Artigo Revisado por pares

Income Inequality in Urban China, 1978-2005

2012; Taylor & Francis; Volume: 45; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.2753/csa2162-0555450101

ISSN

2162-0563

Autores

Wim Jansen, Xiaogang Wu,

Tópico(s)

Regional Economics and Spatial Analysis

Resumo

Abstract The aims of this paper are twofold: (1) identifying the "winners" and "losers" with respect to income in China's economic transition using repeated cross-sectional data at the individual level over the entire period of economic reform, and (2) linking these "winners" and "losers" categories to income inequality at the aggregate level by decomposing the trend in overall income inequality with respect to some key characteristics of these categories. Based on individual-level analyses of eleven waves of survey data collected in urban China from 1978 to 2005, we found that (1) returns to schooling have been increasing over time; (2) returns to party membership did increase, but when distinguishing between ordinary party members and cadre members, the increase in income returns to ordinary members seemed to be nonsubstantive and there was no temporal trend in returns to cadre members; (3) workers in the private sector and the self-employed (getihu) appeared among the "losers" of the economic transition for the entire period 1978-2005; (4) the unemployed also turned out to be among the "losers"; and (5) employers in the private sector were among the "winners." Results from the decomposition analyses showed similar effects on China's overall income inequality.

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