Here is a timely reminder of what business is all about…….
The U.S. economic system of free enterprise operates according to five main principles: the freedom to choose our businesses, the right to private property, the profit motive, competition, and consumer sovereignty.

Freedom to Choose Our Businesses
In this country, the decision whether or not you should go into computer services or any other kind of enterprise (business) is basically yours alone to make. You will decide what fees to charge and what hours to work. Certain laws prohibit you from cheating or harming your customers or other people. But, in general, you will be left alone to run your business as you see fit.
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Right to Private Property
Private property is a piece of land, a home, or a car owned by an individual, a family, or a group. It differs from a public building, or public property, such as the city hall, a park, or a highway, all of which provide a government service for all citizens. In the U.S. economic system, people’s right to buy and sell private property is guaranteed by law. People must use the property in safe and reasonable ways, of course. In setting up computer systems for your customers, for example, you do not have the right to interfere with the electrical, telephone, or computer systems of other people.
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Profit Motive
The main reason why you or any enterprising person organizes a business is to make money. You do this by earning more money than you spend. The amount of money left over after subtracting your business expenses from your business income is known as your profit. In the free enterprise system, business firms try hard to keep costs down and increase their income from sales. The better they succeed at this, the higher are their profits. Economists describe the efforts by business firms to earn the greatest profits as the profit motive.
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Competition
Just as you are free to start a computer business, so is everyone else. The rivalry between sellers in the same field for consumers’ dollars is called competition. If your business is profitable, it is likely that others will enter the same business hoping to be as successful as you are. They will be competing with you for the same customers. To win a share of the computer business, other sellers may try to offer more and better services, or services at lower prices. Because of the pressure of competition, business firms must constantly try to provide the best services and create the best products at the lowest possible prices.
Consumer Sovereignty
In the end, it is the customers, or consumers, who determine whether any business succeeds or fails. In the U.S. free enterprise economy, consumers are said to have sovereignty-the power or freedom to have final say. Consumers are free to spend their money for Product X or for Product Y. If they prefer Y over X, then the company making X may lose money, go out of business, or decide to manufacture something else (perhaps Product Z). Thus, how consumers choose to spend their dollars causes business firms of all kinds to produce certain goods and services and not others.
Source: http://www.socialstudieshelp.com/Eco_Free_Enterprise.htm











Hogwash this is not the way it is in 29
• In 29 you can’t have a swap meet, farmers market, flea market at local long established drive in theater. Thanks planning commission
• In 29 tens of thousands of words in the development code that limits just about every kind or type of business unless it is a massage / brothel parlor barber or tattoo shop, it is not the problem that these are aloud but that other business aren’t, meaning no competing for the commercial space. Get it PC open up, get out of the way and let business do business the citizens deserve a variety of local commerce.
• In 29 we even have restrictions on renting your house out for short terms, no more leveraging your assets no more short term renting to offset vacations or extended visits to care for an ill relative. This is like protectionism like the PC works for special interest.
• In 29 the PC even prohibits selling strawberries on the corner even if your kids grew them in the backyard.