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混合经济体制 特征、案例、优缺点

(2025-04-13 17:41:42) 下一个

混合经济体制:特征、案例、优缺点

https://www.investopedia.com/terms/m/mixed-economic-system.asp

由 INVESTOPEDIA 团队于 2024 年 6 月 20 日撰写
由 ROBERT C. KELLY 审核
由 VIKKI VELASQUEZ 核实

人们认为,政府干预

什么是混合经济体制?
混合经济体制是融合了资本主义和社会主义特征的体制。混合经济体制承认私有财产,允许资本使用方面的经济自由,但也允许政府干预经济活动以实现社会目标。

根据新古典主义理论,混合经济的效率低于纯粹的自由市场。然而,政府干预的支持者认为,自由市场效率所需的基本条件,例如平等的信息和理性的市场参与者,在实际应用中无法实现。
关键要点
混合经济是一种融合了自由市场元素和社会主义元素的经济;它介于纯资本主义和纯社会主义之间。
混合经济通常接受大多数生产资料的私有制,并辅以政府干预,主要通过监管。
混合经济将那些被认为必不可少或生产公共物品的行业社会化。
所有已知的历史和现代经济体都是混合经济的例子。
理解混合经济体系

大多数现代经济体都包含多种不同经济体系的元素。在混合经济中,公共部门与私营部门并肩作战,尽管它们可能争夺相同的有限资源。混合经济体系不会阻止私营部门追求利润,但它们会规范商业,并可能将提供公共物品的行业国有化。

例如,美国就是一个混合经济,因为它将生产资料的所有权主要保留在私人手中,但也包含一些因素,例如农业补贴、制造业监管以及某些行业(如信件递送和国防)的部分或全部公有制。事实上,所有已知的历史和现代经济体都处于纯粹社会主义和纯粹资本主义之间的某种连续体上,这代表着理论建构。1

混合经济 vs. 自由市场
混合经济体系并非自由放任的体系,因为政府参与规划某些资源的使用,并可以对私营部门的企业施加控制。政府可能试图通过向私营部门征税以及利用税收资金促进社会目标来实现财富再分配。

贸易保护、补贴、定向税收抵免、财政刺激和公私合作伙伴关系是政府干预混合经济的常见例子。这些措施不可避免地会造成经济扭曲,但它们是旨在实现特定目标的工具。

各国也可能干预市场以促进目标产业的发展,例如通过创建产业集聚区或降低进入壁垒。这在20世纪的东亚国家中很常见,当时这些国家实施了一项被称为出口导向型增长的发展战略。如今,该地区已成为全球制造业中心。

一些国家专注于纺织业,另一些国家则以机械制造业闻名,还有一些国家是电子元件中心。这些行业之所以崛起,是因为政府保护了初创企业,使其达到了具有竞争力的规模,并促进了航运等相关服务的发展。

混合经济与社会主义
社会主义的一个关键要素是生产资料的共同所有制或集中所有制。2 社会主义的支持者认为,中央计划可以为更多人带来更大的福祉。

社会主义者不相信自由市场经济能够实现古典经济学家所设想的效率和优化,因此他们主张将所有行业国有化,并征用私有资本、土地和自然资源。混合经济很少走向这种极端。相反,他们只关注干预措施能够取得自由市场经济难以实现的结果的特定案例。

这些措施包括价格管制、收入再分配以及对生产和贸易的严格监管。这还包括特定行业(称为公共产品)的社会化,这些行业被认为是必需的,经济学家认为自由市场可能无法充分供应,例如公用事业、军队和警察部队以及环境保护。然而,与纯粹的社会主义不同,混合经济通常在其他方面保持私有制和对生产资料的控制。

混合经济的特征
混合经济通常将市场经济的特征与强大的公共部门相结合。虽然大多数价格由供求关系决定,但政府可能会干预

通过对某些商品实施价格下限或上限,或将公共资金导向某些行业而牺牲其他行业,来平衡经济。3

以下是混合经济政策的常见示例:

社会福利计划
大多数混合经济体,即使是高度市场化的经济体,也会为生活在贫困线或贫困线附近的人群提供福利。在美国,联邦政府为低收入人群提供补充营养援助计划 (SNAP) 福利、医疗补助 (Medicaid) 和公共住房,而许多州政府则提供自己的福利。

许多西欧国家都拥有极其慷慨的社会福利计划,以及政府提供的医疗保健和强有力的劳工保护。

价格管制/补贴
虽然混合经济体的价格通常由市场决定,但政府可能会进行干预,以防止某些商品的价格上涨或跌破某个水平。例如,大多数混合经济体都制定了最低工资法,以防止对劳动力的剥削,并且可能会使用补贴来支持农民或其他关键行业。

强有力的商业监管
虽然大多数商业活动受自由市场引导,但政府可能会使用监管措施来保护公众免受危险产品、污染或垄断商业行为的侵害。许多混合经济体都制定了反垄断法,以确保市场保持竞争力。

混合经济的优缺点
混合经济融合了资本主义和社会主义经济制度的若干优点。资本主义的自由企业原则、市场价格和私有财产激励创新和提高效率,而福利国家和价格管制则保障了最低生活水平。

然而,社会福利计划可能会造成高税负并扭曲市场。根据菲利普斯曲线,诸如最低工资法之类的价格管制可能会产生意想不到的后果,减少就业。其他干预措施,例如住房保障或免费医疗,有时可能会导致物资短缺,因为价格并不能反映物资的供应情况。

混合经济还允许政府通过选择性干预经济来设定其战略重点。例如,美国对某些农业和制造业给予优惠的税收待遇,因为它们被认为对国家长期经济健康至关重要。

混合经济也可能导致竞争减少或监管俘获,因为私人利益集团会游说获得优惠的监管和税收待遇。这可能会产生负面效应,因为监管是由行业而不是政策制定者决定的。

优点
通过市场激励提高效率和生产力。

为最贫困人口提供福利保障。

允许政府通过经济政策设定战略重点。

缺点
无法避免政府干预的市场扭曲效应。

商业利益集团会争取优惠的监管,因此可能陷入监管俘获。

提高税收以支付福利国家政策。

混合经济的历史与批评
“混合经济”一词在二战后在英国逐渐流行,尽管当时许多与之相关的政策最早是在20世纪30年代提出的。许多支持者都与英国工党有联系。

批评者认为,经济计划和市场经济之间不可能存在中间地带,即使在今天,许多人仍然质疑其有效性,认为它是社会主义和资本主义的结合。那些认为这两个概念不相容的人认为,市场逻辑或经济计划必须在一个经济体中占据主导地位。

古典理论家和马克思主义理论家认为,要么是价值规律,要么是资本积累,要么是非货币形式的估价(即非现金交易)才是最终推动经济发展的动力。这些理论家认为,由于资本积累的持续循环,西方经济仍然主要以资本主义为基础。

从路德维希·冯·米塞斯开始,奥地利经济学家就认为混合经济是不可持续的,因为政府干预经济的意外后果,例如价格管制经常导致的短缺,将持续导致人们要求进一步加大干预力度以抵消其影响。4 这表明混合经济本质上是不稳定的,并且随着时间的推移,它总是倾向于走向更加社会主义的状态。

从20世纪中叶开始,公共选择学派的经济学家们描述了政府政策制定者、经济利益集团和市场的相互作用如何引导混合经济中的政策偏离公共利益。混合经济中的经济政策不可避免地会转移经济活动、贸易和……的流向。

收入从某些个人、企业、行业和地区转移到其他。5

这不仅本身会造成经济的有害扭曲,而且总是会产生赢家和输家。这为利益相关方提供了强大的激励,使他们将部分资源从生产活动中抽离出来,用于游说或以其他方式试图影响经济政策,使其对自身有利。这种非生产性活动被称为寻租。

现实世界的例子
从技术上讲,几乎每个国家都可以被视为混合经济体,因为一个国家如果没有一定程度的政府干预或自由市场活动,就很难维持经济活动。即使是朝鲜也允许有限数量的私人市场。

但混合经济体的最佳例子是那些政府在引导市场经济进程中发挥重要作用的国家。许多西欧国家被认为是混合经济体,因为政府提供慷慨的福利计划和严格的商业活动监管。例如,美国就有许多惠及穷人的社会项目,以及一些国有企业。

相反,许多社会主义国家由于其庞大的私营部门,可以被视为混合经济体。中国和越南都成功地将许多国有企业私有化,同时保留了政府在经济事务中的主导地位。

混合经济的特点是什么?
混合经济的特点包括:由供求关系决定公平价格;保护私有财产;促进创新;制定就业标准;限制政府对商业的干预,同时允许政府提供整体福利;以及通过参与方的自身利益促进市场。

混合经济的缺点是什么?
混合经济将利润置于一切之上,包括公民的福祉,各级管理往往不善;由于财富分配不均,它在整个人口中造成了经济不平等;由于政府干预导致效率低下;工人阶级可能受到剥削。

四种主要的经济体系类型是什么?
经济体制主要有四种类型:纯粹的市场经济、纯粹的指令经济、混合经济和传统经济。

哪些国家实行混合经济?
实行混合经济的国家包括美国、英国、瑞典、冰岛和印度。6

总结
混合经济兼具资本主义和社会主义的许多优点,也保留了它们的一些缺点。这种经济类型允许政府提供公共物品和基本的社会保障,同时享受市场经济的生产力。实际上,世界上大多数国家都是混合经济,尽管有些国家更倾向于市场导向,而有些国家则更倾向于国家主导。

Mixed Economic System: Characteristics, Examples, Pros & Cons

 
By  THE INVESTOPEDIA TEAM June 20, 2024
Reviewed by  ROBERT C. KELLY
Fact checked by  VIKKI VELASQUEZ
 
The belief is that government intervention
What Is a Mixed Economic System?

A mixed economic system is one that combines aspects of both capitalism and socialism. A mixed economic system accepts private property and permits economic freedom in the use of capital, but also allows for governments to interfere in economic activities in order to achieve social aims.

According to neoclassical theory, mixed economies are less efficient than pure free markets. However, proponents of government intervention argue that the base conditions required for efficiency in free markets, such as equal information and rational market participants, cannot be achieved in practical application.

KEY TAKEAWAYS

  • A mixed economy is an economy organized with some free-market elements and some socialistic elements; it lies on a continuum between pure capitalism and pure socialism.
  • Mixed economies typically accept private ownership of most means of production, with some government intervention, mainly through regulations.
  • Mixed economies socialize select industries that are deemed essential or that produce public goods.
  • All known historical and modern economies are examples of mixed economies.

Understanding Mixed Economic Systems

Most modern economies feature elements of multiple different economic systems. In mixed economies, the public sector works alongside the private sector, though they may compete for the same limited resources. Mixed economic systems do not block the private sector from profit-seeking, but they do regulate business and may nationalize industries that provide a public good.

 

For example, the United States is a mixed economy, as it leaves ownership of the means of production in mostly private hands but incorporates elements such as subsidies for agriculture, regulation on manufacturing, and partial or full public ownership of some industries like letter delivery and national defense. In fact, all known historical and modern economies fall somewhere on the continuum between pure socialism and pure capitalism, which represent theoretical constructs.1

 

Mixed Economy vs. Free Markets

Mixed economic systems are not laissez-faire systems, because the government is involved in planning the use of some resources and can exert control over businesses in the private sector. Governments may seek to redistribute wealth by taxing the private sector and by using funds from taxes to promote social objectives.

 

Trade protection, subsidies, targeted tax credits, fiscal stimulus, and public-private partnerships are common examples of government intervention in mixed economies. These unavoidably generate economic distortions, but they are instruments aimed to achieve specific goals.

 

Countries may also intervene in markets to promote targeted industries, such as by creating agglomerations or reducing barriers to entry. This was common among East Asian countries in the 20th-century, which saw a development strategy known as export-led growth. Today, the region has turned into a global manufacturing center.

 

Some nations have come to specialize in textiles, while others are known for machinery, and others are hubs for electronic components. These sectors rose to prominence after governments protected young companies as they achieved competitive scale and promoted adjacent services such as shipping.

 

Mixed Economy vs. Socialism

A key element of socialism is common or centralized ownership of the means of production.2 Proponents of socialism believe that central planning can achieve a greater good for a larger number of people.

 

Socialists do not trust that the free-market outcomes will achieve the efficiency and optimization posited by classical economists, so socialists advocate the nationalization of all industries and the expropriation of privately owned capital goods, lands, and natural resources. Mixed economies rarely go to this extreme. Instead, they identify only select instances in which intervention could achieve outcomes unlikely to be achieved in free markets.

 

Such measures can include price controls, income redistribution, and intense regulation of production and trade. This also includes the socialization of specific industries, known as public goods, that are considered essential and that economists believe the free market might not supply adequately, such as public utilities, military and police forces, and environmental protection. Unlike pure socialism, however, mixed economies usually otherwise maintain private ownership and control of the means of production.

 

Characteristics of a Mixed Economy

A mixed economy typically combines the features of a market-based economy with a strong public sector. While most prices are set by supply and demand, the government may intervene in the economy by enforcing price floors or ceilings for certain goods, or by directing public funds to certain industries at the expense of others.3

 

The following are common examples of mixed-economy policies

 

Social Welfare Programs

Most mixed economies, even heavily market-oriented ones, offer benefits to those living at or near the poverty level. In the United States, the federal government provides SNAP benefitsMedicaid, and public housing to low-income individuals, while many state governments provide their own benefits.

 

Many countries in Western Europe have extremely generous social welfare programs, as well as government-provided health care and strong labor protections.

 

Price Controls / Subsidies

While prices in a mixed economy are generally set by the market, the government may intervene to prevent the prices of certain commodities from rising or falling below a certain level. For example, most mixed economies have minimum wage laws to prevent exploitation of the workforce, and they may use subsidies to support farmers or other key industries.

 

Strong Business Regulations

While most business activity is guided by the free market, governments may use regulations to protect the public from dangerous products, pollution, or monopolistic business practices. Many mixed economies have anti-trust laws to ensure that the marketplace remains competitive.

 

Advantages and Disadvantages of a Mixed Economy

A mixed economy combines several of the desirable qualities of both capitalist and socialist economic systems. The capitalist principles of free enterprise, market-based prices, and private property create incentives for innovation and efficiency, while elements of a welfare state and price controls guarantee a minimum standard of living.

 

However, social welfare programs can create a high tax burden and distort the market. Price controls, such as minimum wage laws, can have the unintended effects of reducing employment, according to the Philips curve. Other interventions, such as housing guarantees or free healthcare, can sometimes result in shortages because pricing does not reflect availability.

 

A mixed economy also allows the government to set its strategic priorities through selective interventions in the economy. For example, the United States gives favorable tax treatments to certain agricultural and manufacturing industries, because they are considered crucial for the country's long-term economic health.

 

Mixed economies can also result in less competition or regulatory capture, as private interests lobby for favorable regulations and tax treatment. This can have the perverse effect of regulations being determined by industries rather than policymakers.

 
Pros
  • Increased efficiency and productivity due to market-based incentives.

  • Welfare protections for the poorest members of the population.

  • Allows the government to set strategic priorities through economic policy.

Cons
  • Does not avoid the market-distorting effects of government intervention.

  • May succumb to regulatory capture as business interests campaign for favorable regulations.

  • Higher taxes to pay for welfare state policies.

 

History and Criticism of the Mixed Economy

The term mixed economy gained prominence in the United Kingdom after World War II, even though many of the policies associated with it at the time were first proposed in the 1930s. Many of the supporters were associated with the British Labour Party.

 

Critics argued that there could be no middle ground between economic planning and a market economy, and many—even today—question its validity when they believe it to be a combination of socialism and capitalism. Those who believe the two concepts don’t belong together say either market logic or economic planning must be prevalent in an economy.

 

Classical and Marxist theorists say that either the law of value or the accumulation of capital is what drives the economy, or that non-monetary forms of valuation (i.e. transactions without cash) are what ultimately propel the economy. These theorists believe that Western economies are still primarily based on capitalism because of the continued cycle of accumulation of capital.

 

Austrian economists starting with Ludwig von Mises have argued that a mixed economy is not sustainable because the unintended consequences of government intervention into the economy, such as the shortages that routinely result from price controls, will consistently lead to further calls for ever-increasing intervention to offset their effects.4 This suggests that the mixed economy is inherently unstable and will always tend toward a more socialistic state over time.

 

Beginning in the mid-20th century, economists of the Public Choice school have described how the interaction of government policymakers, economic interest groups, and markets can guide policy in a mixed economy away from the public interest. Economic policy in the mixed economy unavoidably diverts the flow of economic activity, trade, and income away from some individuals, firms, industries, and regions and toward others.5

 

Not only can this create harmful distortions in the economy by itself, but it always creates winners and losers. This sets up powerful incentives for interested parties to take some resources away from productive activities to use instead for the purpose of lobbying or otherwise seeking to influence economic policy in their own favor. This non-productive activity is known as rent-seeking.

 

Real-World Examples

Technically, almost every country can be considered a mixed economy, since it is difficult for a country to sustain economic activity without some degree of government intervention or free market activity. Even North Korea allows a limited number of private markets.

 

But the best examples of mixed economies are those countries where the government takes a significant role in directing the course of the market economy. Many countries in Western Europe are considered mixed economies because the government offers generous welfare programs and tight regulations on business activity. The United States, for example, has many social programs to benefit the poor, as well as several government-owned enterprises.

 

Conversely, many socialist-oriented countries can be considered mixed economies because of their large private sectors. Both China and Vietnam have successfully privatized many of their state-owned enterprises while retaining a leading role for the government in economic affairs.

 

What Are the Characteristics of a Mixed Economy?

The characteristics of a mixed economy include allowing supply and demand to determine fair prices, the protection of private property, innovation being promoted, standards of employment, the limitation of government in business yet allowing the government to provide overall welfare, and market facilitation by the self-interest of the players involved.

 

What Are the Disadvantages of a Mixed Economy?

Mixed economies stress profit above all else, including the well-being of citizens, there tends to be mismanagement at various levels, it creates economic inequality throughout the population as wealth is not distributed evenly, inefficiency occurs due to government involvement, and the working class can be exploited.

 

What Are the 4 Main Types of Economic Systems?

The four main types of economic systems are a pure market economy, a pure command economy, a mixed economy, and a traditional economy.

 

Which Countries Have a Mixed Economy?

Countries that have a mixed economy include the United States, the United Kingdom, Sweden, Iceland, and India.6

 

The Bottom Line

A mixed economy features many of the desirable qualities of both capitalism and socialism, as well as some of their drawbacks. This type of economy allows the government to provide public goods and a basic safety net while enjoying the productivity of a market-based economy. In practice, most countries of the world are mixed economies, although some are more market-oriented and others are more state-led.

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