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Printed from https://writing.com/main/newsletters/action/archives/id/1820-.html
Fantasy: July 11, 2007 Issue [#1820]

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Fantasy


 This week:
  Edited by: rose_shadow
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Table of Contents

1. About this Newsletter
2. A Word from our Sponsor
3. Letter from the Editor
4. Editor's Picks
5. A Word from Writing.Com
6. Ask & Answer
7. Removal instructions

About This Newsletter

People complain about the economy all the time. Just what effect will the economy of your fantasy's society have on your characters?


Word from our sponsor

ASIN: B085272J6B
Product Type: Kindle Store
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Letter from the editor

Economics is one of those subjects in school that you love to skip. After all, what can be more boring than budgets and gross national products and all that schmoo? But the economy and the systems associated with them can actually have a huge influence on how your fantasy society structures itself. Economic systems try to answer three basic questions: what to produce? how to produce it? and for whom to produce for?

Economists have determined that there are three types of systems, with the fourth being a mixture of two of the three.

Traditional

The traditional system answers the three basic questions according to long held custom or tradition (i.e. “this is the way we’ve always done it”). It is strongly based on deep-set beliefs of the culture and labor is usually handed down generation to generation with little change. For example, if your father was a warrior, than you’d be a warrior. If he was a farmer, than you’d be a farmer, and so on.

Advantages

*Bullet* You know what is expected of you
*Bullet* You know your place in the world
*Bullet* Family and community ties are very strong

Disadvantages

*Bullet* Change is discouraged, even punished in some cases.
*Bullet* Production methods are often inefficient resulting in few choices and quantity
*Bullet* Rarely will individuals have increased level of material well-being.

A good fictional example would be the Disney/Pixar movie A Bug’s Life. Flikk, the ant, belongs to a very traditional ant colony where he is constantly told to “be like everyone else” and that the colony has been picking grain the same way for a very long time. The leaders of the colony at the beginning of the movie have no patience with his ideas for more efficient harvesting and refuse to stand up to an oppressive group of grasshoppers because they’ve never known anything different.

Real world examples include the Inuit of North America, the Mbuti of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and the Aborigines of Australia.

Command

Command is similar to traditional in that the individual has little influence over their basic economics. Government leaders—not tradition—control production and therefore make all the decisions about their use. Sometimes this government authority can be one person, a small group, or a group of central planners in an agency. They choose what to produce, how the resources are to be used to produce, and are involved at every stage of including distribution of the product (including, for example, food).

The individual has little choice in what he or she will do as a career. Strict government regulations about education filter people into certain jobs.

One advantage is that wealth is more evenly distributed.

Disadvantages

*Bullet* There is a lack of incentive to work hard or show inventiveness
*Bullet* Lack of consumer choices
*Bullet* No reason to work efficiently since the government sets salaries

Real world examples: North Korea, parts of the People’s Republic of China

Market

The market system is one that many of you are probably the most familiar with because it is also known as capitalism. In this system, economic decisions are not made by the government but by individuals looking out for their own interests, which, according to the “father of modern economics” Adam Smith, is what makes the economy work. Individuals own the factors of production (businesses and machines, etc) and therefore they can choose what they want to produce and how. They can also choose what to buy with the income they received from selling their labor.

Prices in this system change according to the market mood, acting as signals as to what should be bought and produced. This explains the overabundance of fad items like beanie babies and Backstreet Boys CDs. Something becomes popular and businesses rush to fill the consumer want, but like all fads, it fades and there’s an over saturation of the product still on the market, though usually discounted by then.

Advantages:

*Bullet* Freedom to choose career and how you spend your money
*Bullet* Freedom to own property
*Bullet* Freedom to take risks in business and earn a profit
*Bullet* Competition ensures wide range of choice

Disadvantage:

*Bullet* Those too young, too old, or too sick to work can be left behind. In fact, some fear that if it wasn’t for government, churches, family, and other organizations, these marginalized people would have little chance of survival.

*Bullet* This kind of system tends to create an income gap with very few people having most of the money in the economy.

Real world example: The United States

Mixed

A common mixed system combines the elements of market and command. Most countries of the world have a mixed economy in which private ownership of property and individual decision-making are combined with government intervention and regulations. Federal, state, and local governments make laws protecting private property and regulate certain areas of business (such as in environmental protection, safety guidelines, and laws to protect consumers).

An advantage to a mixed system is the checks and balances built into it. One disadvantage, however, is that governmental oversight may become excessive, leaning too far in the command system range.

Real world example: Canada


Editor's Picks

 Invalid Item Open in new Window. []

by A Guest Visitor

 Hundreth Year Open in new Window. [ASR]
A unicorn suddenly finds herself whisked away into a world completely alien to her own.
by HeavencanWait Author Icon

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by A Guest Visitor

 Invalid Item Open in new Window. []

by A Guest Visitor


*Star*Bonus items!*Star*

Image Protector
Star Trek Poetry CONTEST  Open in new Window. [13+]
Poetry Contest Based on Star Trek! Happy Birthday WDC! {BACK for the WDC 16th Bday !)
by Maryann Author Icon

 Invalid Item Open in new Window. []

by A Guest Visitor

Passkey: 7950

*Reading* Erin's Fantasy Book of the Month

If you have a published fantasy novel you would like to see featured here, e-mail me with the ISBN number and a brief hook, and I'll plug it here for you on my next issue.

ASIN: 055357339X
Amazon's Price: $ 9.79


Fitz is the illegitimate son of a royal prince and from the earliest of his memory, that's all he can recall. Unwanted by his royal relatives or his mother's common blood, Fitz strives to find his place in a strange and cold world.

Then one day Fitz is introduced to a scarred, mysterious man known as Chade, and Fitz is trained in the art of the "diplomacy of the knife". Events and dangers swirl around him at every turn and Fitz discovers that his own life is in jeopardy in a world dissolving into chaos.

A rather dark and depressing book but very well-written.

 
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Ask & Answer

From: dizzyduck
Nice to see the return of Campbell and Hero With a Thousand Faces. I really enjoy the newsletters where you focus on a part of his book. *Smile* Those and your animal NLs are by far the best out of all the Fantasy NLs I receive.

I'm going to have to look into buying Hero... Campbell seems a bit longwinded with his explanations, but I bet it's a fantastic (no pun intended *Wink*) read all the same.

Keep up the excellent work!


Thank you! Yes, Hero is a little long-winded, but it is fascinating stuff. *Smile*

From: feegreen
Hey, Erin! Great newsletter! :) Joseph Campbell is MY hero when it comes to story structure. Thanks for including the helpful 'framing' questions.

You're welcome! Thanks for writing and stay tuned for other newsletters in this series *Smile*.

From: alicengoreland
Thank you so much for featuring my contest in your newsletter.

I love you selection of "Magician: Apprentice". It is just the kind of read I look for.

I read everything I could in this weeks newsletter.

Thanks for the hard work.


Thank you! I'm glad you liked the selection; that's why I started adding books to the newsletters, because I love getting good recommendations myself *Smile*.

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