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  • 1
    UID:
    b3kat_BV049641239
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource
    ISBN: 9789819708048
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe, Hardcover ISBN 978-981-97-0803-1
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe, Paperback ISBN 978-981-97-0806-2
    Language: English
    URL: Volltext  (kostenfrei)
    URL: Volltext  (kostenfrei)
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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  • 2
    UID:
    almahu_9949720815202882
    Format: 1 online resource (216 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 981-9708-04-4
    Note: Intro -- Preface-Toward an Olive-Shaped Society -- Growth and Equity in the New Stage of Development -- Paths Toward an Olive-Shaped Society -- The Three Dimensions of Inequality -- Measuring Inequality -- Market Allocation and Redistribution -- Understanding Market Mechanisms Accurately -- Correcting Externalities -- Promoting Competition -- Political Economy -- Improving the Structure of Finance -- The Knowledge-Based Economy -- The Boundaries of Government -- Improving the Structure of Income and Expenditure -- Emphasizing the Role of Public Debt -- Contents -- 1 From Pyramids to Olives -- 1.1 Measuring Inequality with Income, Consumption, and Wealth Gini Coefficient -- 1.1.1 The Income Gini Coefficient Has Steadily Decreased Over the Past Decade, but Remains at a High Level -- 1.1.2 Consumption Accounts for a Relatively Small Share of China's Economy, and There Is Considerable Inequality Within the Country -- 1.1.3 Wealth Is Concentrated with Economic Development -- 1.2 Income Distribution in China -- 1.2.1 Income Structure: Pyramid Versus Olive -- 1.2.2 Raising the Middle-Income Level and Expanding the Middle-Income Group -- 1.2.3 The Low-Income Group Mainly Lives in Rural Areas -- 1.3 Urban-Rural, Regional, and Intergenerational Disparities in China -- 1.3.1 Urban-Rural Disparity: Institutional Cost of Rural-Urban Mobility Should Be Reduced -- 1.3.2 Regional Disparity: Effective Policy Interventions Help Improve Both Efficiency and Equality -- 1.3.3 Intergenerational Disparity: Urgent Need for Further Policy Intervention -- 1.4 Income Distribution from a Macro Perspective -- 1.4.1 Two Features of China's Income Distribution -- 1.4.2 Problems of the Primary Distribution -- 1.4.3 Insufficient Effects of Redistribution -- References -- 2 Building a Unified and Inclusive Labor Market. , 2.1 The Status-Quo and Development Goals of China's Labor Market -- 2.2 Three Major Challenges of China's Labor Market from an Institutional Perspective -- 2.2.1 Challenge 1: Multiple Dualistic Structures Exist in the Labor Market, Which Affects Both Efficiency and Equity -- 2.2.2 Challenge 2: Mismatch Between the Labor Market System and the Changing Society -- 2.2.3 Challenge 3: Building a Resilient Labor Protection Regime and Improving Workers' Voice -- 2.3 Concluding Remarks -- References -- 3 Real Estate: Returning to Real Demand and Reducing Excessive Financialization -- 3.1 Excessive Financialization of China's Land Market and Uneven Distribution of Land Rent -- 3.1.1 As a Factor of Production, Land Has Features of Being Both Monopoly Goods and Financial Assets -- 3.1.2 Financialization and Uneven Distribution of Land Rent Increases Wealth Inequality -- 3.2 Housing Market: Imbalanced Resource Distribution and an Imperative Need to Restore the Status of Housing as a Consumer Product -- 3.2.1 Major Problems in China's Housing Market -- 3.2.2 Restoring the Attribute of Housing as a Consumer Product -- References -- 4 Balancing Regional Development and Carbon Emission Constraints -- 4.1 High-Quality Development Under Carbon Emission Constraints: Focusing on the Imbalance in Regional Development -- 4.1.1 Abatement Costs Vary Greatly Among Chinese Province-Level Regions -- Pursuit of Efficiency Alone Will Bring Challenges to Fairness -- 4.1.2 The Carbon Constraint Will Become Tight Under the Carbon Neutral Strategy, and the Problem of Unbalanced Regional Economic Development May Intensify -- 4.2 Carbon Emission Constraints Exacerbate Regional Imbalances: Who Is Bearing the Cost of Abatement? -- 4.2.1 China's High-Energy-Consuming Industries Have Weak Cost Pass-through Capabilities, and They May Bear Most of the Cost of Emission Reduction. , 4.2.2 High-Carbon Industries Should Bear More Abatement Costs, but the Distribution Is Unequal -- 4.3 Building an Effective Policy System: Reasonable Sharing of Costs and Fair Compensation for Green Transformation -- 4.3.1 Reasonable Cost-Sharing Policy Tools -- 4.3.2 Policy Tools for Equitable Compensation for Green Transformation -- 4.4 Policy Actors in Different Stages of Emission Reduction -- References -- 5 Sharing Infrastructure and Improving Operational Efficiency -- 5.1 Status-Quo of China's Infrastructure Development -- 5.1.1 Infrastructure Promotes Efficiency and Contributes to Equity -- 5.1.2 Achievements and Problems of China's Infrastructure Development -- 5.2 Disparities in Infrastructure Development in China -- 5.2.1 Regional Disparity in Infrastructure Is Narrowing, but Urban-Rural Gap Remains Wide -- 5.2.2 Disparity Is Narrow in Production-Oriented Infrastructure, but Remains Significant in Consumption-oriented Infrastructure -- 5.3 The Operation and Management of China's Infrastructure -- 5.3.1 Sources of Funding: Local Governments Accounts for a High Proportion of Funding Which Should Be Diversified -- 5.3.2 The Operational Efficiency Needs Improvement -- References -- 6 Establishing Equitable and Efficient Systems for Education and Healthcare -- 6.1 Education and Healthcare Are the Cornerstones for Sharing the Fruits of Economic Development and Promoting Social Equity -- 6.1.1 The Mutual Promotion Between Education, Healthcare, and Economic Growth -- 6.1.2 The Improvement of Education and Healthcare Will Promote Social Progress -- 6.1.3 Establishing Equitable and Efficient Systems for Education and Healthcare Is Essential for Achieving Common Prosperity -- 6.2 Problems and Underlying Causes of China's Education and Healthcare Systems. , 6.2.1 Insufficient Funding and Incomplete Institutional Systems Are Two Primary Long-Term Constraints Hindering the High-Quality Development of China's Education System -- 6.2.2 Constraints on the Development of Education at Each Stage Due to Insufficient Funding and Incomplete Institutional System -- 6.2.3 "Seeking Care Is Difficult" and "Seeking Care Is Expensive" Are Still the Main Problems of China's Healthcare System -- 6.2.4 "Seeking Care Is Difficult" and "Seeking Care Is Expensive" Are Primarily Caused by Inadequate Capacity of Insurance and Uneven Allocation of Resources -- 6.3 Establishing the High-Quality Education for All -- 6.3.1 Increasing Fiscal Investment in Education -- 6.3.2 Clarifying the Policy Focus for Different Stages of Education -- 6.4 Promoting the Equal and Fair Provision of Basic Medical Services for All -- 6.4.1 Improving the Depth of Health Insurance Coverage -- 6.4.2 Improving the Quality and Efficiency of Medical Services -- 6.4.3 Stimulating the Innovative Vitality of the Pharmaceutical Industry -- References -- 7 Joining the Hands of Government and Society to Leverage the Role of Public Finance and Charity -- 7.1 Enhancing the Progressivity of China's Tax Burden -- 7.1.1 Types and Incidence of Taxation in China -- 7.1.2 The Current Tax System Is Not Very Effective in Redistribution -- 7.1.3 Direction of Tax System Reform -- 7.2 Rationalizing the Structure of Government Expenditure: More Equality in Public Service and Transfer Payments -- 7.2.1 High Expenditure on Economic Affairs, but Low Expenditure on Public Services and Welfare -- 7.2.2 Transfer Payments Targeting Specific Groups of People -- 7.3 Bringing in SOEs for Common Prosperity -- 7.4 Social Security: Returning to Pay-As-You-Go, Improving Sustainability, and Enhancing the Redistributive Effect -- 7.4.1 Fundamentals of China's Social Security System. , 7.4.2 Core Issues of the Basic Pension Insurance System -- 7.4.3 External Adjustment: Fiscal Support Is Key -- 7.4.4 Internal Adjustment: Revision to Retirement Age Is the Focus -- 7.5 Exploring the Path of Public Charity with Chinese Characteristics -- 7.5.1 Three Major Challenges for Public Charity in China -- 7.5.2 Factors Affecting the Development of Public Charity in China and Possible Solutions -- References -- 8 The Macro Trend of Asset Prices in the Age of Common Prosperity -- 8.1 The Stylized Relationship Between Asset Price Movements and Changes in the Wealth Inequality -- 8.2 How Changes in Income and Wealth Distribution Affect Asset Pricing -- 8.2.1 Impacts of Income Distribution on the Risk-Free Interest Rate and Risk Premium -- 8.2.2 Impacts of Income Distribution on Corporate Earnings and Return on Capital -- 8.2.3 Impacts of Income Distribution on Economic Growth -- 8.2.4 Impacts of Income Distribution on Industrial Structure -- 8.3 Empirical Analysis of the Income Distribution and Asset Price Performance -- 8.3.1 The US Experience: Low Interest-Rate Environment, Lower Volatility of Financial Asset Valuations, and Convergence of Valuations Between Industries -- 8.3.2 Japan's Experience: Inclusive Growth Through Economic Transformation and Structural Upgrading Under Internal and External Challenges -- 8.4 Investment Trends Amid the Pursuit of Inclusive Growth -- References -- Correction to: Joining the Hands of Government and Society to Leverage the Role of Public Finance and Charity -- Correction to: Chapter 7 in: Building an Olive-Shaped Society, https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-97-0804-8_7.
    Additional Edition: ISBN 981-9708-03-6
    Language: English
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  • 3
    UID:
    kobvindex_HPB1428998316
    Format: 1 online resource (xxv, 195 pages) : , illustrations (some color)
    ISBN: 9789819708048 , 9819708044
    Content: This open access book offers a comprehensive analysis of China's way of economic development balancing between efficiency and equity, striving to investigate existing challenges and to discuss the role of fiscal policies and philanthropy to mitigate social inequality. The book analyzes the current overall state and challenges of China's income and wealth distribution and describes the social inequality in specific fields such as labor market, housing markets, education, public health, infrastructure building and carbon emission. This book also explores the implications of long-run trends of macro-asset pricing. The book is both academically rigorous and readable. This valuable reference will attract readers in economics, public finance and social policy who seek to better understand China's path of combating social inequality.
    Note: From pyramids to olives -- Building a unified and inclusive labor market -- Real estate: Returning to real demand and reducing excessive financialization -- Balancing regional development and carbon emission constraints -- Sharing infrastructure and improving operational efficiency -- Establishing equitable and efficient systems for education and healthcare -- Connecting the hands of government and society to leverage the role of public finance and charity -- The macro trend of asset prices in the age of common prosperity.
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9819708060
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9789819708062
    Language: English
    Keywords: Electronic books.
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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  • 4
    UID:
    almahu_9949709180502882
    Format: XXV, 195 p. 78 illus., 77 illus. in color. , online resource.
    Edition: 1st ed. 2024.
    ISBN: 9789819708048
    Content: This open access book offers a comprehensive analysis of China's way of economic development balancing between efficiency and equity, striving to investigate existing challenges and to discuss the role of fiscal policies and philanthropy to mitigate social inequality. The book analyzes the current overall state and challenges of China's income and wealth distribution and describes the social inequality in specific fields such as labor market, housing markets, education, public health, infrastructure building and carbon emission. This book also explores the implications of long-run trends of macro-asset pricing. The book is both academically rigorous and readable. This valuable reference will attract readers in economics, public finance and social policy who seek to better understand China's path of combating social inequality.
    Note: From pyramids to olives -- Building a unified and inclusive labor market -- Real estate: Returning to real demand and reducing excessive financialization -- Balancing regional development and carbon emission constraints -- Sharing infrastructure and improving operational efficiency -- Establishing equitable and efficient systems for education and healthcare -- Connecting the hands of government and society to leverage the role of public finance and charity -- The macro trend of asset prices in the age of common prosperity. .
    In: Springer Nature eBook
    Additional Edition: Printed edition: ISBN 9789819708031
    Additional Edition: Printed edition: ISBN 9789819708055
    Additional Edition: Printed edition: ISBN 9789819708062
    Language: English
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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  • 5
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Singapore :Springer Singapore Pte. Limited,
    UID:
    almahu_9949728672202882
    Format: 1 online resource (216 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9789819708048
    Additional Edition: Print version: Building an Olive-Shaped Society Singapore : Springer Singapore Pte. Limited,c2024 ISBN 9789819708031
    Language: English
    Keywords: Electronic books.
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