你好,欢迎来到经管之家 [登录] [注册]

设为首页 | 经管之家首页 | 收藏本站

美国传统基金会(Heritage)对世界经济自由度的一个排名

发布时间: 来源:人大经济论坛

美国传统基金会是美国共和党的核心智囊机构。他的研究报告有很深的政治影响。以下是它的2006年世界各国的经济自由度的排名中国排名111。中国香港第一。
Click on country to view in-depth analysis
CountryRank[Score]
Hong Kong
1 [1.28] Croatia
55 [2.78] Zambia
111 [3.34]
Singapore
2 [1.56] Greece
57 [2.80] China
111 [3.34]
Ireland
3 [1.58] Jordan
57 [2.80] Kazakhstan
113 [3.35]
Luxembourg
4 [1.60] Macedonia
57 [2.80] Mozambique
113 [3.35]
United Kingdom
5 [1.74] Mexico
60 [2.83] Niger
115 [3.38]
Iceland
5 [1.74] Mongolia
60 [2.83] Dominican Republic
116 [3.39]
Estonia
7 [1.75] Saudi Arabia
62 [2.84] Benin
117 [3.40]
Denmark
8 [1.78] Peru
63 [2.86] Central African Republic
118 [3.41]
United States
9 [1.84] Bulgaria
64 [2.88] Algeria
119 [3.46]
Australia
9 [1.84] United Arab Emirates
65 [2.93] Cameroon
119 [3.46]
New Zealand
9 [1.84] Uganda
66 [2.95] India
121 [3.49]
Canada
12 [1.85] Bolivia
67 [2.96] Russia
122 [3.50]
Finland
12 [1.85] Cambodia
68 [2.98] Azerbaijan
123 [3.51]
Chile
14 [1.88] Georgia
68 [2.98] Gambia, The
123 [3.51]
Switzerland
15 [1.89] Malaysia
68 [2.98] Rwanda
125 [3.53]
Cyprus
16 [1.90] Thailand
71 [2.99] Nepal
125 [3.53]
Netherlands
16 [1.90] Kyrgyz Republic, The
71 [2.99] Guinea
127 [3.55]
Austria
18 [1.95] Lebanon
73 [3.00] Egypt
128 [3.59]
Sweden
19 [1.96] Bosnia and Herzegovina
74 [3.01] Suriname
129 [3.60]
Germany
19 [1.96] Guatemala
74 [3.01] Malawi
130 [3.63]
Czech Republic
21 [2.10] Oman
74 [3.01] Guinea Bissau
131 [3.65]
Belgium
22 [2.11] Mauritius
77 [3.03] Burundi
132 [3.69]
Lithuania
23 [2.14] Qatar
78 [3.04] Ethiopia
133 [3.70]
Malta
24 [2.16] Swaziland
78 [3.04] Togo
134 [3.71]
Bahrain
25 [2.23] Nicaragua
80 [3.05] Indonesia
134 [3.71]
Barbados
26 [2.25] Brazil
81 [3.08] Equatorial Guinea
136 [3.74]
Armenia
27 [2.26] Mauritania
81 [3.08] Sierra Leone
137 [3.76]
Bahamas
27 [2.26] Senegal
83 [3.10] Tajikistan
137 [3.76]
Japan
27 [2.26] Moldova
83 [3.10] Yemen
139 [3.84]
Portugal
30 [2.29] Turkey
85 [3.11] Angola
139 [3.84]
Botswana
30 [2.29] Guyana
85 [3.11] Bangladesh
141 [3.88]
Norway
30 [2.29] Namibia
85 [3.11] Vietnam
142 [3.89]
Spain
33 [2.33] Ivory Coast
88 [3.14] Congo, Republic of
143 [3.90]
Slovak Republic, The
34 [2.35] Mali
88 [3.14] Uzbekistan
144 [3.91]
El Salvador
34 [2.35] Fiji
90 [3.15] Syria
145 [3.93]
Israel
36 [2.36] Colombia
91 [3.16] Nigeria
146 [4.00]
Taiwan
37 [2.38] Romania
92 [3.19] Haiti
147 [4.03]
Slovenia
38 [2.41] Sri Lanka
92 [3.19] Turkmenistan
148 [4.04]
Latvia
39 [2.43] Tanzania
94 [3.20] Laos
149 [4.08]
Hungary
40 [2.44] Djibouti
94 [3.20] Cuba
150 [4.10]
Poland
41 [2.49] Kenya
94 [3.20] Belarus
151 [4.11]
Trinidad and Tobago
42 [2.50] Morocco
97 [3.21] Venezuela
152 [4.16]
Italy
42 [2.50] Philippines, The
98 [3.23] Libya
152 [4.16]
France
44 [2.51] Tunisia
99 [3.24] Zimbabwe
154 [4.23]
Korea, South
45 [2.63] Ukraine
99 [3.24] Burma
155 [4.46]
Uruguay
46 [2.69] Lesotho
99 [3.24] Iran
156 [4.51]
Cape Verde
46 [2.69] Burkina Faso
102 [3.28] Korea, North
157 [5.00]
Costa Rica
46 [2.69] Gabon
102 [3.28] Serbia and Montenegro - Not Graded
Panama
49 [2.70] Honduras
102 [3.28] Sudan - Not Graded

South Africa
50 [2.74] Chad
105 [3.29] Congo, Dem. Republic of - Not Graded
Kuwait
50 [2.74] Ghana
105 [3.29] Iraq - Not Graded

Albania
52 [2.75] Argentina
107 [3.30]
Madagascar
52 [2.75] Ecuador
107 [3.30]
Jamaica
54 [2.76] Paraguay
109 [3.31]
Belize
55 [2.78] Pakistan
110 [3.33]


以下是对中国的评价、中国的评价在不断提高、95年是3.75分、今年是3.34.
China, People's Republic of

• Rank: 111
• Score: 3.34
• Category: Mostly Unfree
• View PDF
o English
o Spanish


Quick Study
• Trade Policy3.0
• Fiscal Burden3.9
• Government Intervention3.0
• Monetary Policy1.0
• Foreign Investment4.0
• Banking and Finance4.0
• Wages and Prices3.0
• Property Rights4.0
• Regulation4.0
• Informal Market3.5


• Population: 1,299,800,000

• Total area: 9,596,960 sq. km

• GDP: $1.5 trillion

• GDP growth rate: 9.5%

• GDP per capita: $1,179

• Major exports: machinery and equipment, textiles and clothing, footwear, sporting goods, mineral fuels

• Exports of goods and services: $502.8 billion

• Major export trading partners: US 21.1%, EU 18.1%, Hong Kong 17.0%, Japan 12.4%

• Major imports: machinery and equipment, mineral fuels, plastics, iron and steel, chemicals, crude oil and fuels

• Imports of goods and services: $441.8 billion

• Major import trading partners: Japan 16.8%, EU 12.5%, Taiwan 11.5%

• Foreign direct investment (net): $53.1 billion

• 2004 Data (in constant 2000 US dollars)



In 2005, China emerged as the world's third-largest trading nation. Its 2004 current account surplus jumped 50 percent to $68.7 billion洋ore than 10 percent of total exports. The Chinese government reports that 2004 GDP growth continued at a robust rate of 9.5 percent. Beijing moved to cool the economy with cutbacks of construction machinery and investment-related imports and by exporting surplus domestic production of chemicals and metals. Foreign direct investment inflows rose 13.32 percent to $60.63 billion in 2004. Stepped-up complaints of China's failure to address intellectual property crimes and other grievances, as well as pressure from U.S. protectionists, generated a groundswell of sentiment in Congress to sanction China for trade transgressions. In late 2004, China's septuagenarian leader Jiang Zemin finally passed the baton to his ***agenarian successor Hu Jintao, but this "transition" did not ease the machinery of political repression, much less presage political reforms. Through 2004 and 2005, even domestic observers of China's political scene bemoaned tighter controls on speech and expression, particularly via the Internet, and complained that President Hu had sold out to party hard-liners. China's trade policy score is 1.5 points better this year, and its fiscal burden of government score is 0.2 point better. As a result, China's overall score is 0.17 point better this year.
Trade Policy

• Score: 3.0
According to the World Bank, China's weighted average tariff rate in 2004 was 6 percent, down from the 12.8 percent for 2001 reported in the 2005 Index. According to the Economist Intelligence Unit, "China has begun trimming its non-tariff import barriers" but continues to utilize quotas and licensing and "retains regulatory control over imports via commodity inspection, registration requirements and quarantine rules." Based on the lower tariff rate, as well as a revision of the trade factor methodology, China's trade policy score is 1.5 points better this year.
Fiscal Burden

• Score: 3.9
China's top income tax rate is 45 percent. The top corporate tax rate is 30 percent. In 2003, according to the Economist Intelligence Unit, government expenditures as a share of GDP remained unchanged at 21.6 percent, compared to a 1.5 percentage point increase in 2002. On net, China's fiscal burden of government score is 0.2 point better this year.
Government Intervention

• Score: 3.0
The World Bank reports that the government consumed 12.6 percent of GDP in 2003. In 2002, according to the International Monetary Fund, China reported receiving 4.31 percent of its total revenues from state-owned enterprises and government ownership of property. According to the U.S. Department of Commerce, however, the government retains much of the apparatus of a planned economy and owns major corporations in the energy, banking, telecommunications, steel, car manufacturing, food, and home appliances sectors. The Financial Times reports that "China's 150,000 state-owned enterprises・till employ more than 50m[illion] workers." Based on the apparent unreliability of reported figures for total revenues, 1 point has been added to China's government intervention score.
Monetary Policy

• Score: 1.0
From 1995 to 2004, China's weighted average annual rate of inflation was 2.68 percent.
Foreign Investment

• Score: 4.0
According to the U.S. Trade Representative, "General barriers to investment that plague China include a lack of transparency, inconsistently enforced laws and regulations, weak [intellectual property rights] protection, corruption and an unreliable legal system incapable of protecting the sanctity of contracts." The Economist Intelligence Unit reports that "China welcomes foreign investment and is bound under World Trade Organisation rules to open its industries further to foreign businesses, but it does not wish to see its control over important 壮trategic' sectors of its economy slip into foreign hands. Partly with this in mind, on July 25th 2004, China announced a significant structural change to its FDI regime・hat allowed foreign investment only in specific, government-designated sectors." Foreign investment regulations that took effect on April 1, 2002, requiring various Chinese bureaucracies to regularly update a Foreign Investment Catalogue for the government to use as a guide in approving foreign investment projects remain in effect. In June 2004, the government opened the retail and distribution sector to 100 percent foreign-owned companies. The People's Bank of China regulates the flow of foreign exchange into and out of the country, and the government intervenes and controls foreign investment in the stock market. The International Monetary Fund reports extensive controls, government approval requirements, and quantitative limits on foreign exchange, current transfers, and capital transactions. Direct investment is subject to government approval, as are real estate transactions.
Banking and Finance

• Score: 4.0
The Economist Intelligence Unit reports that over 35,000 financial institutions were operating in China as of 2004. However, the dominant banking institutions remain four state-owned banks, which accounted for 55 percent of total banking assets and deposits as of March 2004. According to The Economist, "Most capital is・rovided by banks, and the most important banks are still owned by the state. Some of their customers bid for capital at the prevailing rate of interest. Others, the least enterprising and best connected, hustle for it, by pulling strings or calling in favours. But perhaps two-thirds of the banks' loans serve to prop up state-owned enterprises." The Wall Street Journal reported on June 2, 2005, that the "financial system is plagued by bad debts, lack of transparency, corruption and other abuses." The government has injected vast sums into the four major banks to reduce bad loans. According to the U.S. Department of Commerce, "Authoritative estimates of the total stock of bad debt in China's financial system range from 25 to 75 percent of the country's annual gross domestic product." Although the government is relaxing controls on interest rates, the central bank affects the allocation of credit by setting interest rates on deposits and loans. "China's banking sector remains almost entirely state owned, either directly or through state-owned companies・but the] financial sector is evolving more quickly to a market-oriented system now that the country is a member of the World Trade Organisation," reports the EIU. "Foreign banks are gradually being allowed greater scope for their investments in both permissible business areas and geographical scope." Foreign groups are limited to minority stakes in Chinese banks. In December 2004, the government loosened restrictions to permit foreign insurers to operate throughout the country, changing previous rules restricting their activity to a few major cities, and permitted foreign brokers to own up to 51 percent of joint ventures.
Wages and Prices

• Score: 3.0
"In general," reports the Economist Intelligence Unit, "prices remain controlled only for goods and services deemed essential, such as foodstuffs and tobacco・ Coal, which accounts for three-fourths of China's energy consumption, has been one of the most important commodities under price controls・ Price controls generally apply at the ex-factory level, in the form of subsidies to state-owned enterprises to let them produce and sell goods to wholesalers and retailers at artificially low prices." China does not have a national mandatory minimum wage, but the Labor Law allows local governments to determine their own minimum wages.
Property Rights

• Score: 4.0
China's judicial system is weak. The Economist Intelligence Unit reports that "many [foreign firms] prefer arbitration because of concerns about the speed and impartiality of the courts. A related concern for foreign companies is the weak tradition of consistent implementation of court rulings・" According to the U.S. Department of Commerce, "Enforcement of arbitral awards is sporadic. Sometimes, even when a foreign company wins in arbitration in China, the local court may delay or fail to enforce the decision. Even when the courts do attempt to enforce a decision, local officials often ignore court decisions with impunity." The EIU reports that corruption extends to the courts. In 2004, according to The Wall Street Journal, China introduced a constitutional amendment establishing that a citizen's private property is inviolable. Enforcement of this amendment has yet to be tested.
Regulation

• Score: 4.0
The U.S. Department of Commerce reports that "China's legal and regulatory system lacks transparency and consistent enforcement despite the promulgation of thousands of regulations, opinions, and notices affecting・nvestment・ Foreign investors continue to rank the inconsistent and arbitrary enforcement of regulations and the lack of transparency as two major problems in China's investment climate." Corruption is widespread. According to the Economist Intelligence Unit, "Foreign companies investing in China tend to encounter rather different forms of organized dishonesty・ [M]unicipal officials have often given their approval to foreign-invested projects after their children have been granted places in schools abroad・"
Informal Market

• Score: 3.5
Transparency International's 2004 score for China is 3.4. Therefore, China's informal market score is 3.5 this year.


全文下载∶http://www.heritage.org/research/features/index/downloads/Index2006.pdf如果不好下载、并且大家需要、我会上传的。

经管之家“学道会”小程序
  • 扫码加入“考研学习笔记群”
推荐阅读
经济学相关文章
标签云
经管之家精彩文章推荐