Can People Rely on the Government to Achieve Economic Prosperity?

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Kishou · Jan 22, 2025
When it comes to economic regulation and reducing the wealth gap, many people tend to place the responsibility on the government. As the central entity of macroeconomic control, the government certainly plays a crucial role in promoting economic balance through a series of policies and measures. However, is this reliance enough? Can it truly lead […]

When it comes to economic regulation and reducing the wealth gap, many people tend to place the responsibility on the government. As the central entity of macroeconomic control, the government certainly plays a crucial role in promoting economic balance through a series of policies and measures. However, is this reliance enough? Can it truly lead to long-term economic prosperity? This is a question worth delving into.


The Current State and Challenges of Government Regulation

Governments around the world have long sought to regulate the economy through tax, fiscal policies, and legal regulations. For instance, Japan’s corporate tax is a direct tax measure that targets the profitability of businesses, aiming to extract resources from prosperous enterprises and redistribute them to areas of society in need of support. Likewise, the United States employs a progressive income tax system, requiring higher-income groups to shoulder a greater tax burden in order to provide more public services for the lower socioeconomic strata.

While these policies may seem well-designed in theory, they face numerous challenges in actual implementation:

  1. Efficiency of tax redistribution
    The tax revenue collected ultimately needs to be invested back into society, but how the government allocates these resources is often questioned. For example, in Japan, some local government funds have been used for large-scale infrastructure projects, but the direct impact on improving the lives of ordinary citizens is limited, and these projects have even become symbols of “useless investments.” Similarly, the U.S. government has also faced criticism for its massive military spending and certain inefficient social security programs.
  2. Flexibility and Fairness of Policies
    Policy-making often struggles to fully account for the diversity of individuals and industries. For example, Japan’s consumption tax, while theoretically applied equally to all consumer behaviors, disproportionately burdens low-income groups and small businesses in practice. For low-income individuals, the consumption tax represents a larger percentage of their income, increasing their financial strain. Small businesses face greater difficulties when passing on the tax, especially when competing with large chain stores, where maintaining a price advantage becomes challenging. While the policy aims to be fair, the lack of targeted support may unintentionally widen the disparity in burdens across different groups.

Inefficiency and Waste: The Limits of Government Capabilities

The problem is not just about the efficiency of tax redistribution, but also the growing concern over the government’s poor performance in economic regulation.

  • Japan’s Inefficient Infrastructure: The Japanese government has spent huge sums to build numerous local airports and high-speed rail stations, but many of these projects have been criticized as “symbolic engineering” due to low utilization rates. These projects have consumed massive fiscal resources without effectively promoting regional economic development.
  • The Welfare Crisis in Europe: In the 1970s, the expansive welfare state models adopted by many European countries fell into crisis. Government fiscal deficits ballooned, as public service systems struggled to be maintained due to excessive burdens. For instance, the UK’s National Health Service (NHS) has grappled with issues in resource allocation, resulting in shortages of medical resources. The government has long been criticized for mismanaging this critical public health system.

Besides, the large-scale quantitative easing policies implemented by the United States after the 2008 financial crisis, while stabilizing the economy in the short term, have also been criticized for driving up asset prices and exacerbating wealth inequality.


The Limitations of Government Capabilities: Lessons from Japan and the West

Throughout history, the shortcomings of government economic intervention have been repeatedly exposed. The Japanese experience provides a cautionary tale – the signing of the Plaza Accord led to a rapid appreciation of the yen, triggering the formation and bursting of an economic bubble. The subsequent “Lost Decades” demonstrated the limitations of overly relying on government control.

Similar challenges have played out in Europe and the US as well. Following the 2008 financial crisis, some Eurozone countries were forced to implement harsh fiscal austerity measures to address the sovereign debt crisis. While this government intervention brought short-term stability, it also contributed to prolonged economic stagnation, as seen in the persistently high unemployment rates in countries like Greece and Spain.


Seeking New Approaches for Economic Prosperity

Given the limitations inherent in government-led economic management, we need to revisit a fundamental question: is economic prosperity necessarily dependent on the government alone? Our view is that the answer is no. While government policymaking remains important, it is far from the sole or even the primary driver of lasting economic vitality.

The path to future prosperity requires the collaborative participation of the government, enterprises, individuals, and social organizations. This diversified model entails several key elements:

  1. Proactive Participation of Individuals, Groups, and Enterprises
    Individuals and enterprises should not merely be passive recipients of government policies, but active participants in economic regulation. For example, as enterprises fulfill their corporate social responsibility (CSR), they can proactively contribute to regional economic development. Individuals can also influence the direction of the economy through selective consumption or investment.
  2. Gradual Decentralization of Government Functions
    The gradual decentralization of government functions to individuals, groups, and enterprises does not weaken the government’s authority, but can actually improve the overall efficiency of social operations. For example, the subdivision of administrative units can reduce resource waste and avoid the inefficiency caused by excessive centralized government management. The decentralization of administration not only makes policy implementation more flexible, but also allows for more precise responses to the needs of different regions or fields.

Possibilities of Society-Led Economic Regulation

If social organizations and enterprises gradually participate in economic regulation, we can foresee the following possibilities:

  • Increased Policy Flexibility: Social organizations can closely meet the needs of specific groups and quickly respond to changing economic situations.
  • Reduced Resource Waste: Through decentralized management, it can avoid resource misallocation caused by uniform and standardized policies.
  • Enhanced Social Resilience: A diversified economic system with multiple contributors is more resilient in times of crisis. During the pandemic, for instance, many businesses and individuals took part in material distribution and volunteer efforts, helping to fill the gaps left by government actions.

How can such a transformation be achieved?

Of course, this shift requires long-term exploration and practice. For individuals without substantial capital, how can they avoid being suppressed by the dominance of large corporations? The answer to this may lie in new financial models.

Social Citizen Finance is one of the future economic models proposed by Yicheng Commonweal. In this model, everyone can participate in economic regulation through a decentralized approach, truly benefiting from the prosperity brought by the economy.

If you are interested in this topic, you can read our special article on “Social Citizen Finance”. We will continue to explore this subject, showcasing the potential for economic prosperity in the new era.

 

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教你观想:回归清净无垢的本源之相

Master Wonder · Apr 23, 2025

观想是很多修行人的日常功课,它通过专注于某个具体的形象或符号,帮助修行者净化心念,提升意识的层次。通过反复观想,修行者不仅在心中构建出一个具象的形象,更通过这个形象去感悟深层的法界真理。 这个形象,本文称之为”法界原身“,不是某一种肉体形态的投影,而是超越时间、超越生灭的本来面目,是每一位修行者于无始劫以来所具的清净法身。 当我们观想皈依、修习净观、入定自省,其实是在逐步洗净尘垢,回归真实之我。 然而,许多行者在观想中却忽略了一个极其关键的问题:我们所观所念,正在无意中塑造自身的未来形相与能量之态。 一、观想的常见误区:老者观 很多人在修行中会观想皈依的圣者、导师或祖师形象,往往习惯性地将他们设定为慈祥庄重、白发苍苍的长者模样。表面上看,这是出于尊敬与对智慧之年的联想;但实际上,这种“老态”观想模式,会无形中在心识深处投下时间、老朽、衰竭的种子。 心生则法生,心灭则法灭。 观想中所建立的世界,本质上正在塑造我们的“未来身”,特别是在修习密观与坛城相应的行者中尤为重要。 若心常摄取“年老圣相”,那你未来修成的道身、法身,自会朝着这种形态成就。于是便出现了令人啼笑皆非的情况:弟子观想中的自己,比祖师爷还要年迈。 这种形态上的错乱,反映的不是修行进步,而是心识未清,法念未正,观想未圆。 二、正确的观想之道:保持心态年轻 在修行的观想中,我们不妨设定一个年轻、清净、庄严而充满智慧之相。这是对“法界原身”的一种主动呼应—— 年轻,不是对肉体年龄的执著,而是一种永恒的生命力与初心状态。 观想中年轻的自己,不是戏剧化的幻想,而是归于“本初”状态的自性真实。 在法界所见,一些修行者的“心身形貌”,竟比他们所顶礼的古佛还要显得沧桑迟暮。这并非耻辱,而是一种修观错位的显现。 因为你的心识在长年累月中,已经把“苦修、老态、沉重”作为了道的象征,而非“光明、清净、觉照”。 佛陀成道时三十二相圆满,相貌如八尺金身庄严,岂有苍老? 观音现身常为童子、妙龄、青年女相,皆寓意其智慧圆融,能摄万缘。 这不是偶然,而是法性智慧对观想之力的慈悲妙用。 三、法界无年:回归清净本初,证得本来之我 真正的“法界原身”,是无年之身、无垢之身。 它不老不死,不少不多,既非童年,也非老年,而是一种恒常青春的智慧相。 当我们在观想时让自己清净而年轻,实则是在归还自己那一份未被尘世揉皱的光明种子。 如此观想,心中所现非贪非欲,非执相之艳,而是通向更高维度的: 结语:愿诸修行者,早证法身,自现原身 希望所有修行人,在静坐、念咒、观想、礼拜之时,常忆“我是谁”,常照“我当成就何种法身“。 不要让世间的时光束缚了你内在的法界本源,不要让错乱的观想制造出你未来的苍老疲惫之身。 愿诸君: 观自身如清净童子,法身无染。 见皈依者如妙龄大士,慈光灿然。 念念回归初心,步步印证道身。 法界原身,本自不老,本自无垢。 但愿人人观想圆满,修行自在,归于真实之我。 ——谨以此文,献予每一位正行于道上的人。 扩展引导:如何正确进入“法界原身”观修法门

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