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Rent-setting

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Political corruption in China
Rent-setting
InitiatorAppelbaum and Katz
Introduced1987
Synonymrent-creating[1]
Rent-setting
Simplified Chinese设租
Traditional Chinese設租
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinShèzū

Rent-setting[2] (also spelled as rent setting;[3]simplified Chinese:设租;traditional Chinese:設租), also known asrent-creating,[4] refers to the act ofgovernments orbureaucrats using theirpower to intervene in themarket, resulting in the formation of new economic rents and creatingrent-seeking opportunities for certain market entities.[5] In short, it means that the power itself committed an act in order to take a bribe.[6]

The concept of rent-setting was coined by Appelbaum and Katz in 1987.[7] This theory holds that since the regulator itself may become a rent-seeker, the rent-seeker itself will become a rent-setter and thus endogenously determine the size of the rent.[7]

Rent-setting is part of the chain of the rent-seeking process.[8] It can generally be divided into three types: unintentional rent-setting, passive rent-setting and active rent-setting.[9]

In a 'power-money' transaction, rent-setting is from 'power' to 'money', while rent-seeking is often 'money-power-money increment'.[10] In fact, rent seeking and rent setting are two sides of the same behavior and cannot be separated.[11]

See also

[edit]

References

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  1. ^"Revisiting progressive reform".The Economic Observer. 2010-01-29.
  2. ^Timothy Lane; Nina Oding; Paul J.J. Welfens (6 December 2012).Real and Financial Economic Dynamics in Russia and Eastern Europe.Springer. pp. 181–.ISBN 978-3-642-55512-1.
  3. ^P. Rao (3 December 2002).The Economics of Transaction Costs: Theory, Methods and Application.Palgrave Macmillan UK. pp. 102–.ISBN 978-0-230-59768-6.
  4. ^Chi Fulin (2002).The Next Step in China's Reform. China Economic Publishing House.ISBN 978-7-5017-5699-5.
  5. ^Shi Yan (1 June 2014).Study of Communication Failure in Chinese Financial Media.China Social Sciences Press. pp. 50–.ISBN 978-7-5161-4572-2.
  6. ^Chen Yijin (2016-05-07)."Distinguish between a good hospital and a bad one, then what?".Creaders.net.
  7. ^abXie Ping; Lu Lei (2005).An Economic Analysis of Financial Corruption in China: Institutions, Behavior and Mechanism Design.Citic Press. pp. 82–.ISBN 978-7-5086-0374-2.
  8. ^Tak-Wing Ngo; Yongping Wu (4 December 2008).Rent Seeking in China.Routledge. pp. 193–.ISBN 978-1-134-03441-3.
  9. ^Luo Zhixian (2002).Rule of law basis for property rights reform of state-owned enterprises. Standards Press of China.ISBN 978-7-5066-2991-1.
  10. ^Chen Yijin (April 7, 1994)."An economic analysis of rent setting and rent seeking behaviour"(PDF).Economic Research Journal.ISSN 0577-9154.
  11. ^Li Beifang (2016-08-18)."It is capital, not power, that seeks rent".Utopia.
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