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China: Class 5 The Distribution of Well-Being within China
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Good source q Kahn and Riskin. 1998. Income and inequality in China, China Quarterly.
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Data sources q Two household sample surveys conducted by an international team of economists using standard international definitions. q 1988 (20,000 households) q 1995 (15,000 households) q definition of “income” is disposable income, net of taxes. Tried to be comprehensive (e.g. housing subsidies)
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Rural Households
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Urban Households
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Income distribution q Gini index. Higher the value the greater the inequality q Contribution to inequality of an income source. Will depend on: q distribution of that income source q size of that income source relative to total income q Fraction of total income to different decile groups
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Rural Income Inequality,
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Urban income inequality
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Summary Gini indexes. China (1995).452 China (1988).382 Thailand.462 Malaysia.484 Philippines.407 Brazil.634 Mexico.503 Chile.565
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Regional Inequality within China
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Major Chinese Regions
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Two basic measures of the level of regional economic inequality are typically used Standard Deviation--a measure of the ABSOLUTE level of inequality Coefficient of Variation (V)
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Background Considerations q Inheritance of lop-sided economy q strong commitment to more balanced distribution of productive capital and income q substantial redeployment of productive capacity q >2,000 large enterprises established in West and Central China (1956-78) q efficiency sacrificed for equity
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Provincial and regional CVs for per capita income pre reform period
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Why the increasing regional inequality??? A lot of investment was modestly productive Chinese ‘Price Scissors’ policy –deliberately underpriced energy, agriculture and other primary goods –poor provinces were natural resource based –price policy transferred profit/income out of these regions
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q emphasis has shifted to efficiency q UNDP’s Human Development Report (1994) expresses concern about excessively large regional gaps. Since 1978
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Regional Inequality Good source: Wang and Hu. 1999. The Political Economy of Uneven Development: The Case of China.
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q The Province is the basic unit of analysis q constitute functional, economic, administrative and political units q Two separate analyses. With and without Beijing, Shanghai and Tianjin. 3 major metro. areas. q per capita GDP is primary indicator of regional economic welfare q use region-specific GDP deflators to express values consistently in 1978 yuan.
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q 1978 provincial per capita GDP values range from 46% to 179% of national average. q 1994 values range from 43% to 176%. q In both periods, B,S,T are totally off the scale (250% to 650% of the national average) q Clear regional patterning espec. in 1994. All the high income provinces (120%+) are in the Eastern Region.
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Trends in the level of regional inequality?
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Excluding Beijing, Shanghai,Tianjin
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Using a relative measure
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With and without metro areas
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INTERNATIONAL COMPARISONS India U.S. Portugal Japan France Spain China (without BST)
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Alternative indicators of well- being
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