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Inequality and Poverty in China
- Project name/title
- Inequality and Poverty in China
- Year:
- 2004
- Theme:
- Poverty, Inequality & Human Development
- Abstract:
- Getting an accurate picture of poverty and inequality trends and patterns in the world’s most populous country is central to understanding changes in global inequality and poverty – these alter significantly when China is included or excluded. China’s future performance is obviously central to the achievement of the MDGs at a global level as well and, given the country’s rapid integration into the global economy, an accurate assessment of China’s poverty and inequality is important to the wider debate on globalization’s effects (see also the project on ‘The Impact of Globalization on the World’s Poor’. Within China, inequality and poverty are now amongst the most important social and economic issues. The historic campaign of ‘western development’, recently launched by the Chinese government, highlights the urgency and significance of analyzing these issues. Absolute poverty has fallen significantly in the last twenty-five years, and human development indicators have improved substantially. But income inequality has risen, in part reflecting the fast, but uneven nature, of economic growth which has favoured some sectors and regions more than others, and which has raised the returns to skills. Most pronounced is the regional variation in incomes, as well as non-monetary measures of human-wellbeing such as health and education status. The gap between the coastal regions (which have strongly benefited from the expansion in China’s exports) and the interior regions has increased considerably, as has the urban-rural gap. Regional disparities in China reflect differences in endowments of natural resources across regions, locational factors (eg proximity to major transport links such as coastal ports), historical differences in the pace of economic development, the uneven impact of economic reform, and uneveness in the provision of economic and social infrastructure. Moreover, welfare indicators show different amounts of variation across regions (as between income measures and human development measures for example). National indicators of welfare therefore give a very incomplete picture of China’s progress over the last twenty-five years.
- Director:
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- Assistant:
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- Project Meetings
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- Publications:
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- China Urban Poverty and its Contributing Factors, 1986-2000
- China's Regional Inequality in Innovation Capability, 1995-2004
- Development Strategies and Regional Income Disparities in China
- Development of Financial Intermediation and the Dynamics of Rural-Urban Inequality: China, 1978-98
- Estimating Income Inequality in China Using Grouped Data and the Generalized Beta Distribution
- Explaining the Poverty Difference between Inland and Costal China: A Regression-based Decomposition Approach
- The Financial Deepening-Productivity Nexus in China: 1987-2001
- Financial Development and Income Inequality in Rural China 1991-2000
- Financial Development, Growth, and Regional Disparity in Post-Reform China
- Fiscal Decentralization and Political Centralization in China: Implications for Growth and Inequality
- Forces Shaping China's Interprovincial Inequality
- Gender Earnings Differentials and Regional Economic Development in Urban China, 1988-97
- Gender Wage Differentials in China's Urban Labour Market
- Globalization and Regional Income Inequality: Empirical evidence from within China
- Globalization and Regional Income Inequality: Evidence from within China
- How Should We Measure Global Poverty in a Changing World?
- Human Capital and Wage Determination in Different Ownerships, 1989-97
- The Impacts of Growth and Inequality on Rural Poverty in China
- Income Distribution and Labour Movement in China after WTO Membership: A CGE Analysis
- Income Inequality and Poverty in Transition China
- Income Inequality in China and its Influencing Factors
- Income, Income Inequality, and Health: Evidence from China
- Inequality and Growth in Modern China
- The Inequality-Growth Nexus in the Short and Long Runs: Empirical Evidence from China
- Poverty Accounting by Factor Components: With an Empirical Illustration Using Chinese Data
- Poverty Reduction in China: Is High Growth Enough?
- Poverty Reduction in China: Is High Growth Enough? (Chinese)
- Poverty Reduction in China: Trends and Causes
- Poverty and Inequality in China
- Poverty, Pro-Poor Growth and Mobility: A Decomposition Framework with Application to China
- Regional Income Inequality in Rural China, 1985-2002: Trends, Causes and Policy Implications
- Regional Inequality, Industry Agglomeration and Foreign Trade: The Case of China
- Social Benefits in Urban China: Determinants and Impact on Income Inequality in 1988 and 2002
- Spatial Convergence in China: 1952-99
- Understanding Inequality and Poverty in China: Methods and Applications
- The Urban-Rural Income Gap and Inequality in China
- WIDER Special Issue: Inequality and Poverty in China
- WIDER Symposium: Analyzing the Socioeconomic Consequences of Rising Inequality in China
- What Kind of Education Does China Need? The Impact of Educational Attainment on Local Growth and Disparities
- Why Do Poverty Rates Differ From Region to Region? The Case of Urban China
- Widening Gap of Educational Opportunity? A Longitudinal Study of Educational Inequality in China
- Content:
- Project duration:
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3
years
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