私有化的再政治化

Savriël Dillingh
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摘要

约瑟夫-希思认为,私有化应根据具体情况进行判断,并诉诸帕累托标准。我认为,这种方法相当于私有化的非政治化。虽然希斯的方法很有效,有时还很有启发性,但我要说明的是,坚持使用他的方法是会弄巧成拙的,因为它最终需要私有化的政治化。借助交易成本理论,我证明了肯定市场竞争压力会带来社会成本。随后,我认为,根据希斯的观点,私人行为者可以通过诉诸对抗性道德来追求效率,而国有企业(SOEs)在如何实现这种收益方面受到的限制要大得多。由于自由主义中立的压力,国有企业只能追求效率,而不会使行为者倒退。相反,私营部门的成功潜力则取决于其竞争卡尔多-希克斯效率的能力,这种能力特别允许双赢互动。虽然国有企业通常并不比私营部门更有能力实现帕累托最优,但这种差异使得国有企业产生的收益事前较低但更加平等,而私营部门产生的收益事前较高但更加不平等。因此,肯定市场竞争压力的社会成本就是事前的不平等。如果接受这一前提,我们就无法回避这样一个结论,即要采取一致的个案处理方法,就必须从结构上、政治上看待私有化如何影响国家事后提高帕累托能力的问题。
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Repoliticizing Privatization
According to Joseph Heath, privatizations should be judged on a case-by-case basis with appeal to the Pareto criterion. This approach, or so I argue, amounts to a depoliticization of privatization. While Heath’s approach is effective and at times illuminating, I show that a consistent application of his methodology is self-defeating in that it eventually requires a politicization of privatization. With appeal to transaction cost theory, I show there are social costs associated with affirming the competitive pressures of the market. Subsequently, I argue that while private actors may, according to Heath, pursue efficiency with appeal to an adversarial morality, state-owned enterprises (SOEs) are much more constrained in how they may achieve such gains. Due to the pressures of liberal neutrality, SOEs may chase efficiency only without setting actors back. Conversely, the private sector’s potential for success is predicated on its ability to compete for Kaldor-Hicks efficiency, which specifically allows for win-lose interactions. While SOEs are often no more able than the private sector to achieve Pareto optima, this discrepancy makes it so that SOEs produce gains that are ex-ante lower but more equal, whereas the private sector produces gains that are ex-ante higher but more unequal. Thus, the social cost of affirming the competitive pressures of the market is ex-ante inequality. If this premise is accepted, there is no way to avoid the conclusion that a consistent case-by-case approach requires a structural, political view on how privatizations affect the state’s ex-post Pareto-enhancing abilities.
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