For a market to be competitive, there must be more than a single buyer or seller. It has been suggested that two people may trade, but it takes at least three persons to have a market, so that there is competition on at least one of its two sides However, competitive markets rely on much larger numbers of both buyers and sellers. A market with single seller and multiple buyers is a monopoly. A market with a single buyer and multiple sellers is a monopsony. These are the extremes of imperfect competition.
Markets vary in form, scale (volume and geographic reach), location, and types of participants, as well as the types of goods and services traded. Examples include:
- Physical retail markets, such as local farmers' markets (which are usually held in town squares or parking lots on an ongoing or occasional basis), shopping centers and shopping malls
- (Non-physical) internet markets (see electronic commerce)
- Ad hoc auction markets
- Markets for intermediate goods used in production of other goods and services
- Labor markets
- International currency and commodity markets
- Stock markets, for the exchange of shares in corporations
- Artificial markets created by regulation to exchange rights for derivatives that have been designed to ameliorate externalities, such as pollution permits (see carbon trading)
- Illegal markets such as the market for illicit drugs, arms or pirated products
Historically, markets originated in physical marketplaces which would often develop into — or from — small communities, towns and cities.
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