http://chineseinput.net/에서 pinyin(병음)방식으로 중국어를 변환할 수 있습니다.
변환된 중국어를 복사하여 사용하시면 됩니다.
IMF구제금융시대에 있어서 정부와 시장의 역할에 대한 재조명 : 규범적 접근 A Normative Approach
박효종 경상대학교 해외지역연구센터 1998 해외지역연구 Vol.2 No.1
This research has attempted to justify the vision of a minimal state against governmental failures and to present some important reform proposals in South Korea, which is faced with economic crisis. The discussion has been normative rather than empirical. Certainly, the market is an imperfect economic mechanism in the sense that it cannot deal with externality problems and, thus, produce public goods in an efficient way. Asymmetrical information and tyranny of small decisions are other salient area of market failure. Nevertheless, the fact that the market fails in some specific areas should not necessarily mean that the government can succeed in those area. In particular, this research has taken care to refuse the proposition that the government can do what the market cannot do. The main reason is that the government has its own failures. We usually confront the empirical fact that government bureaucrats trend to act as revenue-maximizers and politicians and elected representatives as vote-maximizers In view of those imperfections of both mechanisms, this research posits two major criteria in evaluating the market and government mechanisms. Those are efficiency and social justice. As far as efficiency is concerned, the market is definitely superior to the government, since market transactions always produce Pareto-optimal results. On the other hand, we can say that both the market and government fail with regard to social justice. Agents in the market transactions and government officials tend to behave themselves in an egoistic way, doing harm to public interests and common good in the community. Given this comparison, it is worth noting that the market is less imperfect than the government, although both are essentially imperfect mechanisms. This is also why this research which commits itself to the market rather than the government proposes that the government should self-consciously decline to intervene in the modus operandi of the market mechanism and regulate property rights.