No
discuss the basic economic problem?
china has a commanding and demanding economy and if you screw up you're dead (literally)
A command economy is a system where the government, rather than the free market, determines what goods should be produced, how much should be produced and the price at which the goods will be offered for sale. The command economy is a key feature of any communist society. China, Cuba, North Korea and the former Soviet Union are examples of countries that have command economies. Read more: http://www.investopedia.com/terms/c/command-economy.asp#ixzz27xmMBJXEA market system is an economy that operates by voluntary exchange in a free market and is not planned or controlled by a central authority; a capitalistic economy.
The three main types of economics are traditional economy, command economy (AKA planed or directed economy)& free enterprise economy (AKA private capitalism or the market economy)
Burma has a part command or planned economy and part mixed economy
A voluntary muscle performs movement on command. Involuntary muscle performs with out conscious command.
There are Market, Command (AKA Planned), And Mixed. In a Market Economy (Capitalism) Governments play a minor role. Command Economy (Often associated with Socialism and Communism) All major decisions are made by the government. Mixed Economy (Can be argued that it is the American System) Draws elements of both Market and Command to varying degrees.
mikey jack
discuss the basic economic problem?
market economic,command economic and mixte economic
the answer is command economics - nova net answer
ask your first shirt for the info and send it up your chain of command
china has a commanding and demanding economy and if you screw up you're dead (literally)
A command economy is a system where the government, rather than the free market, determines what goods should be produced, how much should be produced and the price at which the goods will be offered for sale. The command economy is a key feature of any communist society. China, Cuba, North Korea and the former Soviet Union are examples of countries that have command economies. Read more: http://www.investopedia.com/terms/c/command-economy.asp#ixzz27xmMBJXEA market system is an economy that operates by voluntary exchange in a free market and is not planned or controlled by a central authority; a capitalistic economy.
The three main types of economics are traditional economy, command economy (AKA planed or directed economy)& free enterprise economy (AKA private capitalism or the market economy)
Setup.com /PrepareLegacyExchangePermissions This command must be run under an account with Exchange Admins permissions and the domain must be able to communicate with all other domains in the forest while being run. Finally, you will need to wait for the permissions to replicate before continuing. The next command will prepare the schema, and this means the account you run this command from, must be a member of the Schema Admins group as well as the Exchange Admins group. Setup.com /PrepareSchema Setup.com /PrepareAD This command requires different permissions, depending on your current configuration. You need to run this with Enterprise Admin privileges, and if you have any Exchange 2003 servers within your current organization, you need to be a member of the Exchange Organization Administrators group. Again you will need to wait for the changes to replicate before proceeding. You can check for this by looking for the following new Security Groups in the root domain in an OU called Exchange Universal Security Groups (EUSG). Exchange Organization Administrators Exchange Recipient Administrators Exchange View-Only Administrators Exchange Servers Exchange2003 Interop The final step is optional and is only required to run if you have multiple domains within the forest. This command configures the other domain, or domains, in the forest. It does not need to be run on the domain that you run /PrepareAD in, but any additional domains will need this command run. You have three command line options with this command. Setup.com /PrepareDomain - Prepares the current domain Setup.com /PrepareDomain:FQDN of target domain to be prepped Setup.com /PrepareAllDomains - Prepares all domains in the forest.
Setup.com /PrepareLegacyExchangePermissions This command must be run under an account with Exchange Admins permissions and the domain must be able to communicate with all other domains in the forest while being run. Finally, you will need to wait for the permissions to replicate before continuing. The next command will prepare the schema, and this means the account you run this command from, must be a member of the Schema Admins group as well as the Exchange Admins group. Setup.com /PrepareSchema Setup.com /PrepareAD This command requires different permissions, depending on your current configuration. You need to run this with Enterprise Admin privileges, and if you have any Exchange 2003 servers within your current organization, you need to be a member of the Exchange Organization Administrators group. Again you will need to wait for the changes to replicate before proceeding. You can check for this by looking for the following new Security Groups in the root domain in an OU called Exchange Universal Security Groups (EUSG). Exchange Organization Administrators Exchange Recipient Administrators Exchange View-Only Administrators Exchange Servers Exchange2003 Interop The final step is optional and is only required to run if you have multiple domains within the forest. This command configures the other domain, or domains, in the forest. It does not need to be run on the domain that you run /PrepareAD in, but any additional domains will need this command run. You have three command line options with this command. Setup.com /PrepareDomain - Prepares the current domain Setup.com /PrepareDomain:FQDN of target domain to be prepped Setup.com /PrepareAllDomains - Prepares all domains in the forest.