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Market system
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{{Distinguish|market economy|market mechanism|market structure}} {{more citations needed|date=March 2013}} A '''market system''' (or '''market ecosystem'''<ref>{{Cite book| publisher = World Bank| isbn = 978-0-8213-8927-0| last1 = Ledgerwood| first1 = Joanna| last2 = Earne| first2 = Julie| last3 = Nelson| first3 = Candace| title = The New Microfinance Handbook: A Financial Market System Perspective| location = Washington, DC| date = 2013| pages = 26| url = https://openknowledge.worldbank.org/handle/10986/12272| access-date = 2019-07-20}}</ref>) is any systematic process enabling many [[market players]] to [[offer and demand]]: helping buyers and sellers interact and make deals. It is not just the [[price mechanism]] but the entire system of [[regulation]], qualification, [[credential]]s, [[reputation]]s and [[clearing (finance)|clearing]] that surrounds that mechanism and makes it operate in a social context.<ref>{{Cite book|title=Economics: Principles, Problems, and Policies|author= Campbell R. McConnell, Stanley L. Brue|year=2005|publisher=McGraw-Hill Professional|isbn=978-0-07-281935-9}}</ref> Some authors use the term "market system" to refer to specifically to the [[free market|free market system]].<ref>{{Cite book| publisher = Yale University Press| isbn = 978-0-300-09334-6| last = Lindblom| first = Charles Edward| title = The Market System: What it Is, How it Works, and What to Make of It| date = 2002| url-access = registration| url = https://archive.org/details/marketsystem00char}}</ref> This article focuses on the more general sense of the term according to which there are a variety of different market systems. Market systems are different from [[voting system]]s. A market system relies on buyers and sellers being constantly involved and unequally enabled; in a voting system, candidates seek the support of voters on a less regular basis. In addition (a) buyers make decisions on their own behalves, whereas voters make decisions for collectives, (b) voters are usually fully aware of their participation in social decision-making, whereas buyers are often unaware of the secondary repercussions of their acts, (c) responsibility for making purchasing decisions is concentrated on the individual buyer, whereas responsibility for making collective decisions is divided, (d) different buying decisions at the same time are made under conditions of scarcity --- the selection of one thing precludes the selection of another, whereas different voting decisions are not --- one can vote for a president and a judge in the same election without one vote precluding the other, and (e) under ordinary conditions, a buyer is choosing to buy an actual good and is therefore never overruled in his choice, whereas it is the nature of voting that the voter is choosing among potential alternatives and may be overruled by other voters.<ref>{{Cite journal| issn = 0022-3808| volume = 62| issue = 4| pages = 334β343| last = Buchanan| first = James M.| title = Individual Choice in Voting and the Market| journal = Journal of Political Economy| date = 1954| jstor = 1827235| doi = 10.1086/257538| s2cid = 153750341}}</ref> However, the interactions between market and voting systems are an important aspect of [[political economy]],<ref>{{Cite journal| issn = 0032-3497| volume = 39| issue = 2| pages = 208β233| last = Swanson| first = Jacinda| title = The Economy and Its Relation to Politics: Robert Dahl, Neoclassical Economics, and Democracy| journal = Polity| date = 2007| jstor = 4500273| doi = 10.1057/palgrave.polity.2300055| s2cid = 144669186}}</ref> and some argue they are hard to differentiate; for example, systems like [[cumulative voting]] and [[Two-round system|runoff voting]] involve a degree of market-like bargaining and trade-off, rather than simple statements of choice.
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