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5 The Institutions of a Modern Market Economy THE OBJECTIVES OF GOVERNMENT POLICY The Allocation Function Government Production of Pure and Quasi-Public Goods. Table 5.1 The Structure of Government Outlays by Function Percent of GDP Public Goods General Total Defence Public Expenditure Services Australia 37.7 8.2 1.9 3.0 Austria 52.2 4.5 0.9 3.6 Canada 46.3 2.9 1.4 1.5 Czech Republic 40.8 3.9 1.6 2.3 Denmark 59.9 6.0 1.7 4.3 Finland 54.3 3.3 1.6 1.6 France 55.4 9.2 2.9 4.5 Germany 49.7 5.2 1.4 3.9 Italy 52.2 6.5 1.7 4.5 Japan 36.5 4.5 0.9 3.6 Korea 19.2 5.7 2.9 2.0 Netherlands 52.2 11.6 1.8 9.8 New Zealand 38.9 5.3 1.1 4.2 Norway 52.0 6.3 2.6 3.1 Portugal 49.9 8.3 2.2 2.0 Spain 45.2 9.9 1.4 1.8 Sweden 64.5 5.4 2.3 3.0 United Kingdom 43.6 5.4 3.2 1.9 United States 34.3 9.2 5.2 2.9 SOURCE: OECD 2001, Economic Survey of Czech Republic, 2001 Information as a Public Good. Merit Goods Total Other Functions 3.3 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.1 1.8 0.0 0.3 0.0 0.8 .. 0.0 0.6 4.1 6.7 0.1 0.2 1.0 REGULATION OF PRODUCTS. REGULATION OF INDUSTRY. . Total 10.5 11.9 12.3 11.1 16.5 15.2 14.1 13.9 10.2 10.1 5.6 12.0 10.6 18.4 10.6 10.6 17.2 11.5 11.9 Education 4.5 5.3 5.8 4.4 6.5 6.6 5.9 4.5 4.5 3.8 3.6 4.6 5.2 6.8 5.4 4.8 6.6 4.6 5.0 Health 5.5 5.7 6.5 6.1 5.1 5.6 7.1 8.0 5.3 5.6 1.8 6.5 5.3 6.6 4.7 5.5 5.7 5.7 6.5 Other Social Services 0.5 0.8 0.0 0.5 4.9 3.0 1.1 1.3 0.3 0.6 0.2 1.0 0.1 5.1 0.5 0.3 4.9 1.2 0.4 The Distribution Function Income Support Redistribution in-Kind. The Stabilization Function THE INSTRUMENTS OF STABILIZATION. Fiscal Policy Monetary Policy . THE TAX SYSTEM TABLE 5.2 The Structure of the Tax System in Selected Countries Tax Structures as a Percentage of Total Tax Receipts Total Tax Social Security Personal Receipts Contributions Income Percentage of Tax Employees Employers GDP Australia 29.9 43.3 0 0 Belgium 45.9 30.7 9.7 19.2 Canada 37.4 37.8 5.3 8.1 Czech R. 38.3 13.6 10.1 28.8 Denmark 49.8 51.6 2.4 0.7 France 45.2 17.4 8.7 25.2 Italy 42.7 25 6.3 20.5 Japan 28.4 18.8 15 19.6 Korea 21.1 20.1 3.3 7.7 Poland 37.9 22 0 32.3 Sweden 52 35 5.8 22.5 Turkey 28.7 27 5.7 7.3 United Kingdom 37.2 27.5 7.3 9.4 United States 28.9 40.5 10.2 12.2 EU Average 41.3 25.6 8.2 15.9 OECD Average 37 27 7 14.9 SOURCE: OECD in Figures, 2001. p. 38 Total Corporate Taxes on Other Taxes on Income Goods and Taxes income Tax Services 43.3 59.6 51.2 52.5 54.7 51.3 51.8 53.4 31.1 54.3 63.3 40 44.2 62.9 49.7 48.9 15.2 8.5 10.5 9.7 5.6 5.9 7 13.3 12.2 7.5 5.7 5.8 11 9 8.7 8.9 25.5 24.9 24.7 31 33.2 26.6 27.4 18.8 40.5 34.4 21.6 35.7 32.6 16.2 30.2 31.3 16 7 13.6 6.8 6.5 16.2 13.8 14.5 16.2 3.8 9.4 18.5 12.2 11.9 11.4 10.8 THE LEGAL SYSTEM Ownership and Property Rights Freedom to Engage in Economic Activity The Enforcement of Contracts and Compensation Bankruptcy Law Accounting and Financial Disclosure A Clear Definition of Governmental Responsibility A System of Civil Compensation BOX 1 The Crash of 2002 The consequences of failure to provide clear and reliable financial disclosure have been made abundantly clear in the United States economy during the stock market downturn of 2000-2002. After the boom of the late 1990s several important companies resorted to creative accounting techniques to boost the public’s perception of their revenue and profits. The accounting firms proved too complacent and were often compromised by acting both as consultants to companies as well as auditor of their books. Investors became alarmed by their inability to determine a company’s true financial position. Supplier and buyers too, became reluctant to enter into contractual relationships with firms who might be closer to bankruptcy than their published accounts seemed to show. Among the major casualties were the energy trader Enron, and the telecommunications firms Global Crossing and WorldCom. Drastic consequences also befell Arthur Anderson, one of the world’s largest accounting firms, which seemed to be a willing tool of the companies rather than an independent arbiter of a firm’s financial condition. The US government’s response has been to change the regulating framework. In the short-term chief executive officers are to be required to swear, under penalty of law, for the correctness of the accounting statements. More reform is possible including the structure that accounting firms should not act both as consultants and auditor. The real consequences of the crisis for the US economy are at the present hard to fathom. The flight of investors from the market can have real consequences for the way that companies raise money, and can affect investment and the growth of the US economy. Particularly severe might be the reaction of foreign investors. Far from being the safe haven of capitalism, the United States began to look riskier than many other markets, especially Europe where the heavier hand of government generally practiced high accounting standards. THE FINANCIAL SYSTEM . The Central Bank Tasks 1. To act as a clearing bank for the banks 2. To act as the promulgator and enforcer of financial regulation, designed to enhance the stability and efficiency of the financial system 3. To act as a lender of last resort 4. To control the overall stock of money in the economy, and hence the interest rate 5. To monitor the foreign exchange value of the currency Tools The central bank has at its disposal several tools with which it can influence the stock of money in the system: 1. Open-market operations, by which the central bank buys or sells government bonds to and from the public 2. Reserve requirements, which constitute controls on the minimum amount of liquid reserves which banks must hold against the liabilities that it owes its depositors 3. The discount rate, which is the interest rate at which the central bank lends money to banks to provide the reserve base against which banks can lend to borrowers The Independence of the Central Bank. Depository Institutions Commercial Banks. Savings and Loan Banks. Credit Unions. Postal Savings Banks. Nondepository Institutions Investment Banks. Mutual Funds. Venture Capital Funds. Insurance Companies. The Market for Financial Assets The Ownership of Stock. TABLE 5.3 Ownership of Common Stock: An International Comparison (percentage at year-end) United States Japan 1994 FY 1994 United Germany France Kingdom Italy 1993 1993 Sweden 1993 1993 1993 Financial Sector Banks Insurance companies Investment funds Pension funds Mutual funds Other financial institutions 45 3 4 0 26 12 4 44 26 16 0 0 0 2 29 14 7 0 0 8 0 8 3 1 0 0 2 2 62 1 17 0 34 7 3 19 10 2 0 0 6 1 24 1 8 8 0 6 0 Nonfinancial Sector 55 56 71 92 38 81 76 0 0 48 6 1 100 24 1 24 7 0 100 39 4 17 12 0 100 59 4 19 11 0 100 2 1 18 16 2 100 32 28 17 5 0 100 34 7 16 9 10 100 Nonfinancial enterprises Public authorities Individuals Foreign Other Total How Financial Markets Provide Corporate Governance. The Market for Corporate Control. BOX 2 Stocks, Options, and Corporate Governance The rise of global stock markets in the 1990s had a strong impact both on stock ownership and on corporate governance. Several trends were at work. First the rise of the markets tended to attract first time owners of shares. Second the wider use of vested stock ownership plans to replace traditional pension schemes broadened share ownership further. Perhaps most startling was the acceleration in the use of stock options as a means of compensating both management and worker. There were two implications of this. One was that the ownership of the corporations was progressively transferred from the preexisting group of shareholders towards the management and workers. While this might in some respects be a solution to the principal/asset problem by making management more closely identified with the profitability of the firm, it did represent a transfer of wealth from shareholders to management. There is now a pressure to ensure that the issuance of options should be more carefully documented and reflected as an expense in the reporting of financial results. A serious problem was revealed when it became clear that too frequently the reward of management with options encouraged a short-term view of the future. It became in management’s interest to manipulate the stock price higher, cash out options, and leave the firm. What had seemed a device to reward management for a firm’s success, by putting too much emphasis on the short run (and perhaps by allowing the reward to be great enough to facilitate premature retirement), encouraged the pillaging of the corporation. Having survived the challenge of the Marxists people began to wonder if capitalism was strong enough to survive the capitalists. THE ORGANIZATION OF BUSINESS The Corporate Form The Behavior of Firms THE LABOR MARKET Types of Labor Unions TABLE 5.4 Union Membership, Selected Countries, 1987–1989 Membership as a Percentage of Nonagricultural Country Employment Sweden Austria Australia Ireland United Kingdom Italy Germany Canada Netherlands Switzerland France Japan United States Relative Rates of Unionization 96 61 56 51 50 45 43 36 35 33 28 28 17 Full-Time Employment na 52 70 48 47 33 34 na 42 37 na na 19 Full-Time Manual Workers na 57 69 49 53 37 39 na 47 37 na na 27 Income Support INDUSTRIAL POLICY TRADE POLICY BOX 3 Trade and Protectionism The United States has traditionally seen itself as a strong advocate of free trade and it has been, to a large degree, responsible for pushing international trade liberalization agreements since World War II. Most economists believe that free trade enhances both world welfare and the aggregate welfare of countries that engage in it. However, within a country there are costs to particular groups. In general we may say that the broad consuming public benefits from liberalization because it provides access to lower cost imports. However, the labor and capital engaged in the industries at home that the imports compete with are likely to bear the costs. As a rule the broad benefits are greater than the narrower losses to specific labor and capital. However, trade policy is almost always a political issue and that was demonstrated clearly in March of 2002 when President George Bush announced tariffs on steel of up to 30 percent. Bush had generally sided with the anti-tax, anti-tariff wing of the Republican Party, and the move also put the president at odds with many of his steel-producing allies. Generally speaking economist accept few arguments in favor of tariffs – the chief being the protection of infant industries and the preservation of strategic assets. Protection of steel might be seen as strategic consideration but it is more likely that protectionism was promoted by domestic political considerations than by long run strategic concerns. What should be emphasized is that protectionism always has a cost and in this case it will raise the costs in every industry that uses steel as an input. As such it will negatively affect the United States competitive position in industries like automobiles and machinery. It will raise the cots of US construction and have knock-on effects in every corner of the economy. It might succeed in saving some jobs in steel but the likelihood is that this will be more than balanced by the increase in prices and the affect on competitiveness in other industries. DEVELOPING HUMAN RESOURCES The Educational System The Health-Care System