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Internal Labor Migration in China: Trends, Geographical Distribution and Policies Kam Wing Chan Department of Geography University of Washington Seattle [email protected] January 2008
33

Internal Migration in China

Jan 21, 2015

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Page 1: Internal Migration in China

Internal Labor Migration in China: Trends, Geographical Distribution and Policies

Kam Wing Chan

Department of GeographyUniversity of Washington

[email protected]

January 2008

Page 2: Internal Migration in China
Page 3: Internal Migration in China
Page 4: Internal Migration in China

Wuhan:Share of Migrant Workers (Non-Hukou)

(2000 Census Data)

Industry % of employment in that industry

Manufacturing 43

Construction 56

Social Services 50

Real Estate and Housing 40

Wuhan City (7 city districts) 46

Page 5: Internal Migration in China

Urban recreation consumptionrose at 14% p.a in 1995-2005

Page 6: Internal Migration in China

Topics• Hukou System and Migration

Statistics• Migration Trends• Geography • Policies

Page 7: Internal Migration in China

(The Household Registration System, 户口制度)

• Formally set up in 1958• Divided population/society into two major types of households:

rural and urban • Differential treatments of rural and urban residents• Controlled by the police and other govt departments• Basically an “internal passport system”• Currently, the system serves as a benefit eligibility system; a tool

of institutional exclusion than controlling geographical mobility• The population of a city is divided into “local” and “outside”

population.

Page 8: Internal Migration in China

Ad

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An unlicensed school in Beijing

MIGRANT CHILDREN FALL THROUGH THE CRACKS

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Two types of internal migrants

• Hukou Migrants: migrants with local residency rights

• Non-hukou Migrant: migrants withoutlocal residency rights – also called: non-hukou population, or more

generally, “floating population”

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Page 12: Internal Migration in China

Wuhan:Share of Non-Hukou Migrant Workers

(2000 Census Data)

Industry % of Employment

Manufacturing 43

Construction 56

Social Services 50

Real Estate and Housing 40

Wuhan City (7 city districts) 46

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Trends

Page 14: Internal Migration in China

Migration Trends:Floating Population, 1982-2003

(Estimates in Millions)

0

20

40

60

80

100

120

140

1985 1988 1992 1994 1997 1999 2003

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Level of Urbanization, 1990-2005

20

25

30

35

40

45

1990 1992 1994 1996 1998 2000 2002 2004

% o

f Tot

al P

opul

atio

n

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Figure 3 Urban Growth and Migration Rates

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

1990 1995 2000

Per

cent

of U

rban

Pop

ulat

ion

Urban GrowthRate

Urban NaturalIncrease Rates

Net Urban In-migration Rate

Source: Chan and Hu (2003)

True rural-urban migration

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Geography

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The 30 Largest Inter-provincial Migration Flows,1995-2000

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Policies

0.20

0.25

0.30

0.35

0.40

0.45

0.50

0.55

0.60

0.65

0.70

1990

1995

2000a

2000b

2001

2002

2003

2004

2005

2006

CVdf

CVdj

Group 1

Group 2

Notes: CV’s for 1990, 1995 and 2000a are based on old GDP data in 1990 constant prices; those for 2000b-2006 are based on new GDP data in 2000 constant prices. The two series are not directly comparable.

Interprovincial Inequality, 1990–2006

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Urban Growth Scenarios(Population in Millions)

2000 2005 2010 2015 2020National Populationassuming 0.7% growth per year 1265.8 1306.3 1352.7 1400.7 1450.4Population Increase per year 8.1 9.3 9.6 9.9

URBAN SCENARIO 1assuming 3.5% growth per yearUrban Population 458.6 561.6 667.0 792.2 940.9Urban % 36.2 43.0 49.3 56.6 64.9Urban Population Increase per year 20.6 21.1 25.0 29.7Urban Natural Increase (0.55%) per year 2.5 3.1 3.7 4.4Net Rural-urban Migration per year 18.1 18.0 21.3 25.3URBAN SCENARIO 2assuming 4% growth p.a. in 2005-2010, and 3.5% p.a. afterUrban Population 458.6 561.6 683.3 811.5 963.8Urban % 36.2 43.0 50.5 57.9 66.5Urban Population Increase per year 20.6 24.3 25.6 30.5Urban Natural Increase (0.55%) per year 2.5 3.1 3.8 4.5Net Rural-urban Migration per year 18.1 21.2 21.8 25.9

RURAL SCENARIO 1Scenario 1Rural Population 807.3 744.7 685.7 608.5 509.5Rural % 63.8 57.0 50.7 43.4 35.1Rural Population Increase per year -12.5 -11.8 -15.4 -19.8RURAL SCENARIO 2Rural Population 807.3 744.7 669.4 589.2 486.6Rural % 63.8 57.0 49.5 42.1 33.5Rural Population Increase per year -12.5 -15.1 -16.0 -20.5

Known Forecast

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Main points:• Urban Population

– 2005: 43% (560M); – 2010: 50% (675M)– 2020: 65% (950M)

• Increase of about 400M in the next 15 years

• 80% from net rural-urban migration and reclassification, about 20M per year 200-250 peasant migrants by 2020

Urban Growth Scenarios, 2005-2020

0

200

400

600

800

1000

1200

1400

1600

2000 2005 2010 2015 2020

Pop

ulat

ion

in M

illio

ns

Nationa;urban2urban1

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Implications of Urban Growth• Employment?

– Jobs for the 150 M unemployed rural labor

– Many urban jobs currently off-limit to migrants

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Implications of Urban Growth

• Infrastructure and housing– affordable

housing?– education for

kids?– who pays?

financing?

Page 32: Internal Migration in China

Implications of Urban Growth

• Urban poverty, public safety and social stability– wage arrears, unfair

compensation for land expropriated, etc

– 200 M permanent urban underclass?

– protests and riots

Page 33: Internal Migration in China

Thank you!