Type | Journal Article - The China Quarterly |
Title | The hukou system and rural-urban migration in China: Processes and changes |
Author(s) | |
Volume | 160 |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 1999 |
Page numbers | 818-855 |
URL | https://keats.kcl.ac.uk/pluginfile.php/1019278/mod_resource/content/1/Chan and Li the hukou systemand rural-urban migration in china.pdf |
Abstract | Until recently, few people in mainland China would dispute the significance of the hukou (household registration) system in affecting their lives - indeed, in determining their fates.2 At the macro level, the centrality of this system has led some to argue that the industrialization strategy and the hukou system were the crucial organic parts of the Maoist model: the strategy could not have been implemented without the system.3 A number of China scholars in the West, notably Christiansen, Chan, Cheng and Selden, Solinger, and Mallee,4 have begun in recent years to study this important subject in relation to population mobility and its social and economic ramifications. Unlike population registration systems in many other countries, the Chinese system was designed not merely to provide population statistics and identify personal status, butalso directly to regulate population distribution and serve many other important objectives desired by the state. In fact, the hukou system is one of the major tools of social control employed by the state. Its functions go far beyond simply controlling population mobility. Largely based on a relatively comprehensive study of regulations and policy documents pertaining to the hukou system and on recent interviews with central officials in charge of designing hukou policies, this article seeks to contribute to this body of literature by augmenting and updating knowledge about the hukou system in relation to rural-urban migration. Specifically, the article elucidates the complex workings and changes of the hukou conversion process, especially the all-important nongzhuanfei process (converting hukou status from agricultural to non-agricultural), by studying a number of aspects of the system that have been only scantly touched in the Western literature.5 This helps clarify many murky aspects of the operation of this key system. On this basis, we would argue that the hukou system was not designed mainly as a system to block ruralurban migration, as commonly portrayed in the Western literature. Instead, it was part of a larger economic and political system set up to serve multiple state interests. The system alone is less effective in controlling rural-urban migration than is portrayed by conventional wisdom. This is true not only in the recent reform period but also in the pre-reform period. Since the hukou system links people's accessibility to state-provided benefits and opportunities, it significantly affects personal life in many aspects. Its power in controlling people's lives has declined in the reform era in the wake of enormous social and economic changes and increase in rural-urban mobility, despite the central government's continuing efforts to adjust the system to fit the new situation. The first section of this article examines the role of the hukou system in the complicated administration of rural-urban migration in mainland China. The second section reviews the changes of hukou policies since 1978. This includes analysing the array of new hukou categories created in the last two decades, which has not been systematically examined elsewhere, and discussing the major consequences of the policy adjustments with respect to the rise in rural-urban migration. The final section examines some major issues and explores the prospect of future hukou system reforms. |
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