The king tends to make the laws in a monarchy
In an absolutist monarchy such as Saudi Arabia, the King and his chosen ministers make the laws etc.. In a constitutional monarchy such as UK, Luxembourg, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, Denmark, Netherlands, Belgium, Japan, Norway, Sweden or Spain the monarch, government and parliament are separate, with the monarch staying out of politics.
In a country with an absolute monarchy, the monarch makes all of the decisions. Therefore, citizens in a country ruled by absolute monarchy has no decision making power.
The government makes and enforces whatever laws are needed to guarantee free choice.
In a monarchy, the head of the government is either king or queen. They are responsible for making the decisions in a monarchy.
The consumer who influences the market and the country's laws regarding business.
the king makes the laws like in a absolute monarchy
the king. Saudi Arabia is a monarchy government
The UK has a monarch, but the 'goverment' is elected. This is different to an absolute monarchy, where the king or queen makes the laws.
Well the President generally comes up with it but it has to go through Congress and be voted on.
A abusolute monarchy is a monarchy that is not limited or restrained by laws or a constitution
Nothing makes the US a monarchy
Yes, if the monarchy follows the laws of the theorcracy.
In a Monarchy power is inherited. This holds true in a Constitutional Monarchy if that is based on the laws governing the monarchy.
A constitutional monarchy examples - Japan, United Kingdom, Sweden, Spain and Thiland
The people in a monarchy follow the rule of law the same as people in other systems do. The difference comes from how the laws are created, since in a monarchy laws are handed down by royalty, while in a democracy the laws are determined by the people and their representatives.
This depends on what powers the monarch retains. If the monarch is an absolutist, monarchy will be in opposition to democracy. However, numerous monarchies are constitutional monarchies where the monarch has ceded some or most of his power to democratically elected institutions.
The king or queen.