Correction 4
Correction 4
Markets
Local markets;
National markets;
International markets.
3. Do buyers and sellers always meet each other in markets?
(No)/ In some markets, the buyers and sellers confront each other face-to-face. In other
markets, the buyer never sees the seller.
4. What do the terms ‘a local market’, ‘a national market’, ‘an international market’
mean?
A local market: bringing together local buyers and sellers;
A national market: bringing together the buyers and sellers in all parts of the nation);
An international market: bringing together the buyers and sellers in all parts of the
world.
5. What are the principal characteristics of a perfect market?
The principal characteristic of a perfectly competitive market is that buyers and sellers
face so much competition that no person or group has any control over the price.
6. What products are exchanged in perfect markets?
Many products are exchanged in perfect markets: stocks, bonds, and commodities such
as wheat, silver, copper, gold, foreign currencies, soybeans, lumber, cotton, orange juice,
cattle, cocoa, and platinum are bought and sold in perfect markets.
7. Who are the participants of a perfect market?
The participants of a perfect market are private investors, mutual funds, commercial
banks, industrial buyers of commodities, and agricultural brokers.
II. Read the statements and say whether they are true or false.
1. In each market, buyers and sellers are guided by the price system (true);
2. The university placement office brings university graduates together with sellers (false);
3. Sothebys auction in London brings together the buyers and sellers of gasoline (false);
4. The New York Stock Exchange is one of the markets in which buyers and sellers from
around the world participate (true);
5. One single seller can change the price (false).