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concentrated K sellers L Even if M definitely N however O other than A market is commonly thought of as a place where commodities are bought and sold. Thus fruit and vegetables are sold wholesale at Covent Garden Market and meat is sold wholesale at Smithfield Market. But there are markets for things ____________ (1) commodities, in the usual sense. There are real estate markets, foreign exchange markets, labor markets, short-term capital markets, and so on; there may be a market for anything that has a price. And there may be no particular place to which dealings are ____________ (2). Buyers and sellers may be ____________(3) over the whole world and instead of actually meeting together in a market-place they may deal with one another by telephone, telegram, cable or letter. ______________ (4) dealings are ___________ (5) to a particular place, the dealers may consist wholly or in part of agents acting on instructions from client far away. Thus agency buy meat at Smithfield on behalf of retail butchers all over England; and brokers on the London Stock Exchange buy and sell _____________ (6) on instructions from clients all over the world. We must therefore define a market as any area over which buyer and sellers are in such close touch with one another, either directly or through ____________(7), that the prices obtainable in one part of the market affect the prices paid in other parts. Modern means of communication are so rapid that a buyer can discover prices by asking, and can accept it if he wishes, although he may be thousands of miles away. Thus the market for anything is, ____________ (8), the whole world. But in fact things have, normally, only a local or national market. This may be because nearly the whole demand is __________ (9) in one locality. These special local demands, ___________ (10), are of quite minor importance. The main reason why many things have not a world market is that they are costly or difficult to transport.