Effective Property Rights and Economic Development: Next Steps

H. D. Soto, Robert E. Litan
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引用次数: 6

Abstract

and books devoted to the question of how to enhance economic growth, especially in the developing world. Actual progress on the ground, however, is mixed at best. While many areas enjoyed remarkable growth in incomes and living standards during the past three or four decades—Asia being a prime example—other regions noticeably lagged. In the words of a recent, thorough study by the World Bank, by the end of the 1990s, poverty rates in Sub-Saharan Africa, Latin America, and the Caribbean remained “stubbornly high.” If it were a matter of applying the standard neoclassical model used by many economists, solving the growth problem would be relatively easy, somewhat like baking a cake: add some capital (domestic or foreign), technology, and education to a fixed supply of labor and assume the presence of some basic market institutions, and growth of income per capita should follow inexorably. For our purposes here, the key assumption is that market institutions—specifically, the presence of widely recognized and enforceable property rights—are well functioning. Indeed, it is fair to say
有效产权与经济发展:下一步
还有专门讨论如何促进经济增长的书籍,尤其是在发展中国家。然而,实地的实际进展充其量是喜忧参半。在过去的三四十年里,许多地区的收入和生活水平都有了显著的提高——亚洲就是一个典型的例子——但其他地区却明显落后了。用世界银行最近进行的一项深入研究的话说,到20世纪90年代末,撒哈拉以南非洲、拉丁美洲和加勒比地区的贫困率仍然“居高不下”。如果这是一个应用许多经济学家使用的标准新古典主义模型的问题,那么解决增长问题就会相对容易,有点像烤蛋糕:在固定的劳动力供给中加入一些资本(国内或国外)、技术和教育,并假设存在一些基本的市场制度,人均收入的增长就会不可阻挡地随之而来。就我们的目的而言,关键的假设是市场制度——特别是广泛认可和可强制执行的产权的存在——运作良好。的确,可以这么说
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