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『簡體書』中国汽车产业中的租金利用研究Rent Utilization in China’s Auto Industry

書城自編碼: 3400400
分類:簡體書→大陸圖書→經濟各部門經濟
作者: 高建奕
國際書號(ISBN): 9787513063449
出版社: 知识产权出版社
出版日期: 2019-07-01

頁數/字數: /
書度/開本: 16开 釘裝: 平装

售價:HK$ 64.8

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編輯推薦:
对于厘清我国经济发展中寻租与产业发展之间的关系有所助益。
內容簡介:
本书将传统的寻租概念拓展为包含租金创造、租金分配和租金寻求三个相互联系而又分开的过程的租金利用模型,并以此来分析中国汽车产业发展过程中的租金及寻租现象。本书的研究从理论上看拓展了传统寻租理论的解释力,特别是对长期存在计划因素的我国经济发展中寻租现象的解释;从实践方面看,对于厘清我国经济发展中寻租与产业发展之间的关系有所助益。
關於作者:
高建奕,行政学博士,平顶山学院政法学院讲师,行政管理专业带头人。本科、硕士毕业于云南大学行政管理专业,博士毕业于韩国釜山大学行政学专业,曾在韩国水原大学国际学院任助教授三年。主要研究方向为公共政策与公共选择、地方治理等,代表论文为《西方政府失灵理论综述》、《Rent-utilization in aPlan-based Economy: the Case of Chinas Auto Industry》等。
目錄
Contents
Ⅰ.
Introduction.........................................................................................................
1
1.1
Purpose....................................................................................................
1
1.2 Object and
Scope...................................................................................
5
1.3 Methodology.........................................................................................
10
Ⅱ. Theoretical Background and Analytical
Framework............................... 12
2.1 Rent-seeking
Theory...........................................................................
12
2.1.1 Conventional Theory of
Rent-seeking............................... 12
2.1.2 Rent-seeking in the Developing
Countries........................ 18
2.2 Rent-seeking in Chinas Plan-based
Economy.............................. 24
2.2.1 Rent-seeking in the Transitional
Economy after Reform 25
2.2.2 Rent-seeking in the Centrally Planned
Economy
before
Reform........................................................................
29
2.3 Analytical Model of Rent Utilization
for the
Plan-based Economy...........................................................................
33
2.3.1 Institutional Context for the
Analytical Model................. 33
2.3.2 Analytical Model of Rent
Utilization.................................. 34
Ⅲ. Rent Utilization in Chinas Auto Industry:
Before Reform................... 38
3.1 The Development of Auto Industry in the
Centrally
Planned Economy before
Reform................................................... 38
3.2 Rents and Rent Creation
................................................................. 42
3.3 Rent
Allocation....................................................................................
48
3.3.1 Fragmented Structure of Rent
Allocation in the
Central
Level...........................................................................
50
3.3.2 Multilayered Structure of Rent
Allocation between
Central Level and Local
Level.......................................... 56
3.3.3 Institutional Arrangements of Local
Governments Being Rent-seekers
.................................. 58
3.4 Rent-seeking
.......................................................................................
62
3.4.1 Local Governments as the Principal
Rent-seekers 62
3.4.2 State-owned Enterprises Became
Rent-seekers
with the Help of Local
Governments...................... 67
Ⅳ. Rent Utilization in Chinas Auto Industry:
After Reform ................... 70
4.1 The Development of Auto Industry in the
Transitional
Economy of After Reform
Stage..................................................... 70
4.2 Rents and Rent
Creation.................................................................... 77
4.3 Rent
Allocation....................................................................................
89
4.3.1 The Disappearance of Traditional
Rent-allocators ....... 90
4.3.2 The Fragmented Authority of Project
Approval .......... 95
4.4 Rent-seeking
.......................................................................................
99
4.4.1 Rent-seeking by Local Governments
............................... 99
4.4.2 Rent-seeking by Enterprises
............................................. 105
Ⅴ. Comprehensive
Analysis..............................................................................
116
5.1 Rent Utilization in the Auto
Industry........................................... 116
5.1.1 Rents and Rent
Creation..................................................... 116
5.1.2 Rent
Allocation.....................................................................
118
5.1.3
Rent-seeking...........................................................................
120
5.2 Diachronic
Comparison...................................................................
124
Ⅵ. Conclusions.....................................................................................................
130
References..............................................................................................................
137
List of Tables
Table 1 Estimates of the Welfare Losses
from Rent-seeking.................... 16
Table 2 Relevant Growth and Efficiency
Implications of
Different
Rents.....................................................................................
19
Table 3 Interest Rate of Industrial Credit
AdjustmentsMonthly rate... 45
Table 4 Exchange Rate Adjustments
US$100 and Sterling £100=RMB
........................................... 46
Table 5 Central and Local Investment in the
Auto Industry,
1949~1978 RMB Billion.................................................................
65
Table 6 Total Automobile Output and Sedan
Output, 2002~2015........ 76
Table 7 Tariffs for Imported Automobiles,
1986~2006........................... 82
Table 8 Joint ventures Built in China from
1984 to 2010...................... 111
Table 9 Major Actors of Rent Utilization
and Their Functions and
Strategies in Chinas Auto Industry before
and after Reform 124
List of Figures
Figure 1 Institutional Rent under a
Low-Price Control.............................. 31
Figure 2 Analytical Model of Rent
Utilization.............................................. 35
Figure 3 Number of Auto Plant and Special
Vehicle
Factories,
1956~1978.........................................................................
40
Figure 4 Output of Automobiles,
1956~1978............................................. 41
Figure 5 Governing Structure of Soviet
Unions Auto Industry............. 50
Figure 6 Fragmented Structure of Rent
Allocation in the Central Level 55
Figure 7 Multilayered Structure of Rent
Allocation between
Central and Local
Level...................................................................... 57
Figure 8 Imports of sedans,
1979~2001....................................................... 71
Figure 9 Output of Total Automobiles and
Sedans, 1979~2001............ 72
Figure 10 Number of Auto Plants,
1979~2001.......................................... 74
Figure 11 The Fragmented Structure and Rent
Allocation Mechanism. 97
Figure 12 Rent Utilization Before
Reform.................................................. 126
Figure 13 Rent Utilization After
Reform.................................................... 126
內容試閱
Preface


When mentioning rent seeking, conventional
wisdom believes that rent seeking is nothing but a pathological phenomenon
because rent seeking constitutes a type of unproductive activity which results
in social loss and is thus growth-retarding. Recent study, however, shows a
different story. It is said that rents are ubiquitous and of different types;
rents are able to be created and allocated in many ways; rent seeking has
complicated and profound implications to economic growth.
Rather than conventional rent-seeking
approach from methodological individualism, this book applies a much more
far-reaching approach from an institutional perspective. Following the approach
advanced by Boyd and Ngo among many others, this book puts forward an
analytical model of rent-utilization and identifies it into three phases, i.e.
rent creation, rent allocation and rent-seeking, extending the application of
classical rent-seeking approach towards Chinas auto industry in a plan-based
economic system.
The central purpose of this book is to
discuss the rent utilization in Chinas auto industry, to explain how it
shapes, if not totally, at least partly, the development of the auto industry,
focusing on the types of rents, and on the actors, both individual and
institutional, and on the related outcomes, both the economic and political,
and on the influential factors, both formally and informally institutional, in
the different development stages.
Chinas auto industry has experienced over
60-year development since the early 1950s, which is roughly divided into two
halves in this book. The first half the mid-1950s through 1978 in the
centrally planned economy is termed as Before Reformstage, and the second
half 1979 through the mid-2000s in the transitional economy asAfter
Reformstage.
The study in this book showed some findings
conflicting with existing conclusions. The mainstream literature denies that
the existence of rent-seeking activities, even the existence of rents, in the
centrally planned economy, but this study found that institutional rent created
by central government through price control was the main sources of rent before
Reform, and this type of rent endogenously originated from the planned economic
system per se and lasted for a long time.
Rent-seeking activities appeared along the
whole development process of Chinas auto industry, whether before or after the
Reform. Rent-seeking by local governments was a common phenomenon in both
stages. The sharp difference between before Reform and after Reform was that
the enterprises, especially the State-Owned Enterprises SOEs that gained some
autonomy from the governments became another main actor of rent-seeking with
many means. Besides, non-state owned enterprises, such as foreign enterprises
and private enterprises also began to enter the rent-seeking game after Reform.
Rent-seeking per se in Chinas auto
industry could be identified as a means of destroying the monopoly of the
state. In the plan-based economy, the state taking the central government as
its first-level agent was the unique legitimate owner of all the rents. The
central government attempted to strengthen its authority by re-centralization
but failed every time. Although the ostensible target of rent-seeking by local
governments and enterprises was the rents of all types created by the state,
what they really attempted to change was the institutional arrangements inside
the multilayered and fragmented structure of rent allocation. In other words,
centrally tight control was impossible without the change of that existed
multilayered and fragmented structure. Therefore, the widespread rent-seeking
activities by local governments conspired with enterprises could be considered
as one of the critical factors that push the market-oriented reform to come
true.
In the plan-based economy, the state was an
elaborate but imperfect device of rent utilization. The central government
created substantial rents to develop the auto industry as one of pillar
industries. It established corresponding institutional arrangements in order to
attain the goal of this industrial policy. As the monopolistic owner of these
rents, it allocated them to local governments with multi-levels of hierarchies
and to some SOEs. In the process, substantial autonomy with oversight authority
was transferred to local governments.The M-form hierarchical structure, formal
decentralizations, information asymmetry and geographical remoteness caused the
relationship between central and local governments to form multiple
principal-agent situations. Thus, a structure of rent utilization for the auto
industry was fragmented in the central government agencies and multi-layered
among the central-local governments from the day of its birth. The
administrative decentralization that transferred authority from the central to
local governments before and after Reform strengthened this multi-layered
nature while the economic decentralization that transferred authority from
governments to enterprises and families made the whole structure more
fragmented and divided, and finally the resultant force of them ended it in the
early 2000s.
In other words, the rent utilization was
embedded in the regulatory framework which governs industrial and economic
developments at the national level as well as the local level. To a great
extent, rent utilization in China was institutionalized as the constitutive
part of economic governance through intimately connecting to the political
system.
Rent-seeking in plan-based economies has
been out of research focus area for a long time. The model of rent-utilization
in this book does not reject or deny the wisdom of classical rent-seeking
theory. Rather, this model complements and supports it.
This book is a revised and updated version
of my doctoral dissertation Rent Utilization in a Plan-based Economy: Extension
of Rent-seeking Theory towards Chinas Auto Industry. I would like to express
my sincere gratitude to the following people among many others who supported me
during the writing of my doctoral dissertation and the publication of this
book.
To my supervisor, Professor Kim Haengbum,
for his friendly encouragement, his academic rigor and his patient guidance in
supervisions, for his tolerance in personality, and his fatherly selfless help
in my everyday life. Honestly, my doctoral dissertation could not have been
completed and this book could not have been published without Professor Kims
assistance and guidance.
To the Committee Members for my doctoral
dissertation, Professor Kang Yunho, Professor Park Minjeong, Profesor Kim
Insin, especially the Chair, Professor Hahn Inkeun, who read the text for
several times and gave me specific advice, for their constructive suggestions.
To the two anonymous referees and Professor
Lee Seong-gyu for their professional suggestions on the early version of my
doctoral dissertation.
To Professor Kang, Professor Park, and
Assistant Lee, and all the other professors in Public Administration Department
of Pusan National University, for their sincerely help.
To my colleagues both at International
College of University of Suwon and School of Political Science and Law College
of Pingdingshan University for their friendly help.
To Ms. Yang Xiaohong, the Deputy Director,
and Ms. Lantao, the Copyeditor both from Intellectual Property Publishing House
Co., Ltd. for their patient help and professional service. If there are any
errors, they are not theirs, but all mine.
Finally I would like to thank all my family
for their love and support. Thank my dear wife, Zhang Shu, who has been and
will always go to the end of the world together with me, for her sincere trust,
her affectionate companionship, her pure love and her sacrifice for our family.
Thank my lovely daughter, Gao ShalangSharon, for the supreme surprise and joy
she has brought to me. Sharon is an angel and a mascot, whom God sent to me in
the middle of my second and third round dissertation defense to let me
accomplish mymission A doctoral candidate has to pass at least three round
dissertation defenses before earning a Ph.D. in Pusan National University. Her
lovely face, and even her occasional cry brought me great pleasure to my
nervons writing life.
I would like to express my heartfelt thanks
to my Parents-in-law, Zhang Fang and Shu Yulan, for their tolerance and
confidence in me, for their painstaking care for all of us.
I owe a real debt to my parents, Gao
Zhenyun and Zhang Guifang, who now live in the heaven without pain and worry,
for their endless love and selfless support. Without them, I could not have
come so far in my life. I owed them so much that I could not pay them back
forever. I hope that I could meet them again and be reborn as their son in the
heaven. I dedicate this book to my parents.

Gao Jianyi
March 4th, 2019

 

 

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