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Urban Elites and Income Differential in China: 1988–1995

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 October 2004

YANJIE BIAN
Affiliation:
Hong Kong University of Science and [email protected]
ZHANXIN ZHANG
Affiliation:
Chinese Academy of Social Sciences

Abstract

Urban elites and their relative income levels are windows on the emerging socioeconomic order in China. We add to the research literature a new view that economic sectors are the institutional contexts in which different elites seek their material gains. Conducting a trend analysis with 1988 and 1995 national surveys of urban China, we found that political, administrative, and managerial elites maintained consistently higher levels of income relative to professional elites, but this applied mainly to a monopoly sector of industries that were restricted to state operation. Managers in the open industry sector that allowed for free entry and exile experienced income declines relative to professionals within the sector, even though the former had moderately higher income levels than the latter in 1988 and 1995. All elite groups in the monopoly sector retained higher incomes than their counterparts in the open sector in 1995, but not necessarily in 1988.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 2004 Cambridge University Press

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Footnotes

Three RGC grants from Hong Kong SAR's Universities Grants Committee (HKUST6052/98H, HKUST6007/00H, HKUST6007/01H) and a postdoctoral matching grant from the Vice President Office of the HKUST provided financial support for the data analyses presented in this paper. We are grateful to the helpful comments from three anonymous reviewers of JJPS.