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19.04.2026

On the Essential Relationship Between Fiscal and Tax Policy and “Investing in People” and the Paths to Its Realization— —From the Perspective of Human Capital Accumulation

Abstract: At the historical juncture when China’s economic development faces the triple pressures of demand contraction, supply shocks, and weakening expectations, and when the demographic structure is undergoing profound transformation, the paradigm of macroeconomic governance urgently needs to shift from excessive reliance on the accumulation of physical capital to a new stage driven by the coordinated development of both physical capital and human capital. Promoting the close integration of “investment in things” and “investment in people” is not only a requirement for countercyclical adjustment in response to short-term economic fluctuations, but also a strategic cornerstone for shaping new drivers of long-term development and achieving high-quality development. Based on an interdisciplinary perspective that integrates macroeconomic theory, public finance theory, and human capital theory, this paper systematically constructs a theoretical framework for analyzing the essential relationship between fiscal and tax policy and “investing in people.” The paper conducts an in-depth analysis of the connotations and economic attributes of “investment in things” and “investment in people,” as well as their distinct roles in aggregate demand management, and demonstrates the necessity and urgency of integrating the two within the context of the new era. The central argument of this paper is that the essence of fiscal and tax policy support for “investing in people” lies in correcting market failures and positive externalities in the process of human capital formation through the design of both revenue and expenditure mechanisms, thereby internalizing the comprehensive development of individuals as an endogenous variable of economic growth. This process concerns not only the efficiency of resource allocation but also more profoundly involves equity in income distribution and intergenerational social mobility. The study indicates that although the relevant fiscal and tax policy framework in China has been established, it still faces systemic bottlenecks such as rigid inertia in the expenditure structure, insufficient precision of tax incentives, mismatches in intergovernmental fiscal relations, short-term orientation in performance evaluation systems, and the lack of smooth mechanisms for diversified investment. To address these issues, this paper proposes a comprehensive set of policy recommendations that integrate short-term demand management with long-term supply capacity building. These include implementing fiscal expenditure structure reforms oriented toward the full life cycle, constructing an incentive-compatible matrix of tax policies, reshaping central–local fiscal relations with clearly defined powers and responsibilities, innovating budget performance management models based on long-term benefits, and stimulating mechanisms that encourage multiple social actors to invest jointly. This study aims to provide theoretical reference and practical guidance for constructing an “empowering” fiscal and tax policy system that aligns with the goals of Chinese-style modernization and effectively supports high-quality population development and an innovation-driven development strategy.

Keywords: fiscal and tax policy; investing in people; human capital; public expenditure; aggregate demand management; full life cycle; income distribution; high-quality development

Introduction

Since the reform and opening-up, particularly since the mid-to-late 1990s, the model of “investment in things,” characterized by large-scale infrastructure investment, real estate development, and the expansion of manufacturing capacity, has successfully propelled the rapid growth of China’s economy and the rapid accumulation of physical capital. At a specific historical stage, this model effectively resolved the fundamental bottlenecks of economic development, generated strong supply capacity, and, through powerful stimulation of aggregate demand, created a growth miracle that lasted for several decades. However, as China’s economic development enters the “new normal,” the driving force of traditional factors has weakened, constraints on resources and the environment have tightened, and, in particular, fundamental changes in the demographic structure—such as the gradual decline of the working-age population after reaching its peak, accelerated population aging, and a continuously declining total fertility rate—have placed the previously overreliant growth path based on physical capital investment under severe challenge. The law of diminishing marginal returns on investment has become increasingly evident, with overcapacity and accumulating debt risks emerging in some sectors, thereby raising widespread concern about the sustainability and inclusiveness of economic growth.

Meanwhile, the strategic value of “investing in people,” centered on education, health, skills training, and social security, has been elevated to an unprecedented level within the framework of national governance and policy discourse. From the Scientific Outlook on Development centered on “people first,” to the strategic judgment that “talent is the primary resource,” and further to the report of the 20th National Congress of the Communist Party of China explicitly integrating “education, science and technology, and talent,” a profound conceptual transformation is reflected in placing human development at the core of modernization. In 2025, “investing in people” was written into the Government Work Report for the first time; the Recommendations for the Fifteenth Five-Year Plan further emphasized “closely integrating investment in things and investment in people.” “Investing in people” is basically the strategic cultivation and accumulation of human capital, the most fundamental element of modern economic growth. It concerns not only individual well-being and the enhancement of capabilities, but also directly determines the pace of total factor productivity improvement, the strength of technological innovation capacity, and the country’s long-term position in the global competitive landscape.

Against this broad background, examining the relationship between “investment in things” and “investment in people” is by no means a simple binary choice; rather, it involves a profound reconstruction of development concepts, growth drivers, policy instruments, and resource allocation. Fiscal and tax policy, as a foundation and important pillar of national governance, is naturally embedded within this process of reconstruction. It is both a key instrument through which the government conducts macroeconomic regulation and implements countercyclical adjustment, and a fundamental means of redistributing social resources, providing basic public services, and guiding the behavior of micro-level actors. Therefore, scientifically clarifying the essential relationship between fiscal and tax policy and “investing in people,” analyzing the achievements and bottlenecks of current policy practice, and proposing systematic optimization measures carry extremely important theoretical significance and pressing practical urgency.

This paper attempts to move beyond the traditional perspective that simply regards “investing in people” as a type of social expenditure, and instead examines it within a three-dimensional framework consisting of macroeconomic stability, long-term growth potential, and equity in income distribution. The article will first clarify core concepts at the theoretical level and explain the historical context; it will then progressively develop the analysis from perspectives such as the composition of aggregate demand, marginal effects of growth, the balance between short-term and long-term objectives, and the pivotal role of income distribution; finally, it will focus on fiscal and tax policy itself, exploring in depth the theoretical foundations and practical bottlenecks of its key intervention points, and ultimately propose policy recommendations that combine strategic foresight with practical operability.

I. Conceptual Clarification and Historical Inevitability: Moving Toward a New Development Paradigm Driven by the Coordinated Synergy of Material and Human Capital

(I) Redefining “Investment in Things” and “Investment in People” and Distinguishing Their Economic Attributes

1. The Deeper Connotation of “Investment in Things”: In classical macroeconomic analysis, “investment in things” mainly refers to actual expenditures that form stocks of physical capital. Its core characteristics are as follows: First, the object is tangible, and the results of the investment take the form of touchable physical assets such as roads, bridges, factories, and equipment. Second, its value can be capitalized: these assets can be recorded on the balance sheet, and their value can be gradually transferred into products and services through depreciation. Third, property rights are relatively clear, which facilitates market transactions and collateralized financing. Fourth, the multiplier effect is direct and significant; especially under conditions of idle productive capacity, it can quickly stimulate demand in related industries such as steel, cement, and machinery. However, its limitations have also become increasingly prominent: first, diminishing marginal returns— as the capital stock increases, the contribution of each additional unit of investment to output tends to decline; second, a strong lock-in effect— once a specific physical capital structure has been formed, the costs of industrial transformation and spatial restructuring become very high; third, vulnerability to macroeconomic fluctuations— real estate and certain infrastructure investments often become sources of economic overheating or debt risk.

2. The Rich Implications of “Investment in People”: “Investment in people” is a more complex and multidimensional conceptual system. From an economic perspective, it is the productive accumulation of human capital— the knowledge, skills, health, creativity, and adaptive capacity embodied in human beings. Its core characteristics are as follows: First, the object is intangible and attached to the individual; human capital is inseparable from its owner and cannot be directly bought and sold in the way physical capital can be (only its services can be bought and sold). Second, it has positive externalities. When individuals improve their capabilities through investments in education and health, they not only increase their own income, but also benefit society through channels such as knowledge spillovers, improved social coordination efficiency, and reduced crime rates; the social returns are often greater than the private returns. Third, it is life-cycle-based and cumulative. Human capital investment runs throughout the entire course of life; early investment is the foundation for later investment, and it has a pronounced “multiplier effect” or “bottleneck effect” (early deficiencies are difficult to remedy). Fourth, its returns are long-term and uncertain. Its payback period is long, and it is affected by multiple factors such as individual endowments, market opportunities, and the social environment, which makes the risks relatively high. Fifth, it has the dual attributes of both consumption and investment. Receiving education and accessing medical care are both forms of current consumption that bring utility satisfaction and investments in future productive capacity.

(II) The Deep Historical Background and Strategic Considerations Behind Proposing “Close Integration”

Promoting a shift from the relative separation of “investment in things” and “investment in people” toward deep integration is an inevitable requirement arising from systemic changes in China’s stage of development, constraints, and development goals; its background is multiple and complex.

1. A Profound Transformation in the Mechanism Driving Economic Growth: China’s economy has already shifted from a stage mainly driven by factor inputs and investment to a stage of high-quality development driven primarily by innovation. The core of innovation-driven development is talent-driven development. The space for “Smithian growth” (extensive expansion), which relies solely on physical capital input, is narrowing, while “Schumpeterian growth” (intensive upgrading), driven by human capital and technological progress, is becoming the main engine. This means that the focus of resource allocation must shift from building out “hardware” networks more toward cultivating “software” capabilities, making “investment in people” the principal driving force for raising total factor productivity (TFP). The point of convergence between the two lies in the fact that high-quality human capital can improve the efficiency of the use of physical capital and its innovative content, while advanced physical infrastructure (such as digital networks and R&D platforms) can in turn empower the deployment and appreciation of human capital.

2. A Historic Turning Point in the Pattern of Population Development: China is undergoing the world’s largest-scale and fastest demographic structural transformation. In 2022, the total population recorded negative growth for the first time, marking the formal closure of the quantitative window of the “demographic dividend.” The degree of aging continues to deepen, and China is expected to enter a deeply aged society by 2035. This fundamental change brings dual pressure: on the one hand, constraints on the total labor supply are tightening, so the impact of shrinking numbers must be offset by improving labor quality (human capital) and tapping the “talent dividend”; on the other hand, the rising proportion of the elderly population requires society to provide a greater volume of “silver economy” services such as elderly care and healthcare, which in themselves are both consumption and a special form of “investment in people” (maintaining elderly human capital and developing silver human resources). At the same time, overcoming the predicament of low fertility urgently requires improving the childbearing environment through “investment in people” measures that reduce the cost of family childrearing (such as expanding childcare services and education subsidies).

3. Rebalancing Supply and Demand Under the Transformation of the Principal Social Contradiction: The principal social contradiction at present is manifested in the contradiction between the people’s ever-growing needs for a better life and unbalanced and inadequate development. The need for a better life is concentrated in such areas as higher-quality education, more reliable health protection, richer cultural and spiritual products, and a more harmonious ecological environment. The fulfillment of these needs depends to a large extent on improving the quality and expanding the capacity of public services in the field of “investing in people.” From the perspective of the economic cycle, insufficient effective demand, especially weak household consumption demand, is the outstanding contradiction at present. The deeper reasons for weak consumption lie in the slowdown in the growth of household disposable income, relatively large income distribution disparities, and the strong motive for “precautionary savings” brought about by education, healthcare, eldercare, housing, and the like. Increasing public expenditures on “investing in people” can not only directly raise the incomes of workers in related fields, but also reduce households’ worries through improving the social security net, thereby releasing consumption potential and promoting the achievement of a dynamic balance between supply and demand at a higher level.

4. The Reshaping of the Global Competitive Landscape and the Need for National Strategic Security: A new round of scientific and technological revolution and industrial transformation is advancing by leaps and bounds, and competition among major powers is increasingly manifested as competition in science and technology and competition for talent. The “bottleneck” problem in key core technologies is essentially a problem of insufficient reserves of high-end human capital. The modernization and security of industrial and supply chains cannot be achieved without the support of a large number of highly qualified technical and skilled personnel. Against this background, “investing in people,” especially investment in STEM (science, technology, engineering, and mathematics) education, basic research, and the cultivation of talent in frontier fields, directly relates to national strategic security and long-term competitiveness. This requires that fiscal resources must be tilted strategically to ensure that investment in human capital takes the lead.

5. The Practical Requirements of Fiscal Sustainability and the Optimization of Policy Effectiveness: After many years of large-scale investment, traditional infrastructure in many regions has approached saturation, and investment efficiency has declined. At the same time, the accumulation of local government debt risks has constrained the room for continuing to stimulate the economy through large-scale “investment in things.” By contrast, China still has obvious shortcomings in multiple fields of “investing in people” (for example, there remain gaps with developed countries in per capita education funding, the ratio of medical and nursing personnel, R&D investment intensity, and the like); public investment in these fields may have a higher social marginal rate of return and be more broadly inclusive. Optimizing the structure of fiscal expenditure and directing more incremental resources toward the field of human capital is a rational choice for improving the effectiveness of proactive fiscal policy, preventing and resolving fiscal risks, and achieving fiscal sustainability.

Therefore, the call of the times for “close integration” essentially requires us to move beyond the mindset that sets “things” and “people” in opposition or separation and to establish a new framework for development accounting: in the accumulation of national wealth, we must measure not only the abundance of physical capital, but also the depth of human capital; in macroeconomic management, we must not only use “investment in things” to stabilize short-term growth, but also rely on “investment in people” to consolidate the long-term foundation.

II. The Two Pillars in Aggregate Demand Management: The Macroeconomic Roles of Capital Expenditure and Consumption Expenditure

From the perspective of Keynesian macroeconomics, whether government capital expenditure (“investment in things”) or the “investment in people” component within current/transfer expenditure, both are key variables in constituting and regulating aggregate demand (AD) in society. Understanding their similarities and differences within the aggregate demand framework is a prerequisite for designing precise macroeconomic regulation policies.

(I) Commonalities as Components of Aggregate Demand

Both are important components of government expenditure (G), and increases in either can directly expand aggregate demand (AD = C + I + G + NX). During periods of economic recession or insufficient demand, expanding these two categories of expenditure is the principal means by which fiscal policy carries out countercyclical adjustment. Both can, through the multiplier effect, trigger round after round of consumption and investment responses, so that the ultimate increase in aggregate demand is several times the initial increase in government expenditure. In addition, both types of expenditure can create jobs: the former mainly in industries such as construction and manufacturing, and the latter in service sectors such as education, healthcare, and social services.

(II) Differences in the Structure of Aggregate Demand, Transmission Mechanisms, and Timing

1. Different Effects on Demand Structure: “Investment in things” directly increases demand for investment goods (means of production), stimulating related industries such as heavy industry and construction. Expenditure on “investing in people,” by contrast, is more often transformed into demand for consumer goods, especially service consumption. For example, when teachers’ salaries are paid, teachers use that income to purchase food, clothing, cultural services, and the like; subsidizing preschool education can directly increase families’ purchasing power for educational services. Therefore, the former more directly affects investment demand, whereas the latter more directly affects consumption demand.

2. Differences in Transmission Mechanisms and Speed: Projects involving “investment in things” usually require relatively long cycles for project initiation, approval, and construction; from the disbursement of funds to the formation of physical workload and the generation of demand stimulus, there is a certain time lag. But once such projects are launched, the scale of investment is concentrated, and the short-term stimulus effect may be very significant. Many expenditures under “investing in people,” such as raising pension standards, issuing student grants, and increasing subsidies for primary-level medical personnel, can be rapidly delivered to beneficiaries through the existing administrative system or social security network, and may be converted into consumer demand more quickly, with shorter policy lags, especially today with the widespread adoption of digital payment methods.

3. Differences in Income Distribution Effects and Multiplier Magnitudes: Classical research and real-world evidence show that transfer payments and consumption expenditures targeted at low-income groups or livelihood-related sectors often have fiscal multipliers greater than those of general infrastructure investment. The reason is that low-income groups have a higher marginal propensity to consume, and a larger portion of the transfer payments or income increases they receive will be used for immediate consumption, thereby forming final demand more quickly and more fully. By contrast, the distribution of returns from infrastructure investment may be more tilted toward capital owners and enterprises along the relevant industrial chains, and these entities have relatively higher marginal propensities to save. Therefore, in a context of wide income distribution gaps and suppressed consumption propensity, increasing expenditure on “investing in people” may produce superior effects in boosting aggregate demand and improving the structure of demand.

4. Different Pathways of Influence on Potential Growth Capacity: This is the most fundamental difference between the two. “Investment in things” directly raises the economy’s potential output capacity by increasing the capital stock and pushing the production possibility frontier outward, but its effect on productivity is indirect. “Investment in people,” by contrast, acts directly on total factor productivity (TFP) by improving the quality of labor (human capital) and promoting technological progress (human capital being the source of innovation), thereby raising the potential growth rate. In aggregate demand management, taking the latter into account means that current demand-stimulus policies are simultaneously laying the foundation for future supply capacity, thereby achieving, in short-term operations, a unification of demand-side management and supply-side structural reform.

Fiscal and Tax Policy and “Investing in People”: A Systematic Analytical Framework

Fiscal and tax policy support for “investing in people” is a multidimensional and multi-level systematic undertaking, and the essential nature of this relationship can be analyzed from three levels: objectives, instruments, and transmission mechanisms.

(I) The Level of Objectives: The Unification and Balancing of Multiple Objectives

Fiscal and tax policy support for “investing in people” is not oriented toward a single objective, but rather carries multiple strategic intentions:

1. Efficiency Objective: To correct market failures in the field of human capital investment, optimize the allocation of social resources, and promote economic growth. This is the economic rationale based on its positive externalities and public-good attributes.

2. Equity Objective: To guarantee every citizen equal opportunity to acquire basic capacity development, break the intergenerational transmission of poverty, and promote social mobility. This is the ethical requirement grounded in social justice and inclusive development.

3. Stability Objective: To smooth consumption and risk over households’ life cycles by providing social safety nets such as education, healthcare, and old-age security, to strengthen the resilience of economic and social development, and to play the role of a macroeconomic “automatic stabilizer.”

4. Development Objective: To serve the country’s long-term development strategies, such as innovation-driven development, rural revitalization, regional coordination, and green transformation, by providing talent support for these strategies through targeted human capital investment.

Tensions may exist among these objectives, such as short-term conflicts between efficiency and equity; the design of fiscal and tax policy therefore needs to seek balance dynamically, while sound policy design can achieve synergy and enhanced effectiveness—for example, universal education can be both equitable and efficient.

(II) The Level of Instruments: An Integrated Policy Toolbox of “Revenue, Expenditure, and Governance”

1. “Expenditure”: Fiscal expenditure policy, which is the most direct instrument.

First, direct provision: the government funds and operates public schools, hospitals, public training bases, eldercare institutions, and the like, providing services to residents free of charge or at low cost.

Second, fiscal subsidies: financial subsidies are provided to households (such as childcare subsidies and student grants), individuals (such as training vouchers), enterprises (such as employee training subsidies), or nonprofit service institutions, thereby reducing their costs.

Third, government purchase of services: purchasing services such as education, healthcare, eldercare, and vocational training from social actors, thereby guiding the market to increase high-quality supply.

Fourth, social security transfer payments: through social security systems such as pension insurance, medical insurance, and unemployment insurance, carrying out intertemporal and intergroup redistribution to guarantee basic capabilities.

2. “Revenue”: Tax policy, which is an incentivizing and guiding instrument.

First, tax reductions and exemptions: granting pre-tax deductions or tax credits against income tax for individuals’ human capital investment expenditures (such as tuition, medical expenses, training fees, and the like); granting super-deductions for enterprises’ R&D expenses and employee education expenditures; and reducing or exempting income tax, value-added tax, and other taxes for institutions engaged in nonprofit activities such as education and healthcare.

Second, tax expenditures: encouraging households to save for future education through special tax-system arrangements (such as tax deferral for the establishment of education savings accounts).

Third, optimization of the tax structure: increasing the share of direct taxes (such as individual income tax and property tax) to strengthen the redistributive function of taxation and raise more adequate fiscal resources for “investing in people.”

3. “Governance”: Budget management and the fiscal system

First, budget allocation: optimizing the expenditure structure and ensuring investment in key areas of “investing in people” through methods such as medium-term fiscal planning and zero-based budgeting.

Second, performance management: establishing a scientific and effective performance evaluation system to improve the efficiency of fund utilization.

Third, intergovernmental fiscal relations: through the division of administrative powers and expenditure responsibilities and the design of transfer payment systems, ensuring that governments at all levels, especially primary-level governments, have both the incentives and the capacity to fulfill their responsibilities in “investing in people.”

(III) The Level of Transmission Mechanisms: From Policy Instruments to Development Outcomes

Fiscal and tax policy influences human capital accumulation and economic development through the following chain:

Policy instruments → lowering the investment costs of households/enterprises → increasing private human capital investment → enhancing individual capabilities and incomes → aggregating into a stock of high-quality human capital → promoting innovation, raising productivity, and expanding consumption → achieving economic growth, equitable distribution, and social stability.

Any blockage at any stage of this transmission chain—for example, households being unable to respond to tax incentives because of credit constraints—will affect the ultimate effectiveness of the policy. Therefore, policy design must take into account the behavioral responses of micro-level actors and real-world constraints.

A Comparison of Growth Effects: An In-Depth Analysis of Marginal Returns, Cyclical Characteristics, and Differences in Risk

Comparing the economic effects of “investment in things” and “investment in people” from the dynamic perspective of growth theory can reveal more clearly the direction of structural optimization.

(I) Trends in Marginal Returns: Diminishing and Potentially Non-Diminishing

In the standard production function, continuous input of physical capital (K), under conditions where technology (A) and the quantity and quality of labor remain unchanged, inevitably leads to diminishing marginal output. This is the underlying theoretical reason for the decline in investment efficiency in some traditional industries in China. By contrast, the accumulation of human capital (H), especially improvements in knowledge and innovation capacity, may have the potential for non-diminishing or even increasing marginal returns. New growth theory (Romer, Lucas, et al.) points out that knowledge is non-rivalrous and partially non-excludable: one person’s use of knowledge does not prevent others from using it, and the more knowledge is used in production, the more new knowledge may be generated (the “standing on the shoulders of giants” effect). Therefore, sustained investment in core areas of “investing in people,” such as education and R&D, may yield continuously growing returns, which constitute the source of long-term economic growth.

(II) Return Cycles and Intergenerational Effects

Projects involving “investment in things” typically have economic lifespans of several decades, with returns mainly concentrated during the operational period. The return cycle of “investment in people” is as long as the human life cycle, and may even extend across generations. Investment in early childhood education may yield returns to society over the coming decades in the form of higher labor productivity, lower crime rates, and so on, and these investment effects may influence the next generation. This means that the evaluation of “investing in people” must adopt an ultra-long-term perspective, and any utilitarian assessment based solely on short-term GDP growth rates is one-sided.

(III) Risk Attributes: Sunk Costs and Adaptability Risks

Investment in physical capital often creates “sunk costs”; once the investment is completed, it is very difficult to convert its use (such as specialized factory buildings). In an era of rapid technological change, this “lock-in effect” may cause investments to become obsolete quickly, resulting in sunk losses. Although human capital also has specificity risks (such as the obsolescence of acquired skills), human learning capacity and adaptability allow human capital to be updated and reshaped through retraining and lifelong learning, making it more resilient. A person who has received a solid foundational education and possesses strong learning ability is better able to adapt to changes in technology and markets.

(IV) Externalities and Social Returns

As noted earlier, “investment in people” has strong positive externalities. A well-educated and healthy citizen not only benefits personally, but also benefits society through paying taxes, participating in community activities, and contributing to a positive environment. By contrast, the externalities of “investment in things” may be both positive and negative; for example, while infrastructure brings convenience, it may also generate negative externalities such as environmental pollution and ecological damage. Therefore, from the perspective of net social welfare, the net positive externalities of “investing in people” are generally more significant and more certain.

In a comprehensive comparison, at the early stage of economic development, when physical capital is extremely scarce, the marginal returns to “investment in things” are relatively high and should be prioritized. When physical capital has accumulated to a certain level and human capital becomes the more binding constraint, allocating more resources to “investing in people” becomes an inevitable choice for maintaining the vitality of economic growth and improving the quality of development. China is currently at a critical stage of this transition.

V. The Dialectical Unity of Short-Term Stability and Long-Term Development: The Dual Logic of “Close Integration”

Current policy emphasizes “close integration,” and it is necessary to accurately grasp the dual logic it embodies—short-term macroeconomic regulation and long-term strategic development—so as to avoid reducing it to a one-dimensional choice.

(I) Short-Term Logic: Enhancing the Precision and Effectiveness of Countercyclical Adjustment

In the face of demand contraction, the traditional approach has been to initiate large-scale infrastructure projects. Although this approach remains necessary, its limitations have become evident: first, the reserve of high-quality projects has diminished; second, constraints from local government debt have intensified; third, the stimulation of industrial chains is relatively rigid, with limited effects on driving emerging consumption. :Redirecting part of policy resources toward the field of “investing in people” can produce distinctive short-term effects:

1. Superior job creation effects: education, healthcare, and community services are typical labor-intensive sectors, where each unit of fiscal input typically creates more jobs than capital-intensive infrastructure projects, and these jobs are more closely tied to people’s livelihoods, helping to stabilize the incomes of low- and middle-income groups.

2. More direct consumption stimulus: increasing subsidies for preschool education can immediately reduce the burden on families and release other consumption; raising the reimbursement rate of basic medical insurance can reduce households’ expected medical expenditures and increase current consumption; strengthening vocational skills training can enhance workers’ employability and income expectations, thereby boosting consumer confidence. These measures can act more directly on consumption, which is the foundational component of economic growth.

3. More pronounced improvement in social expectations: in periods of heightened uncertainty, substantive government investment in areas related to people’s livelihoods—such as education, health, and eldercare—can effectively enhance residents’ sense of security and expectations of social stability, which has an irreplaceable psychological effect in repairing balance sheets and reversing pessimistic expectations.

Therefore, in the short term, “close integration” means that within fiscal stimulus programs, the weight and priority of “investment in people” projects should be significantly increased, making them an important means of expanding effective demand and stabilizing social expectations.

(II) Long-Term Logic: Building a People-Centered Foundation for Modernization

This is the fundamental purpose and strategic orientation of “close integration.”

1. The Core Path to Achieving High-Quality Population Development: In responding to low fertility and aging, it is not sufficient to rely solely on adjustments in population quantity; rather, comprehensive improvements in population quality must be pursued. Systematic “investment in people,” covering the entire process “from cradle to grave,” is the only path to optimizing the population structure, improving the overall quality of the population, and developing human resources across all age groups.

2. The Source of Cultivating New Quality Productive Forces: New quality productive forces are characterized by high technology, high efficiency, and high quality, and their development depends on scientific and technological innovation. Scientific and technological innovation ultimately depends on talent. Continuously increasing investment in basic research, STEM education, and the cultivation of high-end talent is to inject the most dynamic factors into new quality productive forces.

3. A Foundational Project for Promoting Common Prosperity: Common prosperity means prosperity in both material and spiritual life for all people. Material prosperity requires raising labor compensation and expanding the middle-income group, which depends on the broad improvement of human capital. Spiritual prosperity requires the nourishment of cultural education and health services. Reducing disparities in capability development across different groups and regions through “investment in people” is the most fundamental and effective path toward common prosperity.

4. Strategic Investment to Enhance Long-Term National Competitiveness: Competition among major powers, in the long run, is a competition of systems, and even more a competition for talent. A country that possesses the largest and highest-quality human capital in the world will stand in an unbeatable position in future competition in science, technology, the economy, and culture. Fiscal investment in human capital is the most forward-looking strategic investment a nation can make.

Short-term policies create conditions for long-term strategies and buy time; long-term strategies provide direction and anchoring for short-term policies. Under the framework of “close integration,” the two achieve dynamic unity: through effective short-term demand management, a stable macroeconomic environment is created for long-term human capital accumulation; and the accumulated strength of human capital over the long term will enhance the endogenous growth momentum and risk resilience of the economy, fundamentally reducing the pressure of short-term growth stabilization and forming a virtuous cycle of “short-term stability and long-term excellence.”

VI. Income Distribution: The Core Nexus Linking the Effectiveness of the Two Types of Investment

Whether it is the physical capital formed through “investment in things” or the human capital formed through “investment in people,” its economic value ultimately must be realized in the distribution process. A distorted income distribution system will greatly undermine the macro-social benefits of any investment. Therefore, a sound income distribution system is the key transmission mechanism and incentive foundation for ensuring that policies of “investing in people” achieve their intended effects.

(I) Primary Distribution: The Key Determinant of the Private Rate of Return on Human Capital

If the social distribution mechanism cannot ensure that “those with higher skills earn more” and “innovators earn more,” then the willingness of individuals and families to invest in human capital will be seriously dampened. At present, certain problems in China’s income distribution sphere are constraining the micro-level incentives for “investing in people”:

1. The share of labor compensation still needs to be raised: although it has improved in recent years, the proportion of labor compensation in primary distribution still has room for further increase. Ensuring that growth in workers’ compensation remains basically in step with economic growth, or even slightly exceeds growth in labor productivity, is the direct economic foundation for strengthening families’ capacity to invest in human capital.

2. The premium on human capital has not been fully reflected: in some industries and fields, the income gap between simple labor and complex labor, and between routine skills and highly sophisticated skills, has not been widened in a reasonable manner; the distorted phenomenon that “those who build missiles earn less than those who sell tea eggs” still exists (although its form has changed), and this suppresses investment in high-level, innovation-oriented human capital.

3. The market-based allocation of factors remains insufficient: institutional barriers such as the household registration system, establishment quotas, and industry monopolies hinder the free movement of labor, especially talent, preventing the value of their human capital from being optimally evaluated and realized in a broader market.

(II) The Role of Fiscal and Tax Policy in Promoting Equitable Distribution

Fiscal and tax policy is itself an important redistributive instrument and must work in concert with expenditure and tax policies that support “investing in people”:

1. Individual income tax reform: implementing a tax system that combines comprehensive and classified taxation, rationally setting basic expense deductions and special additional deduction standards, making the tax system fairer, and directly reducing the burdens of childrearing, education, and healthcare for low- and middle-income groups.

2. Property tax development: steadily advancing legislation and reform on real estate tax, appropriately regulating wealth disparities, and raising funds for public services.

3. Integration and upgrading of the social security system: raising the pooling level and benefit level of social security programs such as pensions and healthcare, and strengthening their redistributive and risk-sharing functions.

4. Precision-targeted fiscal transfer payments: increasing central government transfer payments to local governments, especially to underdeveloped regions, with a focus on safeguarding their expenditures on basic public services so as to provide children and residents there with equal starting points for development.

Only when the income distribution system can ensure that investment in human capital receives reasonable market returns, and can compensate for positive externalities and safeguard equality of starting point through redistributive mechanisms, will private decisions to engage in “investing in people” resonate in sync with the state’s macro-strategic intentions and generate powerful endogenous momentum.

Full Life-Cycle Coverage: The Main Links Through Which Fiscal and Tax Policy Exerts Force and Their Theoretical Depth

Fiscal and tax policy support for “investing in people” should follow the scientific laws of human capital formation and carry out systematic intervention across the full life cycle and through multiple stages. Each stage has its own distinctive economic-theoretical basis.

(I) Pregnancy, Infancy, and Early Childhood Education (Ages 0–6)

1. Key focus areas: prenatal and maternal healthcare and nutrition, universally accessible childcare services (ages 0–3), and the provision of universal, high-quality preschool education (ages 3–6), among others.

2. Theoretical basis: the “Heckman Curve (sample selection model, James Heckman)” shows that the rate of return on investment in early childhood is the highest, reflected not only in the development of cognitive abilities, but also in the cultivation of non-cognitive abilities such as perseverance and cooperativeness, and it also has a cost-saving effect (the cost of remedial education at later stages will be higher). Early intervention can effectively break the intergenerational cycle of poverty. The market exhibits serious “market failure” in the provision of childcare services. Issues such as information asymmetry, difficulty in supervising quality, and strong externalities require strong public fiscal intervention to establish standards and oversight and to provide universally accessible services.

(II) Primary Education and Secondary Education (Ages 6–18)

1. Key focus areas: high-quality and balanced development of compulsory education, universalization of upper secondary education, coordinated development of vocational education and general education, improvement of student nutrition, digitalization of education, and so forth.

2. Theoretical basis: education is regarded as a typical quasi-public good. The social returns to basic education far exceed the private returns and have strong positive externalities, such as improving the overall quality of the population and promoting democracy and social harmony. Provision entirely by the market would lead to under-supply and severe class stratification. Fiscal policy must assume primary responsibility for safeguarding fairness in educational opportunity; this is the cornerstone of social equity. Human capital theory indicates that this is the key stage for forming general human capital.

(III) Higher Education and Vocational Education (Ages 18 and Above)

1. Key focus areas: supporting the development of “Double First-Class” institutions, the development of application-oriented undergraduate and vocational undergraduate programs, improving the student aid system (scholarships, grants, student loans, and the like), and encouraging enterprises to participate in running educational institutions, among others.

2. Theoretical basis: higher education and advanced vocational education have stronger private-good attributes, but they still generate significant positive externalities, such as advancing frontier science and technology and cultivating social elites. There are “capital constraint” problems (such as poor families being unable to afford the costs), which require fiscal intervention through grants, student loans, and the like in order to ensure equality of opportunity. At the same time, for basic disciplines and scarce but less popular specialties, market signals fail, requiring targeted fiscal support in service of national strategy.

(IV) On-the-Job Training and Lifelong Learning (Working-Age Stage)

1. Key focus areas: subsidizing enterprise-based on-the-job training, supporting public practical training bases, promoting the linkage of skill-level certification with compensation, and allowing special individual income tax deductions for continuing education, among others.

2. Theoretical basis: Becker’s theory divides training into general training and specific training. Enterprises underinvest in general training because of the “externality” risk posed by employee mobility. This provides the rationale for government subsidies for general skills training. In today’s era of rapid technological iteration, lifelong learning has become essential, but individuals may face constraints of time and money; policies such as tax incentives and training vouchers can reduce individuals’ costs and stimulate motivation to learn.

(V) Health Maintenance and Medical and Health Services (Across the Full Life Cycle)

1. Key focus areas: improving universal basic medical insurance, increasing investment in public health and prevention, supporting the development of primary-level medical and health systems, and developing commercial health insurance, among others.

2. Theoretical basis: medical and health services are characterized by a high degree of information asymmetry (between doctors and patients), uncertainty (the occurrence of disease), and externalities (such as the prevention and control of infectious diseases). Full marketization would lead to “market failure,” resulting in problems such as supplier-induced demand, high costs, and poor accessibility. Public health is a pure public good. Fiscal policy must take the lead in basic medical and health services to ensure their public-interest character and accessibility; health is the precondition for human capital to function effectively.

(VI) Old-Age Security and the Development of Older Persons (Old-Age Stage)

1. Key focus areas: improving the multi-pillar pension insurance system, developing universally accessible eldercare services and integrated medical-eldercare services, supporting education for older persons, and developing elderly human resources, among others.

2. Theoretical basis: old-age security is an institutional arrangement for addressing “longevity risk” and achieving consumption smoothing across the life cycle. Basic pension insurance has functions of social mutual aid and income redistribution that the market cannot effectively provide. Fiscal policy bears the responsibility of being the “payer of last resort. Investment in the health of older persons is a “productive” investment that preserves human capital in old age and reduces the social burden of care.

The theoretical thread running through all stages is this: market failure (public goods, externalities, information asymmetry, incomplete markets) and fairness and justice (equality of opportunity). The role of fiscal and tax policy is to remedy these market defects and to safeguard social equity through redistribution, thereby optimizing, on the whole, the allocative efficiency and level of accumulation of human capital as this strategic factor.

VIII. Practical Obstacles: The Main Institutional Bottlenecks in Current Fiscal and Tax Policy Support for “Investing in People”

Although the direction is clear, the current fiscal and tax system still faces a series of deep-seated institutional and systemic obstacles in effectively supporting “investing in people.”

(I) The “Rigidity” and “Inertia” of the Expenditure Structure

The long-established model of a “development-oriented government” has given the structure of fiscal expenditure a pronounced “production and construction” character. Although the share of livelihood-related expenditures has risen substantially, the solidification of expenditure remains severe: first, the “base-growth” budgeting model makes adjustment of the existing structure exceptionally difficult, and incremental fiscal resources are more easily allocated along existing paths (for example, in the budgeting of scientific research project expenditures, inappropriate and excessive restrictions are imposed on human-related expenditures such as labor services, experts, and performance-related items). Second, in the “GDP race,” local governments still have strong incentives to direct resources toward “hard” projects that can rapidly boost GDP, rather than toward “soft” human capital projects with long cycles and slow results. Third, the pattern of departmental interests has become entrenched, and the adjustment and optimization of the budgets of departments such as education and health face internal resistance.

(II) The “Fragmentation” and “Blunting” of Tax Incentive Policies

1. Insufficient precision: special additional deductions under the individual income tax adopt fixed-amount standards and fail to fully take into account regional differences, actual family burdens, and inflation, thus providing limited support for high-cost education such as interest development and overseas study. The strength of deductions for childcare expenditures is clearly weaker than that for children’s education.

2. Limited strength: the pre-tax deduction ratio under the corporate income tax for employee education expenses (for general enterprises, 1.5% of total payroll) may be insufficient for knowledge-intensive enterprises that urgently need skills upgrading. The super-deduction policy for R&D expenses mainly incentivizes the front end of technological innovation, while providing insufficient incentives for subsequent stages such as commercialization of results and skills training.

3. Poor coordination: tax incentives are insufficiently aligned with industrial, employment, and education policies. For example, for specific skills training urgently needed by strategic emerging industries, there is a lack of coordinated and more forceful combinations of tax incentives to match it.

(III) The “Mismatch” and “Pressure” in Intergovernmental Fiscal Relations

This is one of the largest institutional bottlenecks. Administrative responsibilities for human capital investment, such as compulsory education and basic healthcare, have largely been assigned to local governments, especially primary-level county and township governments. However, under the current tax-sharing system, fiscal resources are concentrated upward, while primary-level governments have limited own-source revenues and are heavily dependent on transfer payments from higher levels. This pattern of “administrative responsibilities sinking downward while fiscal powers move upward” has led to the following:

1. Severe regional inequality: economically developed regions possess strong fiscal capacity, and their per capita expenditures on education and healthcare far exceed those of underdeveloped regions, creating a “Matthew effect” in human capital accumulation.

2. Distorted incentives for primary-level governments: faced with the expenditure pressure of the “three guarantees”—guaranteeing wages, guaranteeing basic operations, and guaranteeing basic livelihoods—primary-level governments first ensure rigid expenditures such as personnel salaries, but lack both the motivation and the capacity for projects that improve the quality of human capital and require long-term investment with no short-term visible results (such as teacher training, curriculum reform, and the upgrading of medical equipment).

3. The transfer payment system is imperfect: there are too many special transfer payments and they are too dispersed; they require local matching funds, increase the burden on primary-level governments, and make the use of funds rigid. Although general transfer payments are not earmarked for specific uses, their scale is still insufficient to enable underdeveloped regions to fully cover the expenditure gaps associated with their administrative responsibilities, and the scientific basis and transparency of the allocation formula still need improvement.

(IV) The “Short-Termism” and “Formalism” of Budget Performance Management

Current budget performance management places excessive emphasis on short-term, quantifiable economic indicators, such as project completion rates and the progress of fund disbursement, but lacks a scientific and effective evaluation system for long-term projects like “investing in people,” whose benefits are difficult to monetize, such as improvements in students’ overall quality and in health conditions. This leads to human capital projects being easily compressed during budget preparation and review because their “performance is not obvious.” The linkage between performance evaluation results and budget allocation is weak, and the binding force is limited.

(V) The “Absence” and “Poor Functioning” of Diversified Investment Mechanisms

There is excessive reliance on fiscal input, and “glass doors” and “swing doors” still remain for social capital and charitable funds seeking to enter fields such as education, healthcare, and eldercare. The recognition and management system for nonprofit organizations is complex, and tax incentive policies are unstable, which affects the enthusiasm of social actors. The application of the public-private partnership (PPP) model in the field of “investing in people” faces challenges related to law, risk, and return mechanisms. Families and individuals, as the most important investors in human capital, still face credit constraints that have not yet been fully removed (such as the coverage and quality of student loans).

(VI) The “Departmentalization” and “Fragmentation” of Policy Design and Implementation

“Investing in people” involves multiple departments, including finance, development and reform, education, health, human resources and social security, civil affairs, and science and technology. At present, there is a lack of a high-level overall coordination mechanism, and policies are often introduced from departmental perspectives, resulting in fragmented policymaking, inconsistent standards, and even mutual constraints. Data sharing is difficult, making it hard to conduct panoramic monitoring and evaluation of human capital investment.

These bottlenecks are intertwined and constitute systemic obstacles that constrain the effectiveness of fiscal and tax policy; they must be resolved through deepened reform.

System Reconstruction: Paths for Optimizing Fiscal and Tax Policy in Support of “Investing in People”

To respond effectively to the above challenges, it is necessary to carry out a systematic, holistic, and coordinated reconstruction of the fiscal and tax policy system:

(I) Implementing Fiscal Expenditure Structure Reform Oriented Toward the Full Life Cycle

1. Formulate and implement a “National Medium- and Long-Term Strategic Plan for Human Capital Investment”: clearly define China’s investment objectives, key tasks, and safeguard measures over the next 10–15 years in key age groups and key fields (such as early education, skills gaps, and healthy life expectancy), and use this as the basic program for medium-term fiscal expenditure planning.

2. Establish a budgetary priority guarantee mechanism for “human capital investment”: in annual budget preparation and medium- and long-term fiscal planning, clearly stipulate that the growth of expenditures on education, health, social security, employment, and the like should exceed the growth of regular fiscal revenue, and gradually raise their share of GDP to the international average level.

3. Deepen “zero-based budgeting” reform: conduct regular “reset-to-zero” evaluations of project expenditures in the field of “investing in people,” reallocate funds according to their strategic importance, urgency, and performance, break dependence on historical expenditure bases, and concentrate resources on the most effective links.

4. Optimize the internal structure of expenditure: while ensuring hardware investment, substantially raise the proportion of spending devoted to “software,” such as training for teachers and medical personnel, curriculum development, public health communication, and family parenting guidance services.

(II) Building an Incentive-Compatible, Precise, and Forceful Matrix of Tax Policies

1. Deepen individual income tax reform: first, continuously raise deduction standards for infant and toddler care, children’s education, elder support, catastrophic illness medical expenses, and the like, and establish a dynamic adjustment mechanism linked to the price index or per capita disposable income. Second, explore the establishment of “family human capital development accounts,” allowing family members to deposit funds up to a certain limit for designated purposes such as education, training, and healthcare, while enjoying tax deferral benefits.

2. Optimize corporate income tax policy: first, for enterprises with high technical requirements for employees, heavy training tasks, and good economic performance, allow an increase in the pre-tax deduction ratio for employee education expenses (for example, from the current 2.5% of total payroll to 5%), and grant super-deductions for expenditures on specific training such as digital transformation and green skills. Second, for enterprise investment in nonprofit vocational education and universally accessible childcare institutions, provide longer-term and stronger income tax reductions and exemptions, as well as preferential land policies.

3. Improve the tax incentive policy system: clean up and integrate tax incentives for education, healthcare, and eldercare scattered across various laws and regulations, and create a unified, transparent, and stable policy list. Increase the pre-tax deduction ratio for enterprises and individuals making donations to qualified fields of human capital.

(III) Reshaping Central–Local Fiscal Relations with Clearly Defined Powers and Responsibilities and Coordinated Fiscal Capacity

1. Further refine and elevate certain administrative responsibilities: consider gradually defining matters involving nationwide livelihood protection and talent mobility, such as compulsory education teachers’ salaries and basic pensions, as shared responsibilities of the central and local governments, and increase the central government’s share of the burden in order to reduce regional disparities.

2. Reform the transfer payment system: first, substantially increase the scale of general transfer payments and allocate them primarily according to the “factor method,” with factors fully reflecting the size of the resident population, age structure, geographic conditions, differences in the cost of public services, and the like, so as to strengthen the coordinating capacity of local governments. Second, consolidate and merge special transfer payments, establish a model of “major special programs + task lists,” and grant local governments greater autonomy. Establish a regular evaluation and exit mechanism for special transfer payments. Third, explore the implementation of transfer payments combining vertical and horizontal approaches, and encourage developed regions to support human capital development in underdeveloped regions through paired assistance, co-construction and sharing, and similar arrangements.

3. Improve the local tax system: accelerate legislation and reform on real estate tax, cultivate stable local tax sources, alleviate fiscal pressure at the primary level, and enable it to devote more fiscal resources to local public services.

(IV) Innovating Budget Performance Management Models Based on Long-Term Social Benefits

1. Develop a performance indicator library applicable to “investing in people”: introduce methods such as “cost–benefit analysis” and “cost–utility analysis,” and design multidimensional indicators covering outputs, outcomes, impacts, and the like. For example, education programs may assess students’ long-term academic achievement, quality of employment, and civic literacy; health programs may assess extensions in healthy life expectancy, reductions in disease burden, and the like.

2. Implement medium- and long-term performance evaluation: for major human capital investment projects, carry out follow-up evaluations over 3–5 years or even longer, and use the evaluation results as the core basis for subsequent budget arrangements and policy adjustments.

3. Strengthen the disclosure and utilization of performance information: publicly disclose to society the performance objectives, evaluation results, and audit reports of key projects, and accept public oversight. Strengthen the hard linkage between performance evaluation results and departmental budgets as well as cadre assessment.

(V) Stimulating Dynamic Mechanisms for Joint Investment by Diverse Social Actors

1. Lower entry thresholds and optimize the business environment: simplify the approval procedures for social actors to establish institutions in education, healthcare, eldercare, and similar fields, and provide fair treatment in land, planning, water, electricity, gas, and other such areas.

2. Innovate the public-private partnership (PPP) model: for fields such as vocational training, smart eldercare, and health management, design PPP models featuring shared risks and shared returns, and clarify government regulatory responsibilities and payment mechanisms.

3. Vigorously develop philanthropy: improve charitable tax incentive policies, facilitate charitable donations, and encourage the establishment of charitable trusts and foundations focused on fields such as education and health.

4. Improve the family financial support system: develop inclusive finance, innovate financial products such as education loans and training loans, improve the national student loan system, and reduce the liquidity constraints on family human capital investment.

(VI) Strengthening Cross-Departmental Coordination and Data Governance

1. Establish a high-level overall coordination mechanism: it is recommended that at the central level a “National Human Capital Development Commission” be established under the leadership of a comprehensive department, responsible for overall planning, policy coordination, and monitoring and evaluation.

2. Advance data sharing and integration: break down interdepartmental data barriers, build a unified “National Human Capital Database,” integrate information on education, employment, social security, health, household registration, and the like, and provide data support for policy formulation, effectiveness evaluation, and precise service delivery.

3. Strengthen policy communication and capacity building: popularize among the public the importance of human capital investment and explain the relevant fiscal and tax preferential policies. Strengthen training for personnel in primary-level fiscal and operational departments so as to enhance their capacity for policy implementation and project management.

Conclusion

The essence of the relationship between fiscal and tax policy and “investing in people” is a process in which public authority, through the mobilization, allocation, and management of resources, strategically shapes and systematically empowers a country’s most valuable factor of development—human capability. This relationship transcends the simple binary distinction between consumption and investment in traditional public finance; it requires that, in the top-level design of state governance, we genuinely place the comprehensive development of human beings at the center and, through sophisticated institutional arrangements, transform macro-level strategic intentions into rational choices by micro-level actors.

This study shows that promoting the close integration of “investment in things” and “investment in people” is a historical necessity for China to overcome the middle-income trap, respond to demographic structural challenges, and achieve high-quality development. It requires fiscal and tax policy to complete a profound transformation from “construction finance” and “subsistence finance” to “livelihood finance,” “development finance,” and “empowerment finance.” Although the current policy system has already laid a foundation, systemic obstacles still remain in areas such as expenditure inertia, tax incentives, intergovernmental relations, performance management, and social mobilization.

Solving these problems cannot rely on piecemeal patchwork; rather, it requires a profound revolution in the fiscal and tax system and policy paradigm. The core of this revolution is to establish the public investment concept of “human capital first” and to build a policy system that covers the full life cycle, is incentive-compatible, has clearly defined powers and responsibilities, and delivers significant performance. Its success depends not only on the efforts of fiscal authorities, but also on the coordination of the entire government governance system and on the forging of broad social consensus.

Looking to the future, a China that continuously, precisely, and efficiently devotes more resources to “investing in people” will surely be better able to unleash the creative potential of hundreds of millions of people, transform demographic pressure into talent advantages, and convert development challenges into opportunities for upgrading, thereby laying the strongest and most enduring human capital foundation for fully building a great modern socialist country and realizing the great rejuvenation of the Chinese nation. This is both the mission of fiscal and tax policy and the fundamental path to national prosperity and flourishing.

摘要:在我国经济发展面临需求收缩、供给冲击、预期转弱三重压力,且人口结构发生深刻变革的历史交汇期,宏观治理范式亟待从过度依赖物质资本积累转向物质资本与人力资本协同驱动的新阶段。推动“投资于物”与“投资于人”紧密结合,不仅是应对短期经济波动的逆周期调节需要,更是塑造长期发展新动能、实现高质量发展的战略基石。本文立足于宏观经济理论、公共财政理论与人力资本理论的交叉视角,系统构建了分析财税政策与“投资于人”本质关系的理论框架。文章深入辨析了“投资于物”与“投资于人”的内涵、经济属性及其在总需求管理中的不同角色,论证了在新时代背景下二者结合的必要性与紧迫性。本文的核心论点是:财税政策支持“投资于人”的本质,在于通过收支两端的设计,纠正人力资本形成过程中的市场失灵与正外部性问题,将人的全面发展内化为经济增长的内生变量。这一过程不仅关乎资源配置效率,更深刻牵涉到收入分配公平与代际社会流动。研究指出,当前我国相关财税政策体系虽已建立,但仍面临支出结构惯性固化、税收激励精准度不足、政府间财政关系错配、绩效评价体系短期化、多元投入机制不畅等系统性卡点。为此,本文提出了一整套融合短期需求管理与长期供给能力建设的政策建议体系,包括实施全生命周期导向的财政支出结构改革、构建激励相容的税收政策矩阵、重塑权责清晰的央地财政关系、创新基于长期效益的预算绩效管理模式,以及激发社会多元主体共同投资的动力机制。本研究旨在为构建与中国式现代化目标相适应、能够有效支撑人口高质量发展和创新驱动发展战略的“赋能型”财税政策体系提供理论参考与路径指引。

关键词: 财税政策;投资于人;人力资本;公共支出;总需求管理;全生命周期;收入分配;高质量发展

引言

改革开放以来,特别是上世纪九十年代中后期以来,以大规模基础设施投资、房地产开发和制造业产能扩张为标志的“投资于物”模式,成功推动了中国经济的高速增长与物质资本的急剧积累。这一模式在特定的历史阶段,有效破解了经济发展的基础瓶颈,形成了强大的供给能力,并通过对总需求的强力拉动,创造了持续数十年的增长奇迹。然而,随着我国经济发展进入新常态,传统要素驱动力减弱,资源环境约束趋紧,尤其是人口结构的根本性转变——劳动年龄人口达峰后缓慢下降、老龄化进程加速、总和生育率持续走低——使得既往过度依赖物质资本投资的增长路径面临严峻挑战。投资边际报酬递减规律日益显现,部分领域出现产能过剩与债务风险累积,经济增长的可持续性与包容性受到广泛关注。

与此同时,以教育、健康、技能培训和社会保障为核心的“投资于人”的战略价值,在国家治理和政策话语体系中被提升到前所未有的高度。从“以人为本”的科学发展观,到“人才是第一资源”的战略判断,再到党的二十大报告明确将“教育、科技、人才”进行一体化部署,彰显了将人的发展置于现代化核心位置的深刻理念转型。2025年,“投资于人”首次被写入《政府工作报告》;“十五五”规划《建议》进一步强调“将投资于物和投资于人紧密结合”。“投资于人”的本质是对人力资本这一现代经济增长最核心要素的战略性培育与积累。它不仅关乎个体福祉与能力提升,更直接决定着全要素生产率的进步速度、科技创新能力的强弱以及国家在全球竞争格局中的长期位势。

在此宏大背景下,探讨“投资于物”与“投资于人”的关系,绝非简单的二元取舍,而是涉及发展理念、增长动力、政策工具与资源配置的深刻重构。财税政策作为国家治理的基础与重要支柱,天然地嵌入于这一重构进程之中。它既是政府进行宏观经济调控、实施逆周期调节的关键工具,也是实现社会资源再分配、提供基本公共服务、引导微观主体行为的基本手段。因此,科学厘清财税政策与“投资于人”之间的本质关系,剖析当前政策实践的成效与瓶颈,进而提出系统性的优化方案,具有极其重要的理论意义和现实紧迫性。

本文试图超越将“投资于人”简单视为一项社会性支出的传统视角,而是将其置于宏观经济稳定、长期增长潜能与收入分配公平的三维坐标中,进行立体化审视。文章将首先在理论层面廓清核心概念,阐释时代背景;进而从总需求构成、增长边际效应、短期与长期目标平衡、收入分配枢纽作用等角度,层层递进展开分析;最后聚焦于财税政策本身,深入探讨其发力环节的理论依据与现实卡点,进而提出兼具战略前瞻性和现实可操作性的政策建议。

一、概念廓清与时代必然:迈向“物”“人”资本协同驱动的新发展范式

(一)“投资于物”与“投资于人”的再定义与经济属性辨析

1.“投资于物”的深层内涵:在经典宏观经济分析中,“投资于物”主要指形成物质资本存量的实际支出。其核心特征在于:第一,客体有形化,投资结果表现为道路、桥梁、厂房、设备等可触摸的实物资产。第二,价值可资本化,这些资产可在资产负债表中记录,并通过折旧方式将其价值逐步转移到产品和服务中。第三,产权相对明晰,便于市场交易和抵押融资。第四,乘数效应直接且显著,尤其在存在闲置生产能力的条件下,能快速拉动钢铁、水泥、机械等相关产业的需求。然而,其局限性也日益凸显:一是边际收益递减,随着资本存量增加,新增单位投资对产出的贡献趋于下降;二是锁定效应强,一旦形成特定物质资本结构,产业转型和空间重构的成本高昂;三是易受宏观波动影响,房地产和部分基础设施投资常成为经济过热或债务风险的源头。

2.“投资于人”的丰富意蕴:“投资于人”是一个更为复杂、多维的概念体系。从经济学角度看,它是对人力资本——蕴含于人身上的知识、技能、健康、创造力及其适应能力——的生产性积累。其核心特征在于:第一,客体无形且依附于个体,人力资本与其所有者不可分离,不能像物质资本那样被直接买卖(只能买卖其服务)。第二,具有正外部性。个人通过教育、健康投资提升自身能力,不仅增加自身收入,也通过知识溢出、提高社会协作效率、降低犯罪率等途径惠及社会,社会收益往往大于私人收益。第三,生命周期性与累积性。人力资本投资贯穿生命始终,早期投资是后期投资的基础,具有显著的“乘数效应”或“瓶颈效应”(早期不足难以弥补)。第四,收益长期性与不确定性。其回报周期长,且受个体禀赋、市场机遇、社会环境等多因素影响,风险较高。第五,兼具消费与投资二重属性。接受教育、享受医疗既是当期消费,带来效用满足,又是对未来生产能力的投资。

(二)提出“紧密结合”的深层次时代背景与战略考量

推动“投资于物”与“投资于人”从相对分离走向深度融合,是我国发展阶段、约束条件、发展目标发生系统性变化的必然要求,其背景具有多重复合性。

1.经济增长动力机制的深刻转换:我国经济已从要素驱动、投资驱动为主转向创新驱动为主的高质量发展阶段。创新驱动的核心是人才驱动。单纯依靠物质资本投入的“斯密式增长”(外延扩张)空间收窄,而依靠人力资本与技术进步推动的“熊彼特式增长”(内涵提升)成为主引擎。这意味着,必须将资源配置的重心,从铺设“硬件”网络更多地转向培育“软件”能力,使“投资于人”成为提升全要素生产率(TFP)的主动力。两者的结合点在于,高质量的人力资本能够提高物质资本的使用效率和创新含量,而先进的物质基础设施(如数字网络、研发平台)又能赋能人力资本的发挥与增值。

2.人口发展形态的历史性转折:中国正经历全球规模最大、速度最快的人口结构变迁。2022年人口总量首次负增长,标志着“人口红利”的数量窗口正式关闭。老龄化程度持续加深,预计到2035年将进入重度老龄化社会。这一根本性变化带来双重压力:一方面,劳动力供给总量约束趋紧,必须通过提升劳动力质量(人力资本)来对冲数量减少的影响,挖掘“人才红利”;另一方面,老龄人口占比上升,要求社会提供更庞大的养老、医疗等“银发经济”服务,这本身既是消费也是特殊形态的“投资于人”(维护老年人力资本、开发银色人力资源)。同时,低生育率困境的破解,亟需通过减轻家庭养育成本(如扩大托育服务、教育补贴)等“投资于人”的措施来改善生育环境。

3.社会主要矛盾转化下的供需再平衡:当前社会主要矛盾体现为人民日益增长的美好生活需要和不平衡不充分的发展之间的矛盾。美好生活需要集中体现在对更优质教育、更可靠健康保障、更丰富精神文化产品、更和谐生态环境等方面。这些需要的满足,很大程度上依赖于“投资于人”领域公共服务的提质扩容。从经济循环看,有效需求不足特别是居民消费需求不振,是当前突出矛盾。消费不振的深层次原因在于居民可支配收入增长放缓、收入分配差距较大,以及教育、医疗、养老、住房等带来的“预防性储蓄”动机强烈。加大“投资于人”的公共支出,既能直接增加相关领域从业者收入,又能通过完善社会保障网降低居民的后顾之忧,从而释放消费潜力,促进供需在更高水平上实现动态平衡。

4.全球竞争格局重塑与国家战略安全需要:新一轮科技革命和产业变革突飞猛进,大国竞争日益体现为科技竞争、人才竞争。关键核心技术“卡脖子”问题,本质上是高端人力资本储备不足的问题。产业链供应链的现代化与安全性,离不开大量高素质技术技能人才的支撑。在此背景下,“投资于人”尤其是对STEM(科学、技术、工程、数学)教育、基础研究、前沿领域人才培养的投入,直接关系到国家战略安全与长远竞争力。这要求财政资源必须战略性倾斜,确保人力资本投资先行。

5.财政可持续性与政策效能优化的现实要求:经过多年大规模投资,传统基础设施在许多区域已趋饱和,投资效率下降。同时,地方政府债务风险积累,制约了继续通过大规模“投资于物”来刺激经济的空间。相比之下,我国在“投资于人”的多个领域仍有明显短板(如人均教育经费、医护人员配比、研发投入强度等与发达国家有差距),这些领域的公共投资社会边际回报率可能更高,且更具普惠性。优化财政支出结构,将增量资源更多导向人力资本领域,是提高积极财政政策效能、防范化解财政风险、实现财政可持续的理性选择。

因此,“紧密结合”的时代呼唤,实质上是要求我们超越将“物”与“人”对立或割裂的思维定式,建立一种新的发展核算框架:在国民财富的积累中,既要计量物质资本的丰裕度,也要核算人力资本的厚实度;在宏观经济管理中,既要利用“投资于物”稳定短期增长,也要依靠“投资于人”夯实长期根基。

二、总需求管理中的双支柱:资本性支出与消费性支出的宏观经济角色

从凯恩斯主义宏观经济学视角审视,无论是政府的资本性支出(“投资于物”)还是经常性/转移性支出中的“投资于人”部分,都是构成并调节社会总需求(AD)的关键变量。理解它们在总需求框架中的异同,是设计精准宏观调控政策的前提。

(一)作为总需求构成部分的共同点

两者均属于政府支出(G)的重要组成部分,其增加都能直接扩大总需求(AD = C + I + G + NX)。在经济衰退或需求不足时期,扩大这两类支出是财政政策进行逆周期调节的主要手段。它们都能通过乘数效应,引发一轮又一轮的消费和投资反应,使最终引起的总需求增量数倍于最初的政府支出增量。此外,两类支出都能创造就业岗位,前者主要在建筑、制造等行业,后者则在教育、医疗、社会服务等服务业。

(二)在总需求结构、传导机制与时效上的差异

1.需求结构影响不同:“投资于物”直接增加的是对投资品(生产资料)的需求,拉动的是重工业、建筑业等相关产业。“投资于人”的支出,则更多转化为对消费品特别是服务消费的需求。例如,支付教师工资,教师会用其收入购买食品、衣物、文化服务等;补贴学前教育,能直接增加家庭对教育服务的购买力。因此,前者更直接地影响投资需求,后者则更直接地影响消费需求。

2.传导机制与速度差异:“投资于物”项目通常需要较长的立项、审批、建设周期,从资金下达到形成实物工作量、产生需求拉动,存在一定的时滞。但其一旦启动,投资规模集中,短期拉动效应可能非常显著。“投资于人”的许多支出,如提高养老金标准、发放助学金、增加基层医务人员补贴等,则可以通过现有行政体系或社保网络迅速落实到受益对象,转化为消费需求的速度可能更快,政策时滞更短,尤其在数字化支付手段普及的今天。

3.收入分配效应与乘数大小差异:经典研究和现实证据表明,针对低收入群体或民生领域的转移支付和消费性支出,其财政乘数往往大于一般性的基础设施投资。原因在于,低收入群体的边际消费倾向更高,获得的转移支付或收入增加会更大部分用于即时消费,从而更快、更充分地形成最终需求。而基础设施投资的收益分配可能更偏向资本所有者和相关产业链上的企业,这些主体的边际储蓄倾向相对较高。因此,在收入分配差距较大、消费倾向受抑制的背景下,增加“投资于人”的支出,对于提振总需求、改善需求结构可能具有更优效果。

4.对潜在增长能力的影响路径不同:这是二者最根本的区别。“投资于物”通过增加资本存量直接提升经济的潜在产出能力,将生产可能性边界向外扩展,但其对生产率的影响是间接的。“投资于人”则通过提升劳动力的质量(人力资本)和促进技术进步(人力资本是创新的源泉),直接作用于全要素生产率(TFP),从而提升潜在增长率。在总需求管理中,兼顾后者,意味着当下的需求刺激政策同时也在为未来的供给能力打基础,实现了需求侧管理与供给侧结构性改革在短期操作上的统一。

三、财税政策与“投资于人”:一个系统性分析框架

财税政策对“投资于人”的支持,是一个多维度、多层次的系统工程,其关系本质可以从目标、工具与传导机制三个层面进行分析。

(一)目标层面:多元目标的统一与权衡

财税政策支持“投资于人”并非单一目标导向,而是承载着多重战略意图:

1.效率目标:纠正人力资本投资领域的市场失灵,优化社会资源配置,促进经济增长。这是基于其正外部性和公共品属性的经济学理由。

2.公平目标:保障每个公民获得基本能力发展的平等机会,阻断贫困的代际传递,促进社会流动。这是基于社会正义与包容性发展的伦理要求。

3. 稳定目标:通过提供教育、医疗、养老保障等社会安全网,平滑居民生命周期内的消费与风险,增强经济社会发展的韧性,起到宏观经济“自动稳定器”的作用。

4.发展目标:服务于国家长期发展战略,如创新驱动发展、乡村振兴、区域协调、绿色转型等,通过定向的人力资本投资为这些战略提供人才支撑。

这些目标之间可能存在张力,如效率与公平的短期冲突等,财税政策的设计需要在动态中寻求平衡,而良好的政策设计可以实现协同增效,比如普惠性教育既公平又高效等。

(二)工具层面:“收、支、管”三位一体的政策工具箱

1.“支”:财政支出政策,这是最直接的工具。

一是直接提供:政府出资举办公立学校、医院、公共实训基地、养老机构等,免费或低价向居民提供服务。

二是财政补贴:对家庭(如育儿补贴、助学金)、个人(如培训券)、企业(如职工培训补贴)或非营利服务机构等提供资金补贴,降低其成本。

三是政府购买服务:向社会力量购买教育、医疗、养老、职业培训等服务,引导市场增加优质供给。

四是社会保障转移支付:通过养老保险、医疗保险、失业保险等社保体系,进行跨期和跨群体的再分配,保障基本能力。

2.“收”:税收政策,这是激励性、引导性的工具。

一是税收减免:对个人的人力资本投资支出(学费、医疗费、培训费等)给予所得税税前扣除或抵免;对企业发生的研发费用、职工教育经费给予加计扣除;对从事教育、医疗等非营利活动的机构减免所得税、增值税等。

二是税式支出:通过特殊的税收制度安排(如设立教育储蓄账户的税收递延等),鼓励家庭为未来教育进行储蓄。

三是税收结构优化:提高直接税(如个人所得税、财产税等)比重,增强税收的再分配功能,为“投资于人”筹集更充足的财力。

3.“管”:预算管理与财政体制

一是预算分配:通过中期财政规划、零基预算等方法,优化支出结构,保障“投资于人”的重点领域投入。

二是绩效管理:建立科学有效的绩效评价体系,提高资金使用效率。

三是政府间财政关系:通过事权与支出责任划分、转移支付制度设计,确保各级政府特别是基层政府有动力、有能力履行“投资于人”的职责。

(三)传导机制层面:从政策工具到发展成果

财税政策通过以下链条影响人力资本积累与经济发展:

政策工具 → 降低家庭/企业投资成本 → 增加私人人力资本投资 → 提升个体能力与收入 → 加总形成高质量人力资本存量 → 促进创新、提高生产率、扩大消费 → 实现经济增长、公平分配与社会稳定。

这个传导链条中任何一个环节受阻,如家庭因信贷约束无法响应税收激励等,都会影响政策最终效果。因此,政策设计必须考虑微观主体的行为反应和现实约束。

四、增长效应比较:边际报酬、周期特征与风险差异的深入剖析

从增长理论的动态视角比较“投资于物”与“投资于人”的经济效应,能更清晰地揭示结构优化的方向。

(一)边际报酬趋势:递减与可能的非递减

在标准生产函数中,物质资本(K)的持续投入,在技术(A)和劳动力数量与质量不变的情况下,其边际产出必然递减。这是我国部分传统行业投资效率下降的深层理论原因。相比之下,人力资本(H)的积累,尤其是知识、创新能力的提升,可能存在边际报酬非递减甚至递增的潜力。新增长理论(罗默、卢卡斯等)指出,知识具有非竞争性和部分非排他性,一个人使用知识并不妨碍他人使用,且知识在生产中使用越多,可能产生的新知识越多(“站在巨人肩膀上”效应)。因此,对教育、研发等“投资于人”的核心领域,持续投入可能带来持续增长的回报,这是经济长期增长的源泉。

(二)收益周期与代际影响

“投资于物”的项目,其经济寿命通常在几十年,收益主要集中在运营期。“投资于人”的收益周期则与人的生命周期等长,甚至跨越代际。对儿童早期教育的投资,其收益可能在未来几十年以更高的劳动生产率、更低的犯罪率等形式回报社会,并且这种投资效果会影响其下一代。这意味着,对“投资于人”的评估必须具有超长期的视野,任何基于短期GDP增速的功利性评价都是片面的。

(三)风险属性:沉淀成本与适应性风险

物质资本投资往往形成“沉淀成本”,一旦投资完成,其用途转换非常困难(如专用厂房等)。在技术快速变革的时代,这种“锁定效应”可能导致投资很快过时,形成沉没损失。人力资本虽然也具有专用性风险(如所学技能过时等),但人的学习能力和适应性使得人力资本可以通过再培训、终身学习进行更新和重塑,其“韧性”更强。一个接受了良好基础教育和具备强学习能力的人,更能适应技术和市场的变迁。

(四)外部性与社会收益

如前所述,“投资于人”具有强烈的正外部性。一个受过良好教育、身体健康的公民,不仅自己受益,还通过纳税、参与社区活动、创造良好环境等使社会受益。而“投资于物”的外部性可能正负兼具,如基础设施带来便利的同时也可能有环境污染、生态破坏等负外部性。因此,从社会净福利角度看,“投资于人”的净正外部性通常更为显著和确定。

综合比较,在经济发展初期,物质资本极度稀缺,“投资于物”的边际报酬较高,应作为优先选项。当物质资本积累到一定水平,人力资本成为更紧的约束时,将资源更多配置于“投资于人”,是保持经济增长活力、提升发展质量的必然选择。我国当前正处于这一转折的关键时期。

五、短期稳定与长期发展的辩证统一:“紧密结合”的双重逻辑

当前政策强调“紧密结合”,必须准确把握其中所蕴含的短期宏观经济调控与长期发展战略布局的双重逻辑,避免将其简化为单向度的选择。

(一)短期逻辑:提升逆周期调节的精准性与有效性

面对需求收缩,传统上倾向于启动大型基建项目。这一方式虽仍有必要,但其局限性已现:一是优质项目储备减少;二是地方政府债务约束强化;三是拉动产业链相对固化,对新兴消费带动作用有限。将部分政策资源转向“投资于人”领域,能在短期内产生独特效果:

1.就业创造效应更优:教育、医疗、社区服务等是典型的劳动密集型行业,单位财政投入创造的就业岗位数量通常高于资本密集型的基建项目,且这些岗位更贴近民生,有助于稳定中低收入群体收入。

2.消费刺激更直接:增加学前教育补贴,能立即减轻家庭负担,释放其他消费;提高基本医保报销比例,能减少家庭医疗支出预期,增加即期消费;加强职业技能培训,能提升劳动者就业能力和收入预期,提振消费信心。这些措施能更直接地作用于消费这一经济增长的基础环节。

3.社会预期改善更明显:在不确定性增强的时期,政府在教育、健康、养老等民生领域的实质性投入,能有效增强居民的安全感和社会稳定预期,这对于修复资产负债表、扭转悲观预期具有不可替代的心理作用。

因此,短期内的“紧密结合”,意味着在财政刺激计划中,应显著提高“投资于人”类项目的权重和优先级,将其作为扩大有效需求、稳定社会预期的重要手段。

(二)长期逻辑:构筑以人为中心的现代化根基

这是“紧密结合”的根本目的和战略指向。

1.实现人口高质量发展的核心路径:应对低生育率、老龄化,不能仅仅依靠人口数量的调节,更要追求人口质量的全面提升。系统性的“投资于人”,覆盖从“摇篮到坟墓”的全过程,是优化人口结构、提升国民综合素质、开发各年龄段人力资源的唯一途径。

2.培育新质生产力的源泉:新质生产力的特点是高科技、高效能、高质量,其发展依托于科技创新。科技创新归根结底靠人才。持续加大对基础研究、STEM教育、高端人才培养的投入,就是为新质生产力注入最活跃的要素。

3.促进共同富裕的基础工程:共同富裕是全体人民物质和精神生活的富裕。物质富裕需要提高劳动报酬和扩大中等收入群体,这依赖于人力资本的普遍提升。精神富裕则需要文化教育、健康服务的滋养。通过“投资于人”缩小不同群体、不同地区在能力发展上的差距,是走向共同富裕最根本、最有效的途径。

4.增强国家长远竞争力的战略投资:大国竞争,长远看是制度竞争,更是人才竞争。一个拥有世界最庞大、最优质人力资本的国家,将在未来的科技、经济、文化竞争中立于不败之地。财政对人力资本的投入,是国家最富远见的战略投资。

短期政策为长期战略创造条件、赢得时间;长期战略为短期政策指明方向、提供锚定。两者在“紧密结合”的框架下实现了动态统一:通过短期有效的需求管理,为长期的人力资本积累创造稳定的宏观经济环境;而长期人力资本的厚积薄发,又将增强经济的内生增长动力和抗风险能力,从根本上减轻短期稳增长的压力,形成“短期稳、长期优”的良性循环。

六、收入分配:联动两类投资效能发挥的核心枢纽

无论是“投资于物”形成的物质资本,还是“投资于人”形成的人力资本,其经济价值最终都需要在分配环节实现。一个扭曲的收入分配制度,会使任何投资的宏观社会效益大打折扣。因此,健全的收入分配制度是确保“投资于人”政策取得预期效果的关键传导机制和激励基础。

(一)初次分配:决定人力资本私人回报率的关键

如果社会分配机制不能使“技高者多得”、“创新者多得”,那么个人和家庭进行人力资本投资的积极性就会严重受挫。当前我国收入分配领域存在的一些问题,制约了“投资于人”的微观动力:

1.劳动报酬占比有待提高:虽然近年来有所改善,但劳动报酬在初次分配中的比重仍有提升空间。保障劳动者报酬增长与经济增长基本同步、甚至略快于劳动生产率增长,是增强家庭人力资本投资能力的直接经济基础。

2.人力资本溢价未能充分体现:在一些行业和领域,简单劳动与复杂劳动、常规技能与高精尖技能的收入差距未能合理拉开,存在“搞导弹的不如卖茶叶蛋”的扭曲现象(虽然形式有所变化),这抑制了对高层次、创新型人力资本的投资。

3.要素市场化配置不充分:户籍、编制、行业垄断等制度性壁垒,阻碍了劳动力特别是人才的自由流动,使其人力资本价值无法在更广阔的市场中得到最优评价和实现。

(二)财税政策在促进公平分配中的角色

财税政策本身是重要的再分配工具,必须与支持“投资于人”的支出和税收政策协同发力:

1.个人所得税改革:实行综合与分类相结合税制,合理设定基本费用扣除和专项附加扣除标准,使税制更加公平,并直接减轻中低收入育儿、教育、医疗负担。

2.财产税建设:稳步推进房地产税立法与改革,适当调节财富差距,为公共服务筹集资金。

3.社会保障制度的整合与提高:提高养老、医疗等社会保障的统筹层次和待遇水平,增强其再分配和风险共济功能。

4.财政转移支付的精准滴灌:加大中央对地方特别是欠发达地区的转移支付,重点保障其基本公共服务支出,为那里的孩子和居民提供平等的发展起点。

只有当收入分配制度能够确保人力资本投资获得合理市场回报,并能通过再分配机制补偿正外部性、保障起点公平时,“投资于人”的私人决策才会与国家的宏观战略意图同频共振,形成强大内生动力。

七、全生命周期覆盖:财税政策发力的主要环节与理论纵深

财税政策支持“投资于人”应遵循人力资本形成的科学规律,进行全生命周期、多环节的系统干预。每个环节都有其独特的经济学理论依据。

(一)孕期、婴幼儿及早期教育(0-6岁)

1、环节重点:孕产期保健与营养、普惠性托育服务(0-3岁)、普及有质量的学前教育(3-6岁)等。

2、理论依据:“Heckman曲线(样本选择模型James Heckman)”表明,对幼儿期的投资回报率最高,不仅体现在认知能力发展上,还体现在非认知能力如毅力、合作精神等的培养上,并具有成本节约效应(后期补偿教育成本会更高)。早期干预能有效打破贫困的代际循环。市场在托育服务供给上存在严重的“市场失灵”。如信息不对称、质量难监管、外部性强等,需要公共财政强力介入,建立标准和监管,并提供普惠性服务。

(二)基础教育与中等教育(6-18岁)

1、环节重点:义务教育优质均衡发展、高中阶段教育普及、职业教育与普通教育协调发展、学生营养改善、教育数字化等。

2、理论依据:教育被视为典型的准公共品。基础教育的社会收益远大于私人收益,具有强大的正外部性,如提高国民素质、促进民主与社会和谐等。完全由市场提供会导致供给不足和严重的阶层固化。财政必须承担主体责任,保障教育机会的公平性,这是社会公平的基石。人力资本理论指出,这是形成通用性人力资本的关键阶段。

(三)高等教育与职业教育(18岁以上)

1、环节重点:支持“双一流”建设、应用型本科和职业本科发展、完善学生资助体系(奖学金、助学金、助学贷款等)、鼓励企业参与办学等。

2、理论依据:高等教育和高级职业教育具有更强的私人产品属性,但依然存在显著的正外部性,如推动前沿科技、培养社会精英等。存在“资本约束”问题(贫困家庭无力负担等),需要财政通过助学金、助学贷款等进行干预,保障机会公平。同时,对于基础学科、冷门紧缺专业,市场信号失灵,需要财政进行定向扶持,服务于国家战略。

(四)在职培训与终身学习(劳动年龄阶段)

1、环节重点:补贴企业在职培训、支持公共实训基地、推行技能等级认定与薪酬挂钩、个人所得税继续教育专项扣除等。

2、理论依据:贝克尔的理论将培训分为通用性培训和专用性培训。企业对于通用性培训投资不足,因为存在员工流动的“外部性”风险。这为政府补贴通用技能培训提供了理由。在技术快速迭代的今天,终身学习成为必须,但个人可能面临时间与资金的约束,税收激励和培训券等政策可以降低个人成本,激发学习动力。

(五)健康维护与医疗卫生(全生命周期)

1、环节重点:完善全民基本医保、加大公共卫生和预防投入、支持基层医疗卫生体系建设、发展商业健康保险等。

2、理论依据:医疗卫生服务具有高度的信息不对称(医生与患者)、不确定性(疾病发生)和外部性(传染病防治等)。完全市场化会导致“市场失灵”,出现供给诱导需求、费用高昂、可及性差等问题。公共卫生是纯公共品。财政必须主导基本医疗卫生服务,保障其公益性和可及性,健康是人力资本发挥作用的前提。

(六)养老保障与老年人发展(老年阶段)

1、环节重点:完善多支柱养老保险体系、发展普惠养老服务和医养结合、支持老年教育、开发老年人力资源等。

2、理论依据:养老保障是应对“长寿风险”、实现生命周期内消费平滑的制度安排。基本养老保险具有社会共济和收入再分配功能,市场无法有效提供。财政承担着“最终付款人”的责任。对老年健康的投入,是维护老年期人力资本、减轻社会照料负担的“生产性”投资。

贯穿所有环节的理论主线是:市场失灵(公共品、外部性、信息不对称、不完全市场)和公平正义(机会均等)。财税政策的角色就是弥补这些市场缺陷,并通过再分配保障社会公平,从而在整体上优化人力资本这一战略要素的配置效率与积累水平。

八、现实梗阻:当前财税政策支持“投资于人”的主要制度卡点

尽管方向明确,但现行财税体制在有效支持“投资于人”方面仍面临一系列深层次的体制机制障碍。

(一)支出结构的“刚性”与“惯性”

长期形成的“发展型政府”模式,使财政支出结构带有强烈的“生产建设”色彩。尽管民生支出占比已大幅提高,但支出固化现象严重:一是“基数增长”预算模式,导致存量结构调整异常困难,新增财力更容易沿原有路径配置(科研项目支出预算中对劳务、专家、绩效等与人有关的支出作不适当的过多限制等)。二是地方政府在“GDP竞赛”中,依然有强烈的动机将资源投向能快速拉动GDP的“硬”项目,而非周期长、见效慢的“软”人力资本项目。三是部门利益格局固化,教育、卫健等部门预算的调整优化面临内部阻力。

(二)税收激励政策的“碎片化”与“钝化”

1.精准性不足:个人所得税专项附加扣除采用定额标准,未能充分考虑地区差异、家庭实际负担和通货膨胀,对兴趣培养、海外留学等高成本教育的支持有限。对托育支出的扣除力度明显弱于子女教育。

2.力度有限:企业所得税对职工教育经费的税前扣除比例(一般企业为工资总额的1.5%)对于知识密集型、急需技能更新的企业可能不够。研发费用加计扣除政策主要激励技术创新前端,对后续的成果转化和技能培训环节激励不足等。

3.协同性差:税收优惠与产业、就业、教育政策衔接不够。例如,对战略性新兴产业急需的特定技能培训,缺乏与之配套的、力度更大的税收激励组合拳等。

(三)政府间财政关系的“错配”与“压力”

这是最大的制度性卡点之一。人力资本投资的事权,如义务教育、基本医疗等大多被划归地方政府,特别是县乡基层政府。然而,在现行分税制体制下,财力向上集中,基层政府的自有财源有限,严重依赖上级转移支付。这种“事权下沉、财权上移”的格局导致:

1.区域严重不均等:经济发达地区财力雄厚,人均教育、医疗支出远高于欠发达地区,造成人力资本积累的“马太效应”。

2.基层政府激励扭曲:面对“保工资、保运转、保基本民生”的“三保”支出压力,基层政府首先确保的是人员工资等刚性支出,对于需要长期投入、短期不见效的人力资本质量提升项目(如教师培训、课程改革、医疗设备更新等)缺乏动力和能力。

3.转移支付制度不完善:专项转移支付过多过散,要求地方配套,加重基层负担,且资金使用僵化。一般性转移支付虽不指定用途,但规模仍不足以让欠发达地区完全弥补事权支出缺口,且分配公式的科学性、透明度有待提高。

(四)预算绩效管理的“短视化”与“形式化”

现行预算绩效管理过于强调短期、可量化的经济指标,如项目完工率、资金支付进度等,对于“投资于人”这类长期性、效益难以货币化的项目,如学生综合素质提升、健康状况改善等,缺乏科学有效的评价体系。这导致在预算编制和审核中,人力资本项目容易因“绩效不明显”而被压缩。绩效评价结果与预算分配挂钩不紧,约束力弱。

(五)多元投入机制的“缺位”与“不畅”

过度依赖财政投入,社会资本、慈善资金进入教育、医疗、养老等领域的“玻璃门”、“弹簧门”依然存在。非营利组织的认定和管理制度复杂,税收优惠政策不稳定,影响了社会力量的积极性。政府与社会资本合作(PPP)模式在“投资于人”领域的应用面临法律、风险和回报机制等挑战。家庭和个人作为最重要的人力资本投资主体,其面临的信贷约束(如助学贷款覆盖面和质量)仍未完全解除。

(六)政策设计与执行的“部门化”与“分割化”

“投资于人”涉及财政、发改、教育、卫健、人社、民政、科技等多个部门。目前缺乏高层次的统筹协调机制,政策出台往往从部门视角出发,导致政出多门、标准不一,甚至相互掣肘。数据共享难,难以对人力资本投资进行全景式监测和评估。

这些卡点相互交织,构成了制约财税政策效能发挥的系统性障碍,必须通过深化改革予以破解。

九、体系重构:支持“投资于人”的财税政策优化路径

为有效应对上述挑战,必须进行系统性、整体性、协同性的财税政策体系重构:

(一)实施全生命周期导向的财政支出结构改革

1.制定并实施“国家人力资本投资中长期战略规划”:明确未来10-15年我国在关键年龄段和关键领域(早期教育、技能短板、健康寿命等)的投资目标、重点任务和保障措施,作为财政中期支出规划的基本纲领。

2.建立“人力资本投资”预算优先保障机制:在年度预算编制和中长期财政规划中,明确规定教育、卫生、社保、就业等支出增长高于经常性财政收入增长的幅度,并逐步提高其占GDP的比重至国际平均水平。

3.深化“零基预算”改革:对“投资于人”领域的项目支出,定期进行“清零”式评估,根据其战略重要性、紧迫性和绩效表现重新分配资金,打破支出基数依赖,将资源集中到最有效的环节。

4.优化支出内部结构:在保障硬件投入的同时,大幅提高用于“软件”的支出比例,如教师和医护人员的培训、课程研发、公共卫生宣传、家庭养育指导服务等。

(二)构建激励相容、精准有力的税收政策矩阵

1.深化个人所得税改革:一是持续提高婴幼儿照护、子女教育、赡养老人、大病医疗等扣除标准,建立与物价指数或人均可支配收入挂钩的动态调整机制。二是探索设立“家庭人力资本发展账户”,允许家庭成员存入一定限额资金,用于教育、培训、医疗等指定用途,享受税收递延优惠。

2.优化企业所得税政策:一是对从业人员技术要求高、培训任务重、经济效益较好的企业,可允许其提高职工教育经费税前扣除比例(如由现行工资总额的2.5%提高至5%),并对用于数字化转型、绿色技能等特定培训的支出给予加计扣除。二是对企业投资举办非营利性职业教育、普惠性托育机构,给予更长期限、更大力度的所得税减免和土地优惠政策。

3.完善税收优惠政策体系:清理整合散见于各法规中针对教育、医疗、养老的税收优惠,形成统一、透明、稳定的政策清单。对向符合条件的人力资本领域进行捐赠的企业和个人,提高税前扣除比例。

(三)重塑权责清晰、财力协调的央地财政关系

1.进一步细化并上移部分事权:考虑将义务教育教师工资、基础养老金等涉及全国性民生保障和人才流动的事项,逐步明确为中央与地方共同事权,并提高中央负担比例,减少区域差距。

2.改革转移支付制度:一是大幅增加一般性转移支付规模,并主要按“因素法”分配,因素应充分体现常住人口数量、年龄结构、地理条件、公共服务成本差异等,增强地方政府统筹能力。二是整合归并专项转移支付,建立“大专项+任务清单”模式,赋予地方更多自主权。建立专项转移支付定期评估和退出机制。三是探索实施纵向与横向相结合的转移支付,鼓励发达地区通过对口支援、共建共享等方式,支持欠发达地区人力资本发展。

3.健全地方税体系:加快房地产税立法与改革,培育地方稳定税源,缓解基层财政压力,使其有更多财力用于本地公共服务。

(四)创新基于长期社会效益的预算绩效管理模式

1.开发适用于“投资于人”的绩效指标库:引入“成本—效益分析”、“成本—效用分析”等方法,设计涵盖产出、结果、影响等多维度的指标。例如,教育项目可评估学生长期学业成就、就业质量、公民素养;健康项目可评估健康寿命延长、疾病负担减轻等。

2.推行中长期绩效评价:对重大人力资本投资项目,实施3—5年甚至更长的跟踪评价,评价结果作为后续预算安排和政策调整的核心依据。

3.加强绩效信息公开与运用:向社会公开重点项目的绩效目标、评价结果和审计报告,接受社会监督。强化绩效评价结果与部门预算、干部考核的硬约束挂钩。

(五)激发社会多元主体共同投资的动力机制

1.降低准入门槛,优化营商环境:简化社会力量兴办教育、医疗、养老等机构的审批流程,在土地、规划、用水用电用气等方面给予公平待遇。

2.创新政府与社会资本合作(PPP)模式:针对职业培训、智慧养老、健康管理等领域,设计风险共担、收益共享的PPP模型,明确政府监管职责和支付机制。

3.大力发展慈善事业:完善慈善税收优惠政策,便利慈善捐赠,鼓励设立关注教育、健康等领域的慈善信托和基金会。

4.完善家庭金融支持体系:发展普惠金融,创新教育贷款、培训贷款等金融产品,完善国家助学贷款体系,降低家庭人力资本投资的流动性约束。

(六)强化跨部门协同与数据治理

1.建立高层级统筹协调机制:建议在中央层面建立由综合部门牵头的“国家人力资本发展委员会”,负责统筹规划、政策协调和监测评估。

2.推进数据共享与整合:打破部门数据壁垒,构建统一的“国家人力资本数据库”,整合教育、就业、社保、健康、户籍等信息,为政策制定、效果评估和精准服务提供数据支撑。

3.加强政策宣传与能力建设:向公众普及人力资本投资的重要性,解读相关财税优惠政策。加强对基层财政和业务部门人员的培训,提升其政策执行和项目管理能力。

结论

财税政策与“投资于人”之间关系的本质,是公共权力通过资源的筹集、分配与管理,对一国最宝贵的发展要素——人的能力——进行战略性塑造和系统性赋能的过程。这一关系超越了传统财政学中关于消费与投资的简单二分,它要求我们在国家治理的顶层设计中,将人的全面发展切实置于中心地位,并通过精巧的制度安排,将宏观的战略意图转化为微观主体的理性选择。

本文研究表明,推动“投资于物”与“投资于人”的紧密结合,是我国跨越中等收入陷阱、应对人口结构挑战、实现高质量发展的历史必然。它要求财税政策完成从“建设财政”、“吃饭财政”向“民生财政”、“发展财政”和“赋能财政”的深刻转型。当前的政策体系虽已奠定基础,但仍在支出惯性、税收激励、政府间关系、绩效管理和社会动员等方面存在系统性梗阻。

破解这些难题,不能依靠零打碎敲的修补,而需要进行一场深刻的财税体制与政策范式革命。这场革命的核心,是树立“人力资本优先”的公共投资理念,构建覆盖全生命周期、激励相容、权责清晰、绩效显著的政策体系。其成功不仅取决于财政部门的努力,更依赖于整个政府治理体系的协同,以及全社会共识的凝聚。

展望未来,一个将更多资源持续、精准、高效地“投资于人”的中国,必将能更好地激发亿万人民的创造潜力,将人口压力转化为人才优势,将发展挑战转化为升级机遇,从而为全面建成社会主义现代化强国、实现中华民族伟大复兴奠定最坚实、最持久的人力资本根基。这既是财税政策的使命所在,也是国家繁荣昌盛的根本之道。

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Сюй Шэн
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Сюй Шэн
Главный специалист по бюджетно-налоговым вопросам Институт экономических исследований при Госсовете КНР по делам развития и реформ