How does the New Rural Collective Economy Affect the Rural Common Prosperity:Based on the Case Studies of D Village and S Village
In the contemporary epoch,the burgeoning new rural collective economy has emerged as a pivotal strategy for fostering communal prosperity within rural domains.This treatise investigates the intrinsic mechanisms through which the new rural collective economy catalyzes rural prosperity,employing the analytical construct of"resources-rules-efficiency."The study is anchored in the case studies of D village in Shandong and S village in Guangdong,elucidating the nuanced trajectories of collective economic development.The findings indicate that the new rural collective economy gives rise to endogenous regulations of varying orientations,contingent upon the distinct ownership structures,modes of participation,and principles of distribution,which in turn,exert influence on the efficacy of rural prosperity.Notably,the community cooperative collective economy,distinguished by a collectivized ownership structure,processual participation,and a distributional ethos anchored in public interest,preserves the collective nature of the management process and the transparency of endogenous regulations,thereby enhancing the endogenous capacities for rural prosperity.Conversely,the stock cooperative collective economy,characterized by an individualized ownership structure,supervised participation,and a distributive principle of shared benefits,concentrates on the economic attributes of collective management while incorporating political power,leading to the erosion of the public character of endogenous regulations and the deviation from the goal of rural communal prosperity.From a strategic standpoint,the progression of the collective economy should transcend the mere sphere of economic operation,necessitating an emphasis on animating the political vitality of the collective.This approach is imperative for constructing a public rule order that can exert a constructive impact on rural communal prosperity.
New Rural Collective EconomyPublic RulesCommon ProsperityPolitical ControlSocial Foundation