帝制中国的财政政策与制度

Taisu Zhang
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摘要

直到清朝的最后四十年,中国的财政榨取主要是对农业生产征税,通常以每年的财产税的形式根据土地持有情况进行评估,并以粮食或现金的形式收取。在清朝之前的所有主要王朝都灵活地运用了这一财政工具,进行了大规模的改革,通常会导致明显更高的税收,发生在王朝中期,但清朝打破了这一趋势:尽管人口和经济增长了近三倍,但在其278年寿命的大部分时间里,农业税的绝对数量仍然保持不变。这最终使得清朝的财政国家在横向和纵向比较中都成为一个极端的异类:相对于它所管理的经济,它不仅比它早期的主要现代竞争对手(从日本到西欧国家再到其他中亚帝国)要小得多,而且它也可能是迄今为止最小的后秦王朝国家。先前的学术研究在很大程度上未能识别,更不用说解释中国帝国历史走向终结时财政政策的这种突然而戏剧性的转变。对此有许多可能的解释,其中一些已经出现在先前存在的文献中,但最有希望的一个-尚未出现-似乎是明清过渡的特殊情况是中国财政思想决定性的保守转向的催化剂,推动清朝国家进入一个根本不同于其前任的政治和制度平衡。
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Fiscal Policy and Institutions in Imperial China
Up until the final four decades of the Qing Dynasty, fiscal extraction in imperial China was primarily a matter of taxing agricultural production, generally in the form of an annual property tax assessed on the basis of landholding, and collected in either grain or cash. All major dynasties prior to the Qing wielded this fiscal instrument somewhat flexibly, with large-scale reforms, usually leading to significantly higher taxes, occurring around mid-dynasty, but the Qing broke this trend: the absolute volume of agricultural taxes remained locked in place for the great majority of its 278-year life-span, despite a near tripling of both the population and the economy. This eventually rendered the Qing fiscal state an extreme outlier in both horizontal and vertical comparisons: relative to the economy it governed, not only was it much smaller than its major early modern competitors, ranging from Japan to Western European states to other central Asian empires, but it was also probably the smallest post-Qin dynastic state by far. Preexisting scholarship has largely failed to identify, let alone explain, this sudden and dramatic shift in fiscal policy towards the end of China’s imperial history. There are a number of possible explanations for it, some of which have appeared in the preexisting literature, but the most promising one — which has not appeared — seems to be that the extraordinary circumstances of the Ming-Qing transition served as the catalyst for a decisive conservative turn in Chinese fiscal thought, pushing the Qing state into a fundamentally different political and institutional equilibrium than its predecessors.
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