<h3>In a command economy, the government controls major aspects </h3><h3>of economic production. The government decides the means of production and owns the industries that produce goods and services for the public. The government prices</h3><h3> and produces goods and services </h3><h3>that it thinks benefits the people.</h3><h3>In a mixed economy both market forces and government decisions determine which </h3><h3>goods and services are produced and how they are distributed. In general, market </h3><h3>forces prevail in mixed economies. The government does not direct the private</h3><h3> sector to produce certain goods and services in certain quantities at </h3><h3>certain times. </h3><h3>However, the government's influence in the economy stems from the amount of money (raised in the form </h3><h3>of taxes and borrowings from the private sector) that it spends and, through various forms of welfare,</h3><h3> redistributes.</h3>
Yolanda, who is 5 years old, has improved dramatically in her ability to throw and catch a baseball. The growth of the corpus callosum has contributed significantly to her improved abilities by enhancing communication between the left and right hemispheres of the brain.