An economist is studying two isolated communities. Community Alpha has three producers: a baker, a weaver, and a farmer, who trade their goods directly with each other. Community Beta has one hundred producers, each specializing in a different good or service, and they also attempt to trade directly. Why is the system of direct, good-for-good exchange a much greater obstacle to economic activity in Community Beta than in Community Alpha?
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An economist is studying two isolated communities. Community Alpha has three producers: a baker, a weaver, and a farmer, who trade their goods directly with each other. Community Beta has one hundred producers, each specializing in a different good or service, and they also attempt to trade directly. Why is the system of direct, good-for-good exchange a much greater obstacle to economic activity in Community Beta than in Community Alpha?
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