You are here: Home / Publications / Income Inequality During China's Economic Transition

Income Inequality During China's Economic Transition

Benjamin, Dwayne; Brandt, Loren; Giles, John; & Wang, Sangui. (2005). Income Inequality During China's Economic Transition. Insitute for Policy Analysis.

Benjamin, Dwayne; Brandt, Loren; Giles, John; & Wang, Sangui. (2005). Income Inequality During China's Economic Transition. Insitute for Policy Analysis.

Octet Stream icon 1420.ris — Octet Stream, 1 kB (1,947 bytes)

This paper provides an overview of the evolution of income inequality in China from 1987 to 2002, employing three series of data sets. Our focus is on both urban and rural inequality, as well as the urban-rural gap, with the objective of summarizing several “first-order” empirical patterns concerning the trajectory of inequality through the reform period. We document significant increases of inequality within China’s urban and rural populations. In rural areas, increased inequality is primarily related to the disequalizing role of non-agricultural self-employment income and slow growth in agricultural income from the mid-1990s onward. Poverty persists, and tied in part to slow growth in agricultural commodity prices. In urban areas, the declining role of subsidies and entitlements, the increase in wage inequality and the layoffs during restructuring, have fueled the growth in inequality within urban areas. Poverty levels, however, are very low. We find that spatial (regional) dimensions of inequality are significant, but are much less important than commonly believed for both the urban and rural populations, and for differences between urban and rural areas. Accounting for urban-rural reclassification, which otherwise exaggerates the rising urban-rural gap, we find a relatively stable ratio of urban to rural incomes. This hides some geographical variation, however: The urban-rural gap is increasing more rapidly in interior provinces, where SOE’s had a more dominant role in economic activity in urban areas, than in coastal provinces where the non-state sector was more important earlier in the reform period.




CHAP



Benjamin, Dwayne
Brandt, Loren
Giles, John
Wang, Sangui



2005





54




Insitute for Policy Analysis






1420