公共支出纯理论Paul A. Samuelson英文原著及中文翻译
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2课本第一章改变的年代、时代引言a (转化、变革).在发达国家的公共部门的管理已经有了一个变革。
(形成,造成)a .这个新的范例对几个原先被认为是传统公共行政的基础规则提出了直接挑战。
(真理) .这几个真理被挑战。
1980s (重新评估).1980s的经济问题意味着政府重新评估他们的官僚制并且需要改变。
(长度), a a .这些观点会在以后做更大范围的讨论,但是这里强调的主要是一点:一百年来很少发生变革的公共职业领域发生了全面变革。
A 一个新的范例, , a .有个争论,关于公共管理尤其是新的公共管理是不是公共部门管理的一个新的范例。
a a (障碍), a ’s(学科,纪律)一些争论认为一个范例是一个要跨越的大障碍,需要所有学科的实践者的同意,或多或少是看待世界的暂时方法。
’s(1989) : . 基本的公共管理部门的范例是这些遵循奥斯特罗姆的争论,即组织有两种对立的类型:官僚组织和市场组织。
a ; , ‘ a “(学科、纪律)”, (完整的)” , , ”, ’ (,2001.231).对本来说,传统行政模型适合被看做一种范式。
他继续说,当然,那些支持公共传统行政的人会争论说他们有纪律,带有完整的理论、法律和普遍原理,专注于他们的研究。
(潜在、含蓄、隐晦的). 公共管理里范式有着很不同的潜在的理论基础,即经济理论和私营部门理论。
, ; . 然而,这不是说这个学科的所有学者都认为传统公共行政范例已经被取代,范例是逐渐改变的这样一个事实。
a 一种新方法的出现1990 .在1990s初期,在大多数发达国家和很多发展中国家一个新的公共部门管理模型出现了。
1980 .在英国撒切尔执政时期,出现了改革,比如公共企业的民营化、精简公共部门。
(出版)1992 (彻底改造)(1992).在美国一个关键事件是所写的《彻底改造政府》的出版。
() a (程度、范围)() () a .国际组织特别是法国为基础的,较小范围的世界银行和开始对提高自己的成员国和客户国家公共管理感兴趣:在内的在公共管理改革过程中起了领导作用。
公共产品理论简介:根据公共经济学理论,社会产品分为公共产品和私人产品。
按照萨缪尔森在《公共支出的纯理论》中的定义,纯粹的公共产品或劳务是这样的产品或劳务,即每个人消费这种物品或劳务不会导致别人对该种产品或劳务消费的减少。
而且公共产品或劳务具有与私人产品或劳务显著不同的三个特征:效用的不可分割性、消费的非竞争性和受益的非排他性。
而凡是可以由个别消费者所占有和享用,具有敌对性、排他性和可分性的产品就是私人产品。
特征:1.效用的不可分割性私人产品可以被分割成许多可以买卖的单位,谁付款,谁受益。
公共产品是不可分割的。
国防、外交、治安等最为典型。
2. 受益的非排它性私人产品只能是占有人才可消费,谁付款谁受益。
然而任何人消费公共产品不排除他人消费(从技术加以排除几乎不可能或排除成本很高)。
因而不可避免地会出现“白搭车”现象。
3. 消费的非竞争性边际生产成本为零:在现有的公共产品供给水平上,新增消费者不需增加供给成本。
(如灯塔等)边际拥挤成本为零:任何人对公共产品的消费不会影响其他人同时享用该公共产品的数量和质量。
个人无法调节其消费数量和质量。
边际拥挤成本是否为零是区分纯公共产品、准公共产品或混合产品的重要标准。
根据西方经济理论,由于存在“市场失灵”,从而使市场机制难以在一切领域达到“帕累托最优”,特别是在公共产品方面。
如果由私人部分通过市场提供就不可避免地出现“免费搭车者”,从而导致休谟所指出的“公共的悲剧”,难以实现全体社会成员的公共利益最大化,这是市场机制本身难以解决的难题,这时就需要政府来出面提供公共产品或劳务。
此外,由于外部效应的存在,私人不能有效提供也会造成其供给不足,这也需政府出面弥补这种“市场缺陷”,提供相关的公共产品或劳务。
免费搭车:从公共产品消费的角度看,非排他性意味着一个人使用公共产品,并不排除其他人使用,即使从技术上可以排他,但成本太大,这样,消费者不会自愿花钱消费这种产品,而是期望他人购买,自己从中受益。
公共产品理论目录一、公共产品概念 (1)(一)公共产品的定义和数学形式 (1)(二)公共产品的分类 (2)(三)公共产品的特征 (2)(四)商品的分类 (3)二、公共产品理论及历史演变 (4)(一)公共产品理论雏形——大卫.休谟与亚当.斯密的公共产品理论 (4)(二)公共产品理论的发展——奥意学派与瑞典学派的公共产品理论 (5)(三)公共产品理论的形成——萨缪尔森的公共产品理论 (6)(四)现代公共产品理论的进一步发展 (7)(五)新制度经济学与公共产品理论 (8)(六)公共产品理论的新发展:公共产品的私人供给 (9)三、公共产品显示偏好、生产及供给 (9)(一)公共物品偏好显示机制 (9)(二)公共产品的财政供给 (11)(三)公共产品的生产 (14)四、公共产品理论的应用贡献及意义 (15)公共产品理论一、公共产品概念(一)公共产品的定义和数学形式一般说来,公共产品是指那些为整个社会共同消费的产品.严格地讲,它是在消费过程中具有非竞争性和非排他性的产品,是任何一个人对该产品的消费都不减少别人对它进行同样消费的物品与劳务。
由政府提供的用于满足社会公共需要的产品和劳务.社会公众对公共产品的需求是政府经济职能的源泉。
但不同的经济学家多其定义有所不同:第一,萨缪尔森认为公共产品是所欲集体成员集体享用的消费品,每个社会成员可以同时享用,任何人对该产品的消费不会减少其他人的消费。
不论每个人是否愿意购买它,他带来的好处不可分割的散步到整个社区里;第二,奥尔森认为,任何物品如果一个集团中的任何一个人能够消费它,它就不能适当的排斥其他人对该产品的消费;第三,布坎南将公共产品定义为任何集团或社团因为任何原因通过集体组织提供的商品或服务.某一种公共产品只可以是很小的团体受益,而另外一些公共产品却可以使很大的团体绳子全世界的人都受益。
最后在经济学上则认为,公共产品是那些在消费上同时具有非排他性和非竞争性的产品。
综上所述,公共产品具有非耗竭性,多一个人消费公共产品不会影响其他人的消费。
行政管理硕士毕业论文准公共物品视角下的拼车出行现状及政策性思考本文是行政管理论文,本文在系统地研究已有文献资料的基础上,结合我国当前实际情况,探索拼车出行的需求现状及存在的困境,并对此提出了自己的几点政策建议。
文章类型:硕士毕业论文行政管理毕业论文第1 章绪论1.1 研究背景及意义1.1.1 研究背景拼车出行在国外始于二战时期,当时欧美国家城市居民为了节省燃油,拼车出行成为战时的一种特殊措施;到上世纪七十年代石油危机的出现之后,拼车在国外成为了一种潮流;近年来,随着绿色消费的观念不断宣传,以及互联网技术和智能手机的推波助澜,拼车出行现象在国内外都得到了广泛的关注。
在当今欧美国家,各个国家拼车的形式多种多样,拼车出行的政策也不尽相同。
在美国,设置专门的HOV 车道供拼车出行的车辆行驶,在纽约这样的大城市,奥巴马政府规定高峰时期不拼车不让上路;在英国,拼车网络得到了政府的广泛认可和支持,出台了一系列的配套政策来保障拼车出行;在德国,政府出台了《民法典》给予私家车拼车出行法律保障,对于拼车出行的安全和收费问题也出台了相应的政策,同时政府还设立了大量的拼车中心和拼车俱乐部,引导城市居民拼车出行;在日本,拼车出行已被日本政府列入低碳出行的方式。
可见,在国外,拼车出行已经形成了一套完善的拼车政策体系,拼车出行已经发展的十分完善和规范。
硕士毕业论文辅导联系杨编辑微信:LunwenFz 在我国,拼车出行可谓是近年来出现的新鲜事物,受限于我国“春运”的特殊现象,拼车出行最先始于非日常的长途出行。
近几年,随着我国绿色交通的倡导以及互联网技术的不断提高,拼车出行这种介于私人交通和公共交通之间的新型交通方式得到了迅速的发展,尤其是在北上广这些特大城市,拼车行为越发频繁,拼车出行越来越受到广大年轻上班族的认可。
2005 年出现了互联网拼车方式,之后各类拼车出行的软件层出不穷,由嘀嗒拼车到滴滴出行,到如今出现的优步打车,拼车市场发展空间巨大,已成为当下政府和企业的重要关注点。
THE PURE THEORY OF PUBLIC EXPENDITUREPaul A. Samuelson1. Assumptions. Except for Sax, Wicksell,Lindahl, Musgrave, and Bowen, economists have rather neglected the theory of optimal public expenditure, spending most of their energy on the theory of taxation. Therefore, I explicitly assume two categories of goods: ordinary private consumption goods ()n X X X ,,21 which can be parcelled out among different individuals ()s i ,,,,2,1 according to the relations ∑=si ij j X X and collective consumption goods ()m n n X X ++ ,1 which all enjoy incommon in the sense that each individual's consumption of such a good leads to no subtraction from any other individual's consumption of that good, so thati j n j n X X ++= simultaneously for each and every i th individual and each collectiveconsumptive good. I assume no mystical collective mind that enjoys collective consumption goods; instead I assume each individual has a consistent set of ordinal preferences with respect to his consumption of all goods (collective as well as private) which can be summarized by a regularly smooth and convex utility index()i m n i i i X X u u +=,,1 (any monotonic stretching of the utility index is of course also an admissible cardinal index of preference). I shall throughout follow the convention of writing the partial derivative of any function with respect to its j th argument by aj subscript, so that ij ii jX u u ∂∂= etc. Provided economic quantities can be divided into two groups, (1) outputs or goods which everyone always wants to maximize and(2) inputs or factors which everyone always wants to minimize, we are free to change the algebraic signs of the latter category and from then on to work only with "goods," knowing that the case of factor inputs is covered as well. Hence by this convention we are sure that 0 ij u always.To keep production assumptions at the minimum level of simplicity, I assume a regularly convex and smooth production-possibility schedule relating totals of alloutputs, private and collective; or ()0,,1=+m n X X F , with 0 j F 、and ratios n jF F determinate and subject to the generalized laws of diminishing returns.Feasibility considerations disregarded, there is a maximal (ordinal) utility frontier representing the Pareto-optimal points —of which there are an (s —I) fold infinity —with the property that from such a frontier point you can make one person better off only by making some other person worse off. If we wish to make normative judgments concerning the relative ethical desirability of different configurations involving some individuals being on a higher level of indifference and some on a lower, we must be presented with a set of ordinal interpersonal norms or with a social welfare function representing a consistent set of ethical preferences among all the possible states of the system. It is not a "scientific" task of the economist to "deduce" the form of this function; this can have as many forms as there are possible ethical views; for the present purpose, the only restriction placed on the social welfare function is that it shall always increase or decrease when any one person's ordinal preference increases or decreases, all others staying on their same indifference levels: mathematically, we narrow it to the class that any one of its indexes can be written ()s u u u U U ,,,21 = with 0 j U .2. Optimal Conditions. In terms of these norms, there is a "best state of the world" which is defined mathematically in simple regular cases by the marginal conditionsr j ir ijF F u u = ()n j r s i ,2,1,;,,2,1== or ()n j r s i ,2;1;,,2,1=== (1)r j n s i ir i j n F F u u +=+=∑1 ()n r m j ,2,1;,,2,1== or ()1;,,2,1==r s j (2)1=q kq i k i u U u U ()n k s q i ,2,1;,,2,1,== or ()1;,,2;1===k s i q (3) Equations (1) and (3) are essentially those given in the chapter on welfare economics in my Foundations of Economic Analysis. They constitute my version ofthe "new welfare economics." Alone (1) represents that subset of relations which defines the Pareto-optimal utility frontier and which by itself represents what I regard as the unnecessarily narrow version of what once was called the "new welfare economics."The new element added here is the set (2), which constitutes a pure theory of government expenditure on collective consumption goods. By themselves(1)and(2)define the (s —Ι) fold infinity of utility frontier points; only when a set of interpersonal normative conditions equivalent to (3) is supplied are we able to define an unambiguously "best" state.Since formulating the conditions (2)some years ago, I have learned from the published and unpublished writings of Richard Musgrave that their essential logic is contained in the "voluntary-exchange" theories of public finance of the Sax-Wicksell-Lindahl-Musgrave type, and I have also noted Howard Bowen's independent discovery of them in Bowen's writings of a decade ago. A graphical interpretation of these conditions in terms of vertical rather than horizontal addition of different individuals' marginal-rate-of-substitution schedules can be given; but what I must emphasize is that there is a different such schedule for each individual at each of the (s —Ι)fold infinity of different distributions of relative welfare along the utility frontier.3. Impossibility of decentralized spontaneous solution. So much for the involved optimizing equations that an omniscient calculating machine could theoretically solve if fed the postulated functions. No such machine now exists. But it is well known that an "analogue calculating machine" can be provided by competitive market pricing, (a) so long as the production functions satisfy the neoclassical assumptions of constant returns to scale and generalized diminishing returns and (b) so long as the individuals' indifference contours have regular convexity and, we may add, (c) so long as all goods are private. We can then insert between the right- and left-hand sides of (Ι) the equality with uniform market pricesr j p p and adjoin thebudget equations for each individuali i n n i L X p X p =++ 11 ()s i ,,2,1 = (1)1where L' is a lump-sum tax for each individual so selected in algebraic value as to lead to the "best" state of the world. Now note, if there were no collective consumption goods, then (Ι) and (r)‘can have their solution enormously simplified. Why? Because on the one hand perfect competition among productive enterprises would ensure that goods are produced at minimum costs and are sold at proper marginal costs, with all factors receiving their proper marginal productivities; and on the other hand, each individual, in seeking as a competitive buyer to get to the highest level of indifference subject to given prices and tax, would be led as if by an Invisible Hand to the grand solution of the social maximum position. Of course the institutional framework of competition would have to be maintained, and political decision making would still be necessary, but of a computationally minimum type, namely, algebraic taxes and transfers ()s L L L ,,,21 would have to be varied until society is swung to the ethical observer's optimum. The servant of the ethical observer would not have to make explicit decisions about each. person's detailed consumption and work; he need only decide about generalized purchasing power, knowing that each person can be counted on to allocate it optimally. In terms of communication theory and game terminology, each person is motivated to do the signalling of his tastes needed to define and reach the attainable-bliss point.Now all of the above remains valid even if collective consumption is not zero but is instead explicitly set at its optimum values as determined by (1),(2),and(3).However no decentralized pricing system can serve to determine optimally these Levels of collective consumption. Other kinds of "voting" or "signalling" would have to be tried. But, and this —is the point sensed by Wicksell but perhaps not fully appreciated by Lindahl, now it is in the selfish interest of each person to give false signals, to pretend to have less interest in a given collective consumption activity than he really has, etc. I must emphasize this: taxing according to a benefit theory of taxation can not at all solve the computational problem in the decentralized manner possible for the first category of "private" goods to which the ordinary marketpricing applies and which do not have the "external effects" basic to the very notion of collective consumption goods. Of course, utopian voting and signaling schemes can be imagined. ("Scandinavian consensus," Kant's "categorical imperative," and other devices meaningful only under conditions of "symmetry," etc.) The failure of market catallactics in no way denies the following truth: given sufficient knowledge the optimal decisions can always be found by scanning over all the attainable states of the world and selecting the one which according to the postulated ethical welfare function is best. The solution"exists"; the problem is how to "find" it.One could imagine every person in the community being indoctrinated to behave like a "parametric decentralized bureaucrat" who reveals his preferences by signalling in response to price parameters or Lagrangean multipliers, to questionnaires, or to other devices. But there is still this fundamental technical difference going to the heart of the whole problem of social economy: by departing from his indoctrinated rules, any one person can hope to snatch some selfish benefit in a way not possible under the self-policing competitive pricing of private goods; and the "external economies" or " jointness of demand" intrinsic to the very concept of collective goods and governmental activities makes it impossible for the grand ensemble of optimizing equations to have that special pattern of zeros which makes laissez-faire competition even theoretically possible as an analogue computer.4. Conclusion. To explore further the problem raised by public expenditure would take us into the mathematical domain of "sociology" or "welfare politics," which Arrow, Duncan Black, and others have just begun to investigate. Political economy can be regarded as one special sector of this general domain, and it may turn out to be pure luck that within the general domain there happened to be a subsector with the "simple" properties of traditional economics.汉语翻译公共支出纯理论1、假设:除了萨克斯、维克塞尔、林达尔、马斯格雷夫和鲍恩,经济学家们宁愿忽视最优公共支出理论,而将他们的大量精力用于税收理论。