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The Unirule Institute of Economics (Unirule) is an independent, nonprofit, non governmental (NGO) think tank, which was jointly initiated in July of 1993 by five prominent economists, Prof. Mao Yushi, Prof. Zhang Shuguang, Prof. Sheng Hong, Prof. Fan Gang, and Prof. Tang Shouning. Unirule is dedicated to the open exchange of ideas in economics in general, with a particular focus on institutional economics, and maintains a highly prestigious status within academic circles.

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Books


 

The Natural Law is the Gentlemen's Mission
By SHENG Hong


Rules and Prosperity
By FENG Xingyuan


 

A History of China
By YAO Zhongqiu

 


On Hayek
By YAO Zhongqiu


The Limits of Government ⅡI
By YAO Zhongqiu


Capital Freedom of China
2011 Annual Report

By FENG Xingyuan and
MAO Shoulong


Coase and China
Edit by ZHANG Shuguang and SHENG Hong

Where the Chinese Anxieties Come From
By MAO Yushi


Humanistic Economics
By MAO Yushi


Food Security and Farm Land Protection in China
By MAO Yushi ,ZHAO Nong and YANG Xiaojing


Report on the Living Enviroment of China's Private Enterprises
By FENG xingyuan and
HE Guangwen


Game: Subdivision, Implementation and Protection of Ownership of Land
By ZHANG Shuguang


The Nature, Performance and Reform of State-owned Enterprises
By Unirule Institute of Economics


Rediscovering Confucianism
By YAO Zhongqiu



Virtue, Gentleman and Custom
By YAO Zhongqiu


China's Path to Change
By YAO Zhongqiu




The Great Wall and the Coase Theorem
By SHENG Hong



Innovating at the Margin of Traditions
By SHENG Hong





Economics That I Understand
By MAO Yushi





Why Are There No Decent Enterprisers in China?
By ZHANG Shuguang



What Should China Rely On for Food Security?
By MAO Yushi and ZHAO Nong





Case Studies in China’s Institutional Change (Volume IV)





Unirule Working Paper (2011)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Highlights

To Eradicate Corruption without Freedom of Speech Is Nothing but an Illusion

by MAO Yushi, Honorary President, Unirule Institute of Economics
Translated by MA Junjie, Researcher, Unirule Institute of Economics

Scholars from Taiwan normally hold an annual meeting to express their exceptions for the year ahead, to communicate across different areas of the society, especially among scholars and decision makers. It’s a different situation from us, and we need to learn from practices of Taiwan. Today, the title of my speech is “Republic Means Freedom of Speech.”

What does “共和” mean? This word is translated from English, and the meaning of “republic” in the Oxford English Dictionary is ambiguous. We have this translation following the meaning of the Japanese translation. However, I find it inaccurate. Regardless of its original meaning, as we call a state a “republic,” at least we mean the peaceful state between people and the abolishment of violence.

Issues of a state can be very complicated. People have very differentiated opinions. Then how are we supposed to solve domestic problems without violence? Discussion and negotiations are the answer. But what if we can’t reach an agreement? We keep the discussion and negotiation going, till we reach one. We will finally reach an agreement. Why? Because we have the same objective, that is the happiness of all the people of the state. If violence is used when an agreement can’t be reached, then the republic does not exist.

Before the reform and opening up, it was a game of life or death in the political struggle in China. From LIU Shaoqi to LIN Biao, from PENG Dehuai to HE Long, if one lost, one would die. Now politics within the Communist Party of China have development and become civilised, and no death penalty falls on political criminals; while as we see the fate of Jang Sung-taek, a leading figure of North Korea, who lost his life after a failed batter in politics. China is a civilised political entity, that is to say, politicians are safe as political struggles take the form of argument.

What is a safe institution for politicians, and what is an unsafe one? Apparently, a civilised, democratic institution is safe for politicians. On the contrary, a dictatorship is utterly dangerous for politicians. They may think they are safe, but in fact they are not. Many examples come to the fore, dictators such as Nicolae Ceau?escu, Saddam Hussein, and Muammar Gaddafi, all died a violent death. Politicians in democracies may face death threats, but only rarely. Most of them get to step down from their office safely. Nowadays, political criminals are exempted from death penalty, and the institution of secret reporting is abolished in China. In the past, a person may get in serious trouble if he or she held contrasting opinions from the party authorities and got reported. Such cases are hardly seen now. This shows that the government has relaxed its control over the ideas of citizens. In fact, the reporting system that aims to convict someone for his or her unorthodoxical opinions exists somehow within the system of the state but has been eradicated in the free market.

How to make everyone feel safer, not only for politicians, but also for common citizens? The rule of law is a must. There is progress and backward development for China’s rule of law. We have seen several cases where innocent people were convicted, though not sentenced to death, for something they have not done. As the real criminals were found at last, a couple of wrongly convicted citizens got their justice. Why did such things happen at all? I think it’s because there were no guarantees for people’s security, and abuse during the investigation. As there are wrongful criminal cases, to correct them is even harder as there is this old problem in China— that is authority is more powerful than law.

A republic means we should resort to rationality, and protection of the freedom of speech is the most important feature of a republic. It also provides a critical standard to measure if the society is making progress or developing backwards. From this perspective, I think this country is taking a step backward, as we can see.

Therefore, in this New Year Expectations, I expect more freedom of speech in the year ahead. One fundamental thing is the protection of the freedom of speech without which nothing else is guaranteed. And the freedom of speech is something to fight for, not to be taken for granted.

Therefore, as a common citizen, we all need to do our part. China is getting more and more powerful, but that is just in terms of economic development, far from being a respectful power in the international community. We have this Chinese dream, but to realize this dream it takes not only economic success, but also heartfelt respect from other peoples of the world. In this regard, we are far from it. What is the problem then? Firstly and ultimately, we need freedom of speech without which it is impossible to eradicate corruption. Nothing is possible without freedom of speech.

 



 

Current Events

Unirule Master Thoughts Class(2015) 5th Session Held in Beijing

November 28th to 29th, Unirule Master Thoughts Class(2015)  5th session was held in Beijing. This session was joined by Professor SHENG Hong, Director of Unirule Institute of Economics; Mr. MAO Yushi, Honorary President of Unirule; and Professor ZHANG Qianfan, Peking University.

On the morning of November 28th, Professor SHENG Hong spoke on “Institutional Economics and China’s Reforms”. Professor SHENG Hong pointed out the development of institutional economics was institutional economics represented by John Rogers Commons, post-institutional economics represented by John Kenneth Galbraith, and new institutional economics represented by Ronald Coase, Douglass North, and Steven N. S. Cheung. (To read more)

 

 

 

Seminar on Crisis of the Middle East and International Politics Held in Beijing

December 1st, a seminar on Crisis of the Middle East and International Politics was held at Unirule Beijing Office.

Present at the seminar include Professor LIANG Shuying, China University of Political Science and Law; Mr. JIANG Hao, Director of Unirule Law and Public Governance Centre; Professor SHANG Huipeng, Peking University; Professor SHENG Hong, Director of Unirule; Professor TIAN Feilong, Beihang University; Professor YANG Junfeng, People's Public Security University of China; Professor LI Dun, Tisinghua University; and journalists from the media. (To read more)

 

 

 

Seminar on “Bank-Enterprise Relation and Property Rights Protection— Release of Investigation Report on Qinghai Donghu Hotel Bank Loans Disputes” Held in Beijing

December 3rd, a seminar on “Bank-Enterprise Relation and Property Rights Protection— Release of Investigation Report on Qinghai Donghu Hotel Bank Loans Disputes” was held at Unirule Beijing Office. Present at the meeting include famous jurists HE Weifang, LI Xun, SUN Guorui, WANG Yong, XU Xin, YANG Lixin, ZHENG Xiaojing; renowned political scholars LIU Junning, FENG Xingyuan; and economists SHENG Hong, WU Qing, ZHANG Shuguang, ZHAO Nong, MAO Shoulong; and entrepreneur Mr. SUN Dawu. Professor GAO Yan, Deputy Director of Unirule, hosted the seminar. (To read more)

 

 

Unirule Reading Circle(VII) on SHENG Hong’s An Explanation on Confucianism by Economics Held in Beijing

December 15th, Unirule Reading Circle(VII) on Professor SHENG Hong’s new book An Explanation on Confucianism by Economics was held at Unirule Beijing Office. Present at the event include the author, Professor SHENG Hong, Director of Unirule; Professor FAN Gang, Secretary-General, China Reform Foundation; Professor YAO Zhongqiu, President of Unirule; and Mr. MAO Zengyu, Deputy Director of Economy Press China.

 

Professor SHENG Hong introduced how he wrote this book, and Professor FAN Gang, Professor YAO Zhongqiu, and Mr. MAO Zengyu commented on this book from various perspectives. They all spoke highly of this book. At last, all the guests joined the Q&A session and interacted with the audience. (To read more)


 

 

News

Unirule 10-D Spatial Simulation Planning Model (SSPM)

The Unirule 10-D Spatial Simulation Planning Model (SSPM) is a mathematical and computational model based on economics. It is developed by a Unirule research team led by Professor SHENG Hong. SSPM is designed to simulate the development scale, economic density, industry distribution, resource constraints, ecological preservation, institutional influence, policy effect, and the evolution process in the next ten to twenty years or even longer period for a region. SSPM provides reference for the regional economic development strategy making, which can be directly adopted in the planning on regional economic development, population, land use, industry development, townships, water and ecology.

So far, SSPM has been adopted in the industry planning of Qianhai Area, Shenzhen, and the economic development planning of Yangcheng County, Shanxi Province.

Learn more about the SSPM

 


Current Researches/ Consulting

Improving China’s Implimentation and Supervision Institution of the Constitution

At present, research on the implimentation and supervision institution of China’s constitution is insufficient. Multiple problems exist in the current studies, such as the lack of a cultural perspective, and empathetic understanding of China’s political tradition; a lack of authentic Chinese perspective and an indulgence of Westernized framework of analysis; and a lack of reflection of the reality and the existing political framework.

 

The research on China’s constitution review institution should put the protection of civil rights and constitutional construction first, with a reflection of China’s reality and take in the advantages of external researches. A plausible research approach is as follows: 1. This research ought to provide a right relief mechanism; 2. It should take into account that China is a vast country with imbalanced regional development realities which foster unique and differentiated conceptions of the law and politics in general; 3. It should be built upon the current constitutional structure and take into account the interactive system of the power of the party, the National People’s Congress, etc. in order to make it a progressive research, which can enable the elements of constitutionalism to supplement the current constitutional framework; 4. Scrupulous examination should be given to constitutional practices in other regions and cultures, especially those influenced by the Chinese culture or with a similar institutional set-up, such as Taiwan and France; 5. Observations should be made in regard to the traditional Chinese institutions, such as the institution of the expostulation system (“谏议制度”, or giving advice),  supervision system, and the institutions established in this light, e.g., Taiwan’s Control Yuan.

 

Improving Entrepreneurs' Survival Environment: Abolishing Death Penalties in Relation to Fund-Raising Cases in China

In recent years, environment for private enterprises has been taking a deteriorating turn, which attracts attention from the media and the academia. The causes are complex and multi-faceted, including: 1, the abuse of powers by government officials as the government powers expand; 2, “the private-owned deteriorating with the state-owned advancing” (guojin mintui) worsens the picture where the survival environment for private enterprises gets more and more squeezed; 3, external demands of enterprises decrease while internal cost increases; 4, financial suppression escalates with the industrial restructuring and updating lagging behind; and 5, the fluctuation of macroeconomic policies by the government poses uncertainty for production and investment. Moreover, many innocent entrepreneurs were labeled and persecuted for their “gangster behaviors” by the policy and law enforcements in Chongqing city, which was just a glimpse of similar occasional “gangster crashing” movements in the country. Many entrepreneurs are suppressed and sanctioned in the name of “illegal fund-raising”. According to active law, the court can sentence entrepreneurs to death penalty with this charge.

 

Unirule Institute of Economics is planning to undertake research on the problems of the crime of “illegal fund-raising” and specific methods to abolish this charge.

 

It is fit for Unirule to carry out this research project. Unirule Institute of Economics is a non-profit, non-governmental organization, which focuses on institutional economics with expertise in economics, laws, and politics. It has been dedicated to independent research on China’s institutional reforms and public policies as well as the reform of private finance. In 2003, 2011, and 2013, Unirule held seminars on the cases of Mr. SUN Dawu, Ms. WU Ying, and Mr. ZENG Chengjie. These seminars have been very influential before and after the close of the cases.


Unirule Institute of Economics has undertaken research projects in corporate finance and private finance in recent years. Over the years, Professor FENG Xingyuan has been carrying out pioneering research on private finance and private enterprises. He has gained rich experience and published many publications and papers on relevant topics, including “Report on the Freedom of China’s Corporate Capitals”, “Report on the Survival Environment of China’s Private Enterprises 2012”, research on the risks of private finance, etc. In August 2013, Professor FENG Xingyuan and his research team completed and released the “Report on Private Enterprise Fund-Raiding in West Hunan and the Case of Mr. ZENG Chengjie”, which analyzed and assessed the process, nature, problems, and causes of a series of events and proposed policy recommendations concerning the fund-raising activities in West Hunan and the case of Mr. ZENG Chengjie.

 

Business Ethics Declaration of Chinese Entrepreneurs

Over the last three decades, China’s economy has been embracing rapid growth with entrepreneurs being a key drive. The biggest and most significant structural change is the rise of entrepreneurs who constitute the pillar of the society nowadays. Today, the biggest, and the youngest group of entrepreneurs are going international, bridging China and the world.

However, because of the abnormal political, social and ideological environment of China for the last five decades, Chinese entrepreneurs happen to be widely confused and for the last thirty years, the emerging group of entrepreneurs has been suffering from severe anxiety over identity:

Firstly, due to the long time anti-market ideological propaganda by the authorities, many entrepreneurs believe they have the “original sin”. They are led to believe that their profits are based on exploiting the workers, which further leads to their confusion and anxiety over the ethical justification of their fortune and profits.

Secondly, this anti-market ideology also affects the public; leading the public to envy the fortune of entrepreneurs while disrespect them since their deeds are “unethical” and “dishonest”. This public opinion, in return, affects entrepreneurs’ self-identity. They, therefore, can’t convince themselves of the contributions they make to the society, or identify themselves within the social hierarchy.

Thirdly, Chinese entrepreneurs, especially those whose enterprises have gone international, are bothered with this severe identification anxiety. Chinese people stand out in entrepreneurship, so do Chinese enterprises. But what are the driving forces behind? Thanks to the long time culture break-up from the traditions, and the anti-tradition propaganda, Chinese entrepreneurs find it hard to comprehend and identify their cultural and social roles. This leads to the chaotic and restless mental state of entrepreneurs. This also results in the lack of a cultural supportive pillar for enterprise management in China.

“Business Ethics Declaration of Chinese Entrepreneurs” aims to provide answers to the anxiety over identity for Chinese entrepreneurs, to re-identify them by providing authentic and orthodoxical conceptions, to help them mature their thoughts and corporate social responsibilities.

This research project is committed to establishing a value system for Chinese entrepreneurs. To confront the anxiety over identity for Chinese entrepreneurs, this project provides answers to the three questions below:

1.Do Chinese entrepreneurs have the “original sin”?
2.What do Chinese entrepreneurs contribute to the society?
3.How do Chinese entrepreneurs gain respect?

 

An Economic Research of Chinese Urban Smog Management

The issue of smog has been on the spotlight in China that no matter government officials, ordinary citizens, or journalists and the press have expressed serious concern and anxiety towards it. Unirule Institute of Economics takes on this research topic and is conducting an economic research on China’s urban smog management.


The urban smog is attributed to multiple factors with many interest parties involved, which also makes it an economic issue. Unirule seeks to find a solution to the management of smog by the design of institutions from an economic point of view.

 

 

Fairness and Efficiency of Financial Resource Allocation

The first scale problem of the fairness and efficiency of financial resource allocation is whether the overall tax bearing standard falls within the optimal interval, whether the design of tax kinds and the mechanism will harm the development of the economy. The second scale problem is whether the expenditure structure of the existing financial resource allocation, especially transfer payment, obeys the principal of justice, and the efficiency of financial expenditure especially the general administrative costs.


Unirule Institute of Economics is going to undertake research on the fairness and efficiency of financial resource allocation with the emphasis on the second scale problem. In order to fulfill the ideal of justice in a society, the involvement of financial resource allocation is one of the methods, and a universal one. A state can promote justice by implying financial expenditure in two ways: the direct and the indirect way. When applying the direct way of implying financial expenditure measures to promote justice, financial expenditure is directly distributed to individuals to fill the gap of incomes between individuals.

 

Among the financial expenditure items of China are pensions and relief funds for social welfare, rural relief funds as well as social insurance funds. The indirect way is by governments' increase in expenditure used for supporting agriculture and villagers, construction of infrastructure, education and medical treatments. This research is on the justice of financial resource allocation and it deals mainly with whether the transfer payment of financial resources obeys the second rule of Rawls's theory of justice, which states that when violation to the first rule has to be made, resource allocation can be towards the poorest group of people. Besides the justice issue, efficiency is also involved in the financial resource allocation. The administrative costs of China have long been above the average standard of other countries in the world, therefore, a big amount of public financial resources are wasted (trillions of RMB per year as estimated). In regard with the efficiency issue of the financial resource allocation, this research deals mainly with the change of ratio of administrative costs by government agencies (in addition to other costs, such as medical treatments of government officials covered by public budgets, and housing subsidies) of financial income. The reform of the fiscal and taxation system is one of the core issues in China's on-going reforms. This research aims not at a comprehensive examination of the fiscal and taxation system, but a specific aspect which is the "fairness and efficiency of financial resource allocation", and evaluating the status quo of China's financial resource allocation.

Research on China's Urbanization on the Local Level

Urbanization is one of the most essential economic and social policies of the new administration. The emphasis of this policy is posed on medium and small cities as well as townships. As noticed, there are thousands of industrialized townships in China with their social governance lagging far behind their economic development.


Firstly, a big population is located in between the urban and rural level, which can't transform into citizens. Hundreds of millions of people have left their villages and moved to commercialized and industrialized towns. They are in industrial and commercial occupations and it is highly unlikely that they would go back to their villages. However, they are not entitled to local Hukou registration, which further leads to the deprivation of various rights, for example, the right of education.

Secondly, public governance in such industrialized and commercialized towns, in general, is at a rudimentary level. The number of officially budgeted posts is asymmetric with the population governed, which leads to the employment of a large number of unofficially budgeted staff and unjustified power to govern. There is a lack of financial resources for the local government to carry out infrastructure construction or to provide public goods sufficiently. Thirdly, the urbanization results in imbalanced development of the structure of society. Since the industrialized and commercialized townships are unable to complete urbanization, urbanization in China has basically become mega-urbanization which is dominated by administrative power. Local governments centralize periphery resources with administrative power and construct cities artificially, which impedes townships and villages from evolving into cities by spontaneous order. Fourthly, industry upgrading can't be undertaken in those industrialized and commercialized townships and the capacity for future economic development is greatly limited. The industry upgrading is, in essence, the upgrading of people. Enterprises ought to draw and maintain technicians, researchers, and investors, to meet their needs for living standards, which cannot be satisfied by townships. Similarly, the lagging urbanization reversely sets back the cultivation and development of the service industry, especially the medium and high-end services.


Unirule Institute of Economics is going to carry out research on urbanization of China on the local level, aiming at improving public governance of the industrialized townships, optimizing the urbanization methodologies, and improving the "citizenization" of migrant workers, therefore further pushing social governance towards self-governance and democracy.

 

Research on the Public Governance Index of Provincial Capitals

At the beginning of the year 2013, Unirule conducted field survey, including more than 10 thousands of households in 30 local capital cities. According to the field survey, the Public Governance Index was derived. The main conclusions of the PGI report as below:


Three statements summarize the status quo of public governance in provincial capitals. Firstly, public services have generally just gotten a pass. Secondly, protection to civil rights is disturbing. Finally, governance methodologies need improvements. These statements point out the solution: the structure of the society needs to be altered from that with a government monopoly to a civil society with diverse governance subjects. The ranking of provincial capitals in the public governance assessment from the top to the bottom is as follows: Hangzhou, Nanjing, Urumqi, Tianjin, Chengdu, Shanghai, Beijing, Nanchang, Xi'an, Xining, Shijiazhuang, Wuhan, Guangzhou, Yinchuan, Hohhot, Chongqing, Shenyang, Changsha, Jinan, Kunming, Nanning, Haikou, Fuzhou, Guiyang, Harbin, Hefei, Changchun, Zhengzhou, Taiyuan and Lanzhou.

Generally speaking, all provincial capitals are graded comparatively low in the three public governance assessments from 2008 to 2012. Even those that ranked the highest in performance have just barely passed the bar of 60 points. Few provincial capitals with poor public governance got over 50 points.


There is a certain amount of correlation between the changes of ranking and improvements in public governance in provincial capitals. In the short term, should the capital cities be willing to raise their rankings, they can achieve this by increasing transparency in government information and civil servants selection, encouraging local non-governmental organizations, or promoting wider participation in local affairs. There is but a weak correlation between public governance and the local GDP level. However, a strong correlation exists between the rankings and the equity of local fiscal transfer payment. That is to say, a region gets a higher ranking in public governance if subsidies to local social security, medical care, education and housing are distributed more to the poorest residents in that region. On the contrary, a region's ranking falls if such resources are distributed with prejudice to the groups with high incomes. This phenomenon shows that equity is of significance in the assessment of the government by the people.


When residents are not satisfied with medical care, elderly support system, water supply and electricity supply, the situation can be improved when they complain to the government. But when similar situations take place in public transportation, environment greening, heating systems, and garbage management, whether by collective actions or filing complaints to government agencies, residents can hardly be satisfied with what the government does.


According to the three public governance assessments carried out from 2008 to2012, we discovered that the Gini coefficient of residents in provincial capitals was decreasing and the income fluidity was improving. From 2010 to 2012, citizens' comments on protection of civil rights are deteriorating, especially in terms of property and personal security. The request for freedom of speech is also increasing. For the moment, citizens in provincial capitals have a low evaluation on the cleanness and honesty of local governments.

 

Research on Disclosure of Government Information


Room for reforms is getting narrower as the opening-up and reforms deepen. It also leads to a more stabilized vertical mobilization of the demographic structure with the conflicts in the distribution of interests exacerbating. A collaborative system centering the political and law system and involving close cooperation between the police, courts, petition offices, and the city guards (Chengguan) is developed to deal with social unrest. This system is operated by local governments and finalized as a system of maintaining stability (Weiwen). There have been Internet spats over the amount of Weiwen funds. It is unsustainable to maintain such a Weiwen system, and the disclosure of government information is the most significant approach for this end. The essence of public governance is to dissolute conflicts instead of hiding and neglecting them. And one way to achieve this is by sufficient communication. Public and transparent appraisement and supervision cannot be achieved without transparent government information, otherwise the result will be the exclusion of citizens from public governance.


Unirule Institute of Economics has been undertaking research on the disclosure of government information since 2011. This research is carried out not only from the perspective of the regulations for the disclosure of government information which evaluates whether governments of various levels are obeying the regulations and their performances, but also by examining information disclosure laws in developed countries while looking at the status quo in China. There are seven aspects where government information disclosure can be improved, namely, information disclosure of government officials, transparency of finance, transparency in the decision-making mechanism, transparency in administration, transparency in public services, transparency of enterprises owned by local governments, and transparency in civil rights protection.

 

Upcoming Events

Unirule Biweekly Symposiums

Unirule's Biweekly Symposiums are known in China and throughout the world for their long history of open and in-depth discussions and exchanges of ideas in economics and other social sciences. Over 380 sessions have been held and over 15,000 scholars, policy makers, and students, as well as countless readers on the web, have directly and indirectly, and participated in the Biweekly Symposium for close to 20 years.

Biweekly Symposiums begin at 2 p.m. every other Friday and are free and open to the public.

Schedule
Biweekly Symposium No. 539: 4th Dec., 2015
Biweekly Symposium No. 540: 18th Dec., 2015

 

Previous Biweekly Symposiums

Biweekly Symposium No. 537: F.A. Hayek: The “Knowledge Problem” and Economic Order

Lecturer: Prof. Viktor J. Vanberg

Host: ZHANG Shuguang, Chairman, Unirule Academic Committee

Commentators: LIU Yejin, XU Jianming, LI Song, ZHU Junsheng

 

Professor Viktor J. Vanberg started by introducing Hayek’s influence on his research. He thought Hayek’s effort to illustrate the fault of central planning was significant. As he introduced Hayek’s ideas, he stressed the individual and the social dimension, concerning the individual ability to obtain knowledge. A society concerns many existing dimensions and levels, different groups, and differentiated abilities to solve problems. And the rational choice theory assumes that individuals are able to handle all possible situations and choose the best action plans, which is totally false. It’s impossible to choose the optimal choice based on the knowledge and information individuals hold.

Professor Vanberg thought the way knowledge communicates in the society constitutes the basis of Hayek’s social theory. Hayek also emphasised the distinction between two kinds of orders, one was spontaneous order, or the self formed order, and the other was constitutional design, or the organisational order. The fundamental thing about spontaneous order as the organisation principle lies in the achievable purpose of people. And if the individual knowledge was utilised by central planning instead of by individual choices, it is impossible to be of any good.

 

 

Biweekly Symposium No. 538: Rethinking the Paradigms of Economics.

Lecturer: ZHANG Weiying

Host: FENG Xingyuan, Professor, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences

Commentators: SHENG Hong, ZHAO Nong, MO Zhihong

 

As a champion of market economy, Professor ZHANG Weiying introduced his latest book Principles of Economics and spoke on “Rethinking the Paradigms of Economics. ” He mentioned several topics that stimulated his rethinking, such as the discussion of the socialist planning economy, the market economy and entrepreneurship, the market failure and the government’s intervention, the sector politicise and their flaws, the two major financial crises and their implications, and the flaw of mainstream economics in understanding institutions.

 

He stressed that it was not conclusions of economics, but the paradigms and analytical frameworks that were at issue. The main stream economic paradigm was based on given assumptions, resources, preferences, and techniques; secondly, the assumption entailed that information was objective and given, and could be obtained fully; thirdly, there was no such thing as uncertainty; fourthly, everyone was equally smart and rational. If such assumptions proved market was efficient, then planned economy was possible and effective where both the market and the economic plan sufficed.

 

He specifically pointed out that from a theoretical point of view, the Austrian School of economics was the best school of thoughts about economics because it considered the market as a process, instead of a static equilibrium. The market was a process where entrepreneurs constantly created, and produced, and processed information. If such logic stood, then the government’s intervention on economy was false.

 

Other participants also commented on Professor ZHANG Weiying’s lecture. Professor MO Zhihong spoke highly of the book; Professor SHENG Hong thought Professor ZHANG’s book and research was a new evidence that planned economy would fail and market economy would prevail; Professor ZHAO Nong pointed out that the neo-classical economics and the Austrian School were not at contradiction, but at supplementary position.

 

 


Editor: MA Junjie
Revisor: Hannah Luftensteiner

 

Comments? Questions? Email us at unirule@unirule.org.cn




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