Generally, there are two fundamentally different ways of organizing an economy. Market and Command Economy. A market economy is one in which individuals and private firms make the major decisions about production and consumption. In a market economy, decisions are made in markets, where individuals and enterprises voluntarily agree to exchange goods and services, usually through payments of money. A system of prices, of markets, of profits and losses, of incentives and rewards determines the what (profits), the how (costs) and the form whom (reward for inputs). [Laissez-faire economy] A command economy is one in which the government makes all important decisions about production and distribution. In a command economy, the government owns most of the means of production; it also owns and directs the operations of enterprises in most industries; it is the employer of most workers and tells them how to do their jobs; and it decides how the output of the society is to be divided among ...