东印度的垄断和从英国有限进入的过渡,1600-1813

D. Bogart
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引用次数: 7

摘要

许多市场受到政治和宗教当局实施的法律和习俗的限制。North, Wallis和Weingast(2009)认为,从有限的访问过渡需要一系列的步骤,如精英的法治和永久存在的组织的创建。本文以东印度市场为例,研究英国是如何采取这些措施的。东印度公司在法律上垄断了英国与今天的印度和中国之间的所有贸易,但它的特权和财产远不安全。国王和议会授权闯入者进入公司的市场,并迫使公司发放贷款以保持其垄断地位。只有在政治稳定和财政能力增强的18世纪中期,才出现了稳固的垄断。然而,市场自由化又等了几十年。政府和公司在财政和政治上的合作使其垄断地位保持稳定,直到1813年一系列事件的发生才使其走向终结。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The East Indian Monopoly and the Transition from Limited Access in England, 1600-1813
Many markets are limited by laws and customs enforced by political and religious authorities. North, Wallis, and Weingast (2009) argue that the transition from limited access requires a series of steps like rule of law for elites and the creation of perpetually lived organizations. This paper studies how these steps were taken in England in the case of the East Indian market. The East India Company had a legal monopoly over all trade between England and modern day India and China, but its privileges and property were far from secure. The king and parliament authorized interlopers to enter the Company’s market and forced the Company to make loans to retain its monopoly. A secure monopoly only emerged in the mid-eighteenth century when political stability and fiscal capacity increased. However, liberalization of the market had to wait several more decades. A fiscal and political partnership between the government and the Company kept its monopoly stable until a confluence of events in 1813 brought it to an end.
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