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A Producer Rewarded Economic System

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8. Free Market Construct

December 19, 2011 By Raymond Leave a Comment

Revised November 18, 20113

The Free Market Construct will give you a contrast with the Open Market Construct.  The Open Market is governed by exact prosperity creating technology.  The Free Market has very little if any prosperity creating technology.  The little it has in prosperity creating technology is being violated to the extreme.  The Free Market has been taken over largely by rewarded non-producers and counter-producers. They sit on the demand side of the definition of the Free Market and take money, value, energy, wealth, capital and power without placing supply on the market. The rewarded non-producers and counter-producers continually drain organizations,  societies, nations and mankind of the money, value, energy, wealth, capital and power. This money, value, energy, wealth, capital and power is created by the Producers.

It is very important to remember, the Free Market is a Market.  It works like any Market.  It is always working 24/7 in establishing the value for all commodities, trades, goods and services placed on it.  Even when non-producers and counter-producers take money without placing supply on the Market, the Market sets value.  However, the value of these commodities, trades, goods and services is higher than it should be.  This is because non-producers and counter-producers make demands without balancing them with supply.   The Market senses a low supply in relation to demand and the prices go up.  This is commonly called inflation.  When supply is low, prices go up.  When supply is high or abundant, prices go down.

 The definition of the Free Market is, a Market in which prices are controlled by supply and demand, without government regulations and restrictions. 

  • The Free Market allows for advantages by non-producers and counter-producers.  It allows monopolies and all other ways a non-producer and counter-producer can dream up.  They use these advantages to take money, value, energy, wealth, capital and power off the market without exchange for it with supply.
  • Technically speaking the Free Market should not be open to non-producers and counter-producers.  The definition of Free Market “strictly” implies that commodities, trades, goods and services must be supplied in order to demand or take money from the Market.  Supply, “in supply and demand,” implies commodities, trades, goods and services.  Commodities, trades, goods and services must be placed on the Market in exchange for any money received.  The money can be used to place a demand on the Market for other products.
  • Non-producers and counter-producers use one half of the Free Market definition.  They use the demand side of the Free Market definition.  They leave out the supply side.  Or, they fix and control the supply side to their advantage.
  • The non-producers and counter-producers enter into the Free Market and take money, value, energy, wealth, capital and power from it without a product exchanged for it.  This is catastrophic for individuals, families, organizations, societies, nations, mankind and environments!   Today in 2011 we are experiencing the result of this activity, on the Free Market, by non-producers and counter-producers.  We are in a deep world wide recession as a result.
  • The Free Market has no restrictions except keeping all government regulations out of it.
  • The Free Market does not restrict monopolies or any other way non-producers and counter-producers control the supply and demand.  They use methods of controlling supply and demand to receive more money than what their products are worth.
  • The Free Market doesn’t prevent people from taking a non-productive and counter-productive advantage in the Market.
  • The greatest difference between the Open Market and the Free Market is; “the Open Market does not allow for non-producer and counter-producer participation.  The Free Market allows for non-producer and counter-producer participation.”  Non-producers and counter-producers have wrecked many a society and nation.  They have been allowed to participate in the Market without exchange for the money, value, energy, wealth, capital and power they received.
  • Non-producers and counter-producers are found in all levels of a society.  They are located from the poorest among us all the way to the wealthiest among us.  There are no exceptions; non-producers and counter-producers, whether rich or poor, are non-producers and counter-producers.  They are a heavy burden and liability for organizations, societies, nations and mankind!

Producer Rewarded Open Market Economics
The Science of Economics
By R P Obrigewitsch
December 19, 2011

Filed Under: Open Market Tagged With: demand, Free Market, goods, Government, inflation, market, non-producer, Open Market, prices, Producer, products, regulations, services, supply, supply and demand, value

4. Market Action

October 8, 2011 By Raymond Leave a Comment

Revised November 17, 2013

The market action of establishing the value for commodities, trade, goods and services is happening continuously twenty four hours a day. This market action takes place on all Markets whether Open Markets or not.  It is an action inherent to Markets.  As long as there are producers, producing commodities, trades, goods and services and exchanging them with each other, this Market force is at work.  It is a force working to establish the prices even with all the destructive out exchange taking place on the Market by the non-producers and counter-producers.  This force is always at work in the Market.  This is a natural force found in nature.

Even with all the muddle and confusion created by the non-producers and counter-producers this market action is taking place.  Of course the value of commodities, trades, goods and services gets placed incorrectly.  The value is usually higher than it would be when non-producers and counter-producers are allowed in the Market.

If non-producers and counter-producers become Producers they would create products.  They would place their created commodities, trades, goods and services on the Market.  This increased volume of commodities, trade, goods and services would cause a drop in prices across the Market.  There would be an increase in products on the Market in relation to money in circulation.  As production volume increases, demand tends to drop off and prices drop as a result.  Rewarding non-production and counter-production causes prices to rise because the volume of commodities, trades, goods and services is lower.  The non-producers and counter-producers are exchanging little or no commodities, trades, goods and services for the money they receive.   This causes demand to rise and prices follow along.

The Market has a directed effort to set the value for commodities, trades, goods and services that are competing with each other. The Market forces take place “anywhere at anytime” producers create a Market by exchanging commodities, trades, goods and services with each other or for money.

Producer Rewarded Open Market Economics
The Science of Economics
By: R P Obrigewitsch
December 4, 2011

Filed Under: Open Market Tagged With: action, demand, goods, Market action, Market force, Markets, natural force, services, supply, value

Economic Axioms

  • 0.0 Axioms of Economics Glossary
  • 1. Axioms of Economics, Introduction
  • 2. Creating Money
  • 3. Products and the Open Market
  • 4. Production, Exchange Value and Money
  • 5.0 Production Rewarding
  • 6.0 Prosperity, Economics & Freedom
  • 7.0 Ownership
  • 8.0 Production and Reserve Strength
  • 9.0 Economics and Government
  • Axioms of Economics

Producer Economics

  • 1. What is money?
  • 1.1 What is a Product?
  • 1.2 The Four Basic Laws of Economics
  • 1.3 Who are the Producers?
  • 1.4 All Producers are Workers
  • 1.5 Workers and Producers Create Money
  • 1.6 Government Products and Services
  • 1.7 Non-productive & Counter-productive Activities
  • 1.8 Work, Energy and Money
  • 1.9 Production Creates Futures
  • 1.95 Producers, Non-producers and Counter-producers
  • 2.0 Attention and Money
  • 2.01 Attention Vacuum and Producers
  • 2.02 Attention Vacuum and Producers
  • 2.1 Banks Don’t Create Money
  • 2.2 Capitalism Without Rules
  • 2.4 True Wealth!
  • 2.5 True Wealth! Part 1
  • 2.6 True Wealth! Part 2
  • 2.7 True Wealth! Part 3
  • 3.0 Socialism
  • 3.1 Political Economic Systems
  • 3.2 Producers, Non-producers and Counter-producers
  • 3.3 Overt and Hidden Socialism
  • 3.4 Capital Destroying; Capitalism and Socialism
  • 3.5 Economics is a Group Activity
  • 3.6 Capital Producing Capitalism and Capital Producing Socialism
  • 3.7 Private Forms of Socialism
  • 3.8 Capitalist Socialist Economics
  • 3.9 Government Socialism
  • 4.0 Types of Socialism
  • 4.1 Interfacing in Groups
  • 4.2 Correlated Pay
  • 4.3 System of Measuring Production
  • 4.4 Systems of Pay
  • 4.5 State of Action
  • 4.6 Capital Destroying Capitalism
  • 4.7 Capital Destroying Socialism
  • 4.8 Use of the Word Capital
  • 4.9 Producer Rewarded Open Market Economics
  • 5.0 Prosperity Thrusts
  • 5.1 Pure Capitalism
  • 5.2 Right Wing Socialism
  • 5.21 Three Types of Capitalism
  • 5.3 Left Wing Socialism
  • 5.4 Foundation Socialism
  • 5.9 Deus ex Machina
  • 6.0 Three Types of Capitalism (Revised 4/11/19)
  • 6.1 Five types of Socialism
  • 6.2 Three Types of Bad News

Money Velocity

  • 1.0 Money Velocity and Prosperity
  • 1.1 The Money Velocity Cycle
  • 1.2 Capital Producing Economics
  • 1.3 Vampire Economics
  • 1.4 The Goal of a Society
  • 1.5 Production Efficiency
  • 1.6 Why Money Velocity Slows
  • 1.7 Capital Destroying Economics
  • 1.8 Producer, Non-producer or Counter-producer
  • 1.9 Razor Thin Path
  • 2.0 Stock Market

Open Market

  • 10. A Barter or Money Based Market?
  • 1. The Open Market!
  • 3. The True Value of Production!
  • 4. Market Action
  • 5. Free Market vs. Open Market
  • 6. Free Market, Non-existent!
  • 2.0 Open Market Technology
  • 7. The Open Market Construct
  • 8. Free Market Construct
  • 9. Establishing a Market
  • 11. Producers Create Markets

Money Supply

  • 1. The Constant Money Supply
  • 2. Production and Prosperity
  • 3. Medium of Exchange
  • 4. Money Symbol
  • 5. Creating Money
  • 6. Review
  • 7. Symbol for Value and Energy
  • 8. Energy Creators

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