(Chicago) West Side clergymen Wednesday hailed the disbanding of the Chicago Police Department`s Special Operations Section, which has been marred by scandal and alleged misconduct. CBS 2`s Dorothy Tucker reports. .
* Seven dead after U.S. shooting spree* Iraq calls Blackwater deaths unprovoked* Helicopter crash mars Musharraf trip* Costa Ricans back U.S. free trade deal* Retail therapy embraces Hong KongDarcy Lambton reports
* Myanmar crackdown claims more lives* US demands immediate halt to violence* Leading polluters consider climate change* Musharraf files for re-election bid* North Korea nuclear talks resume* Solar-powered space mission underwayDarcy Lambton reports.
Market
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Markets)
A street market in Aix-en-Provence, France
In economics, a market is a social structure for exchange of rights, which enables people, firms and products to be evaluated and priced. There are two roles in markets, buyers and sellers. The definition implies that at least three actors are needed for a market to exist; at least one actor, on the one side of the market, who is aware of at least two actors on the other side whose offers can be evaluated in relation to each other. A market allows buyers and sellers to discover information and carry out a voluntary exchange of goods or services. It is one of the two key institutions for organizing trade, along with the right to own property. In everyday usage, the word "market" may also refer to the location where goods are traded, or in other words, the marketplace.