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China's Household Income and Its Distribution, 1995 and 2002

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 June 2005

Abstract

A new, independently designed household income survey for China in 2002 shows some decline in income inequality in both rural and urban China since 1995. However, the overall Gini ratio for China remained unchanged due to a rise in the urban–rural income gap. The reduction in rural inequality stemmed mainly from a fall in both inter-provincial inequality and inequality within most of the provinces, as well as from a further improvement in the distribution of wage income and farm income and a reduction in the regressiveness of net taxes. The reduction in urban inequality came from a fall in inter-provincial inequality and better distribution of imputed rental income and net taxes. The results raise questions about whether recent more equity-oriented policies, such as the “great western development strategy,” began to reduce some dimensions of overall income inequality. For the first time, a special survey was implemented to furnish data on migrants living in towns and cities. Incorporating the migrants into the urban population raises urban inequality and reduces the urban–rural gap somewhat, but leaves the latter still very high by international standards.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© The China Quarterly, 2005

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Footnotes

The authors wish to thank Sucharita Sinha and Edward Levine, who did almost all the programming and computations; Qin Gao, who did some supplementary computations and helped interpret results; and Li Shi, Yue Ximing, Wei Zhong and Deng Quheng of the Economics Institute of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, who helped clarify many issues. Anil Deolalikar, Gus Edgren, Keith Griffin and Dorothy Solinger gave very useful suggestions. The survey was financed by the Ford Foundation and the Swedish International Development Agency. Last minute intervention by Borje Llunggren, the Swedish Ambassador to China, helped secure funds for the inclusion of the survey of the urban migrants. A grant from the Academic Senate of the University of California, Riverside and financial support from the International Labour Office helped pay for computations and research assistance.