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'''Free Market Capitalism'''
|Free market capitalism is an economic system where private enterprises and businesses are free to operate with few or no restrictions from the government. To elaborate, it means that things such as prices, costs, and wages are regulated by participants in the market, such as the buyers and the sellers: as such, government oversight and regulation are minimized. Popular among market liberals of all stripes, it has become one of the most in-use systems around the world.
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{| class="wikitable mw-collapsible mw-collapsed"
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!Type
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|[[File:GFX Econ Subtype American Capitalism.png|center|link=]]
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'''Corporatism'''
|Corporatism is an economic system which aims to organize the state and society as a whole into corporate groups, believing that it is the best way to achieve an efficient and strong economy. Deriving from the ideas of syndicalist thinkers such as Sorel, it also seeks to promote class cooperation between capital and labor instead of class struggle, and posits that a good relationship between the boss and the worker is the key to the machine of the state being well-oiled. Asking for total devotion toward the state, corporatism is commonly found in fascist and dictatorial regimes. Important to note, however, is that such a system is distinct from a corporatocracy, in which the lines between the state and the corporations are blurred.
|rowspan=7|{{color|palegreen|+10.00%}} {{color|yellow|Consumer Goods Production Factor}}
{{color|palegreen|+0.05}} {{color|yellow|GDP Growth Multiplier}}
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{| class="wikitable mw-collapsible mw-collapsed"
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!Type
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|[[File:GFX Econ Subtype Gelenkte Wirtschaft.png|center|link=]]
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|[[File:GFX Econ Subtype Colonial Economy Corporatism.png|center|link=]]
'''Corporativist Colonial Economy '''
|A colonial economy is a system propped up and constructed by a colonizing country to serve its interests. While the exact balance of civilian and military economic interests varies, the system's goal above all else is to sack and plunder the colony, to extract and export as many resources as possible to the colonizing nation. In colonies subjected to corporativist systems, this relationship becomes even more apparent. Corporate monopolies from the metropolis run these states, and extract all of the resources that they can. As seen in examples of this system such as in the reichskommissariats of the German Reich, few accommodations are typically given to the native peoples laboring under these systems.
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'''Planned Economy'''
|A planned economy, or command economy, is an economic system in which the entirety of economic output and growth is planned in advance to account for the needs of the population and of the country as a whole. Such a planification can be either centralized or decentralized, and can be decided either by a dedicated council of experts, or by the people in a participatory manner.
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{{color|palegreen|+10.00%}} {{color|yellow|Dockyard Output}}
 
{{color|palegreen|+10.00%}} {{color|yellow|Construction Speed}}
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{| class="wikitable mw-collapsible mw-collapsed"
|+ class="nowrap" style="text-align:center" | Planned Economy Subtypes
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!Type
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|[[File:GFX Econ Subtype Worker Directed.png|center|link=]]
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