Chapter 5. The emerging hybrid market economy: the ‘core–periphery’ model

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2020 ◽  
Vol 3 (5) ◽  
Author(s):  
Pan Jiang

At this stage, the market economy has become an important force to promote China's economic development. Consolidating the core of market economic development, namely, economic equality and economic freedom, is an inevitable requirement for upholding and improving China's basic economic system, and it is also an important aspect of the country's strong guarantee for market economic development. Therefore, it is necessary to research the meaning of the market economy in the constitution, and at the same time clarify the constitutional norms’ obligation to guarantee the implementation of state agencies to provide adequate constitutional guarantees for the development of the market economy.


2020 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. 36
Author(s):  
Yuncheng Shang

<p>Business administration plays an important role in the development of enterprises in transition. It can provide correct development direction for enterprises, give corresponding scientific guidance, and improve the core competitiveness of enterprises, which is conducive to the stable development of China’s market economy and improve China’s comprehensive strength. This article puts forward the research on the role of business administration in enterprise transformation. By analyzing the content and characteristics of business administration, it points out the role of business administration in enterprise transformation and market economy development, so that enterprises can face up to the role of business administration and actively cooperate to provide a strong guarantee for their own development.</p>


2013 ◽  
Vol 357-360 ◽  
pp. 2233-2237 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hong Ke ◽  
Rui Zhu Wu ◽  
Gao Feng Luo

Engineering cost index is one of the core tools to reflect the change of supply and demand in construction market and the level of productivity development. This paper comprehensively analyzes the actuality of compilation and application of engineering cost index from some representative provinces and cities in China, and systematically introduces and contrasts the application of engineering cost index in developed and developing countries or regions, providing reference for the engineering cost index during the transition to market economy in our country in the transition period, making it the edge tool to control engineering cost in a reasonable way.


2019 ◽  
Vol 2 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Yuhang Zhou

Abstract: With the development and progress of the market economy, enterprises intending to enhance the market value of economic activities must integrate the core of enterprise economic management, stimulate their creativity, and effectively realize economic goals, transforming from production factors to management factors. The enterprises must create a strategic economic management model that is more suitable for market demand and promote sustainable development. This paper analyses the importance of market-oriented enterprise economic management model and discusses specific strategies for reference.


2021 ◽  
pp. 151-154
Author(s):  
Antoine Vauchez ◽  
Samuel Moyn

This concluding chapter explains that far from having fulfilled the trumpeted promise of clarifying the respective roles of the state and the marketplace, the neoliberal turn has given birth to a space of mingling and exchange that has no precedent. An extraterritorial zone has grown up at the margins of business, politics, and government. In this new framework, confusion of roles and mixing of genres are not individual deviations from the norm or symptoms of occasional administrative anomalies. On the contrary, they constitute the new normal when it comes to the functioning of the state in its relationships with the market economy. This book, in the end, tells the story of a “black hole” that has appeared at the very heart of our democracies: its birth in a blind spot hidden from the view of professional regulations and political oversight, the expansion of its gravitational pull at the core of the state, and the ensuing political and democratic costs that we face today.


2020 ◽  
pp. 241-255
Author(s):  
Juliane K. Mendelsohn

Over the past couple of years, many competition and antitrust scholars have feared the dawn of ‘algorithmic collusion’. Some have thus suggested expanding the notions of ‘collusion’ and ‘agreement’ in order to capture such coordination. Rather than using an expansive reading of ‘collusion’, the author of this article suggests an approach that works with the core and original intent of Article 101(1) TFEU: the fostering of independent conduct and prevention of market coordination. It finds this to be doctrinally undisputed and also consistent with long-standing competition policy debates, as well as an egalitarian notion of price that lays the foundation of the free market economy. On this basis, and considering given uncertainties, an operational notion of ‘collusive risk’ is put forward.


2002 ◽  
Vol 50 (4) ◽  
pp. 779-793 ◽  
Author(s):  
Saladin Meckled-Garcia

The paper responds to Cohen's critical claim that for agents who sincerely accept Rawls's difference principle it is not consistent to seek material incentives towards productivity. The central argument of the paper is that productive agents in a market economy would not be as productive without material incentives unless held to be under a (controversial) duty to increase productivity. This duty is distinct from merely having a duty to contribute up to a reasonable minimum, and then equalise material benefits. The controversial duty is not derivable from the difference principle itself, nor from the background motivations for it. Therefore, if Cohen's critique is internal to Rawlsian distributive justice, it is based on a controversial version of that view of distributive justice when applied to a market system. It is the reach, and not the core insight of Cohen's critique that is attacked here. If in any way sound, that insight does not un-controversially apply to all material incentive-seeking in a market economy.


2004 ◽  
pp. 1-28 ◽  
Author(s):  
Johann Eekhoff ◽  
Christiane Moch
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