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好文推薦: 轉載_經濟學人 The new age of crony capitalism

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The new age of crony capitalism | The Economist
www.economist.com/printedition/2014-03-15‎
14 小時前 - This week in The Economist: Business and government | Cable consolidation in America | Russia, Ukraine and Crimea | Changing ...

http://www.economist.com/news/leaders/21598996-political-connections-have-made-many-people-hugely-rich-recent-years-crony-capitalism-may


Business and government
The new age of crony capitalism

Political connections have made many people hugely rich in recent years. But crony capitalism may be waning
Mar 15th 2014 | From the print edition




AS THE regime of Viktor Yanukovych collapsed in Ukraine, protesters against it could be found outside One Hyde Park, a luxury development in west London. Their target was Rinat Akhmetov, Ukraine’s richest man and a backer of the old regime. “Discipline your pet”, they chanted.

Ukraine’s troubled state has long been dominated by its oligarchs. But across the emerging world the relationship between politics and business has become fraught. India’s election in April and May will in part be a plebiscite on a decade of crony capitalism. Turkey’s prime minister is engulfed by scandals involving construction firms—millions of Turks have clicked on YouTube recordings that purport to incriminate him. On March 5th China’s president, Xi Jinping, vowed to act “without mercy” against corruption in an effort to placate public anger. Last year 182,000 officials were punished for disciplinary violations, an increase of 40,000 over 2011.

As in America at the turn of the 20th century, a new middle class is flexing its muscles, this time on a global scale. People want politicians who don’t line their pockets, and tycoons who compete without favours. A revolution to save capitalism from the capitalists is under way.
The kind of rents estate agents can only dream of
“Rent-seeking” is what economists call a special type of money-making: the sort made possible by political connections. This can range from outright graft to a lack of competition, poor regulation and the transfer of public assets to firms at bargain prices. Well-placed people have made their fortunes this way ever since rulers had enough power to issue profitable licences, permits and contracts to their cronies. In America, this system reached its apogee in the late 19th century, and a long and partially successful struggle against robber barons ensued. Antitrust rules broke monopolies such as John D. Rockefeller’s Standard Oil. The flow of bribes to senators shrank.

In the emerging world, the past quarter-century has been great for rent-seekers. Soaring property prices have enriched developers who rely on approvals for projects. The commodities boom has inflated the value of oilfields and mines, which are invariably intertwined with the state. Some privatisations have let tycoons milk monopolies or get assets cheaply. The links between politics and wealth are plainly visible in China, where a third of billionaires are party members.

Capitalism based on rent-seeking is not just unfair, but also bad for long-term growth. As our briefing on India explains (see article), resources are misallocated: crummy roads are often the work of crony firms. Competition is repressed: Mexicans pay too much for their phones. Dynamic new firms are stifled by better-connected incumbents. And if linked to the financing of politics, rent-heavy capitalism sets a tone at the top that can let petty graft flourish. When ministers are on the take, why shouldn’t underpaid junior officials be?

The Economist has built an index to gauge the extent of crony capitalism across countries and over time (see article). It identifies sectors which are particularly dependent on government—such as mining, oil and gas, banking and casinos—and tracks the wealth of billionaires (based on a ranking by Forbes) in those sectors relative to the size of the economy. It does not purport to establish that particular countries are particularly corrupt, but shows the scale of fortunes being created in economic sectors that are most susceptible to cronyism.

Rich countries score comparatively well, but that is no reason for complacency. The bailing out of banks has involved the transfer of a great deal of wealth to financiers; lobbyists have too much influence, especially in America (see article); today’s internet entrepreneurs could yet become tomorrow’s monopolists. The larger problem, though, lies in the emerging world, where billionaires’ wealth in rent-heavy sectors relative to GDP is more than twice as high as in the rich world. Ukraine and Russia score particularly badly—many privatisations favoured insiders. Asia’s boom has enriched tycoons in rent-seeking sectors.

Wanted: emerging-market Roosevelts
Yet this may be a high-water mark for rent-seekers, for three reasons. First, rules are ignored less freely than they used to be. Governments seeking to make their countries rich and keep people happy know they need to make markets work better and bolster the institutions that regulate them. Brazil, Hong Kong and India have beefed up their antitrust regulators. Mexico’s president, Enrique Peña Nieto, wants to break its telecoms and media cartels. China is keen to tackle its state-owned fiefs.

Second, the financial incentives for businesses may be changing. The share of billionaire wealth from rent-rich industries in emerging markets is now falling, from a peak of 76% in 2008 to 58% today. This is partly a natural progression. As economies get richer, infrastructure and commodities become less dominant. Between 1900 and 1930 new fortunes in America were built not in railways and oil but in retailing and cars. In China today the big money is made from the internet, not building heavy industrial plants with subsidised loans on land secured through party connections. But this also reflects the wariness of investors: in India, after a decade of epic corruption, industrialists in open and innovative sectors such as technology and pharmaceuticals are back in the ascendant.

The last reason for optimism is that the incentives for politicians have changed, too. Growth has slowed sharply, making reforms that open the economy vital. Countries with governments that are reforming and trying to tackle vested interests, such as Mexico, have been better insulated from the jitters in the financial markets.

There is much more to be done. Governments need to be more assiduous in regulating monopolies, in promoting competition, in ensuring that public tenders and asset sales are transparent and in prosecuting bribe-takers. The boom that created a new class of tycoon has also created its nemesis, a new, educated, urban, taxpaying middle class that is pushing for change. That is something autocrats and elected leaders ignore at their peril.

前述英文悉數轉載自經濟學人原文網頁, 好圖文共賞~~ 
待取得繁體中文翻譯稿件, 當即刻奉上! 請仔細讀並學習唷~ ^__^

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武道琴俠
偶只看懂圖片
真像外星人
2014-03-14 19:53:06
版主回應
哈哈~ 這是關於烏克蘭與俄羅斯的文章, 因為圖片有趣 所以連文一起取來用, 其實用來比喻過去40多年的家事, 也很適切~~ 我不知道自己的祖父母留下的田 房 與財產有這麼多, 但過去18年的去年與先父的堂哥們聊過後, 我才知道!

What a big and happy family I have. 哈哈哈
2014-03-16 17:56:27
WitchVera
公務員是公僕嗎? 但, 法官不是公僕.

轉貼一則文如下:
「各位請就坐,本席今天要審理的是吃十個包子吃飽案,希望能夠水落石出。當事人請入證人席。你面前的就是那十個讓你吃飽的包子嗎?請看清楚,他們大小不同喔!」

「是的。」

「你是自願吃這些包子進而吃飽的嗎?」

「不是,是他們強迫我吃的。所以這十個包子每個包子都有責任。」

「那麼你是吃第一個包子吃飽的嗎?是第二個包子吃飽的嗎?……」(法官依序問了十個包子,到第十個包子當事人才說是)

「是這第十個包子嗎?那我們把它切成兩半,讓你吃飽的是哪一半?」(當事人指了指其中一半)

「好,讓我們再把這個包子切成兩半,你是吃哪一半吃飽的?」(當事人又指了其中一半。後來法官總共做了十次,桌上只剩下一零二四分之一個包子。)

接著法官說:「好,你確定吃了這一零二四分之一的包子才飽的嗎?」

當事人:「是的。」

法官:「那麼你覺得其他人吃了這一零二四分之一個包子會飽嗎?」

當事人:「應該是不會,因為這個份量很少。但是法官我是連續吃了那麼多個包子才飽的,不是只吃那一零二四分之一個包子才飽的啊。」

法官:「你不要那麼囉唆,我們已經把責任都依序切割開來了,這樣方便我們判刑嘛!好啦,既然其他人吃那一零二四分之一個包子不會飽,但你吃了之後飽了,那麼就是你個人體質問題,這十個包子都沒有致你於飽的故意,所以通通輕判六到八個月,其中幾個還可以易科罰金,然後有幾個包子無罪。判最重的八個月是那第三個包子,因為我們判斷他在你吃飽的過程中扮演了一個關鍵的角色!好啦,還有沒有什麼問題?」

一號包子辯護律師:「報告有!我覺得一號包子根本就判太重,該判無罪!」
2014-03-15 12:30:32
WitchVera
"In Russian eyes, the US is neither sovereign nor a democracy; it is the festering corpse of a democracy being fed on by the world's fattest vultures.

"the world's fattest vultures"--always take out someone else's dishes even they are already full and the plenty meals are on their tables. Pretty good post and imagine today. Thank you, Jeff.

ClubOrlov: The Madness of President Putin
cluborlov.blogspot.com (web:http://cluborlov.blogspot.in/2014/03/the-madness-of-president-putin.html ) and,

http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2014/03/17/why_is_japan_so_different
2014-03-19 16:33:05
WitchVera
國際要聞!【烏克蘭:撤離駐克里米亞軍隊】http://www.cna.com.tw/news/firstnews/201403245021-1.aspx
烏克蘭代理總統圖奇諾夫表示,下這道命令是由於俄羅斯軍隊「威脅到烏克蘭軍人」及其眷屬的生命與健康。
2014-03-25 06:13:38
是 (若未登入"個人新聞台帳號"則看不到回覆唷!)
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