the more important creating
change becomes.
The best spot will be somewhere in the middle. Closer to the mixed zone in the center. How far off the center and in which direction is the best is something we can argue about.
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