Title: Human Capital of China
1Human Capital of China
2Outline
- Population Growth
- One-Child Policy and consequence
- Labor market
- Household registration system
- Floating population
- Return to education
3Population Size of China
- China now accounts for 20 percent of World
population (30 percent in the 1950s). - Pre-modern population growth rate 0.4
- By the mid-1950s the population was growing more
than 2 per year. - Two-Child, but Wait, Policy (1971-79) Total
fertility rates dropped from 5.8 to 2.7. - One-Child Policy (since September 1980)
4Implementation of the One-Child Policy
- An array of measures
- Mandatory insertion of intra-uterine devices for
women with one child, sterilization for couples
with two or more children, and abortion for
unauthorized conceptions. - Strictness fluctuated
- One-and-a-Half-Child Policy
- Implementation of the policy was delegated to
local government. - Substantial financial penalties (equal to
households annual income) may be imposed.
5Consequence of the One-Child Policy (I)
- The policy has never been fully successful. About
half of total births were second or higher order
births in most years. - The level of coercion varies widely for different
regions of China. The demand for coercion also
vary and may depend on the economic growth
levels. - Shanghais TFR in 2000 was .68.
- Extremely unbalanced sex ratio due to the
preference for boys. - In late 1930s B(120)G(100)
- 1960s and 1970s B(108)G(100)
- 2000 B(120.8)G(100)
6Explaining the Missing Girls
- Hidden girls
- 12 more 10-year-olds were recorded in the 2000
census than newborns in the 1990 census. This
could account for as much as one-third of the
missing girls. - Sex-selective abortion Diffusion of ultrasound
machines has been associated with worsening
gender imbalances in many Asian societies. - Mortality rates for girls are higher than those
for boys, a abnormal pattern.
7Dependency Rate
- Dependency rate The percentage of children and
seniors. - China will enjoy low dependency rate during
2005-2015. - Reduced number of children due to birth control
- Baby boomers (and echo) 1960s and late 1980s.
- Dependency rate steadily increases from 2010.
- The effect of birth control weaken
- Baby boomers
8Consequence of the Dependency Rate Dynamics
- Declining dependency rates imply more rapid
growth of per capita GDP. - Declining dependency rates may increase the
saving rates and investment rates - A young population is more adaptable and able to
accept the rapid social changes and accompanied
the shift to a market economy.
9Growth of Working-age Population (percent)
- Table 7.3
- Year National Rural Urban
- 82-90 2.5
- 00-05 1.6 -0.1 4.1
- 10-15 0.5 -1.6 2.5
- 20-25 0 -2.3 1.5
- 35-40 -0.8 -3.9 0.3
- 45-50 -0.6 -3.6 0.0
10Supply to the Labor Market
- Labor supply
- About 50 million workers, 40 of the
public-enterprise workforce, were laid off since
mid-1990s. - Rural-urban migration
- Farm-Non farm migration
- A generation of rural residents is leaving the
land, and the process appears to be accelerating
in the decade after 2000. - By 2000, 76 of the 16-20 age group had some kind
of off-farm work.
11Household Registration and Social Stratification
1955-96 (Wu et al, 2004)
- The hukou (household registration) system
- Hukou determines access to jobs, education,
housing, health care, and right to move. - Two Classifications
- Place of Registration Ones residential
location. - Type of Registration Divide the population into
agricultural and nonagricultural sectors - Hukou status is inherited
- Restrictive when markets (i.e. rental markets,
health service market) are underdeveloped
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13Empirical Evidence
- 1996 national survey of Chinese Life Histories
and Social Change in Contemporary China - 6,090 adults aged 20-69
- Patterns
- Good education strongly increases the odds of
converting rural to urban hukou. - The Communist Party membership substantially
increases the odds of hukou conversion, although
not as much as does education. - The results for military experience are mixed.
- Rural hukou status significantly decreases
educational attainment and the chance of gaining
CCP membership. - Women are more likely to successfully convert
hukou.
14Hukou Reform 1997-2002(Wang, 2004)
- The hukou system largely survived the two-decade
economic reform and opening of China. - The 1997-2002 Reform (I)
- A general relaxation of internal immigration
restrictions especially for elderly parents,
children, and talents. - The rural-to-urban migration quota system in all
small cities and towns are abolished in October
2001. - Those with stable non-agricultural income and a
permanent residence in a small city or town for
over two years automatically qualify for an urban
hukou.
15Hukou Reform 1997-2002
- The 1997-2002 Reform (II)
- The localized practice of selective migration
(for talents and investments) to the major cities
is further polished and nationally adopted. - A national wave of erasing the rural/urban
distinction in the hukou system took place in
2001-2002. - Two leading functions after reform
- Internal migration control (with reformed
mechanisms) - Socio-political management of the targeted people
16Zhongdian Renkou(Targeted People)
- Residents suspected of threatening national
security
- Residents suspected of serious criminal
activities. - Residents who have shown early signs of violent
revenge, making trouble and other violent acts - Residents who were ex-convicts as a result of
purposeful crimes and released wihtin the last
five years - Narcotics users
17Floating Population(Liang and Ma, 2004)
- Floating population Migrants without local
household registration status. - Inter-county floating population
- In 1982 7 million
- In 1990 22 million
- In 1995 44 million
- In 2000 79 million (Guangdong 21 million)
- Intra-county floating migration contribute
another 66 million to the size of the floating
population. - City-origin migrants accounted for 15 percent of
the interprovincial floating migrant population
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20Interprovincial Migration 1985-2000 (Fan, 2005)
- Also using national census data (1990 and 2000)
- Inter-provincial migration became more
unidirectional and concentrated. - Over time, the effect of regional disparity has
increased and the effect of distance decreased.
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23Leaving Chinas Farms Paths and Hurdles (Rozelle
et al., 1999)
- Questions
- Are the poor and those without local wage-earning
opportunities more likely to migrate? - Is chain migration important? If so, is it due to
information and social network effects or due to
transportation costs and proximity to urban
regions? - Do rural institutions prevent people from
leaving, push people off the farm, or are they
neutral? - Does human capital facilitate entrance into the
migrant labor force?
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25Answers to the Four Questions
- Rich or Poor?
- Poorer (fairly remote but less rural) villages
see most outmigrants - Information or Transport Costs?
- Ease of transportation (approximated by the
existence of a bus route through the village) is
an insignificant determinant of migration. The
availability of numerous buses, good roads and
cheap fares does not matter. - Note that 43 of villages with bus routes had
their own village enterprises compared to 25 of
those without. - A villages migration network (approximated by
lagged migration) is a significant factor.
26Further Findings
- Rural Institutions Important?
- Generally rural institutions have a smaller
impact on long-term migration. - Mandatory grain surplus delivery requirements
have insignificant impact on migration. - Land security also has little effect.
- Existence of land rental markets increase
migration probability. - Does Education Matter?
- Insignificant after controlling for other
factors, e.g. age.
27Chinas Human Capital Investment(Heckman, 2005)
- Current HC investment is too low
- HC investment is highly beneficial in China
- HC investment is inequitable and inefficient
28Benefits of Human Capital Investment in China
- The rate of return to physical capital investment
in China is as high as 20. - In the US and many other countries the rate of
return to HC is as high as 15 to 20. - The rate of return to HC in China
- 4-7 in the 1990s by the wage approach
(comparing wages of people with different
education) - 30-40 by the social return approach (compare
the productivity of people with different
education)
29Underinvestment and Inefficient Distribution of
HC Investment
- In 2002 the public expenditure in education is
about 3.3 of GDP while 45 of GDP was invested
in physical capital. - Educational expenditure is tied to the wealth of
a province. - The place of a persons birth is one of the most
important determinants of that persons adult
skill level (Knight and Song, 1999).
30Attainment in Basic Education in China (Tsui,
1997)
- Data Three sample surveys on children by NBS.
- Main findings
- Major expansions of the basic education system
took place before and during the Cultural
Revolution (except for the 1959-61 famine) - Rural as well as urban basic literacy rates
improved continuously over time. - There is a long-term convergence in the
rural-urban gap in the illiteracy rates. - Within-provincial basic literacy rates changed
little during 1981-1990. However, interprovicial
disparity in basic literacy increased.
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33Childrens Social Welfare in China, 1989-1997
(Adams and Hannum, 2005)
- Question How has the fundamental change in
Chinas finance system (more localized and
market-oriented approaches to social service
provision) affected human-capital-related social
services? - Medical care
- Basic education
- Data China Health and Nutrition Survey (1989,
1993, and 1997) - Access to health insurance
- Enrolment and grade-for-age attainment
34Welfare Reform in China
- Health
- By 1975, insurance coverage reached about 90 of
the population (almost all urban population and
85 of the rural population). - Some earlier studies suggest that overall
insurance rate dropped from 26 in 1989 to 23 in
1997.
35Empirical Findings
- Education
- Children in the top quartile (family resources)
is 2.5 times more likely than those in the bottom
quartile to be enrolled in school - Children in high-income community were 2.2 times
more likely than those in low-income community to
be enrolled in school - Contribution of community funds to local
education is increasingly important.
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37Return to Education(Maurer-Fazio, 1999)
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40Return to Education(Li, 2003)