Migration and regional inequality: changing characteristics of China's economic inequality

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Scholars studying economic inequality in China have maintained that regional inequality and economic divergence across provinces have steadily increased over the past 30 years. New studies have shown that this trend is a statistical aberration; calculations show that instead of quickly and sharply rising, regional inequality has actually decreased, and most recently, remained stable. Our study suggests that China’s unique migratory regime is crucial to understanding these findings. We conduct a counterfactual simulation to demonstrate how migration and remittances have mitigated income inequality across provinces in order to show that without these processes, we would have seen more of a rise in interprovincial income inequality. We conclude by arguing that inequality in China is still increasing, but it is changing and becoming less place-based. As regional inequality decreases, there are signs that point to the increasing importance of interpersonal inequality.
Original languageEnglish
JournalEurasian Geography and Economics
Volume58
Issue number1
Pages (from-to)89-113
ISSN1538-7216
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2017

    Research areas

  • China and regional economic inequality, migration, remittances, economic convergence, hukou system and inequality

ID: 179094882