Type | Conference Paper - Prepared for the Urban China Network Second Meeting January 2005, New Orleans |
Title | Urbanization, Institutional Change, and Spatial Inequality in China (1990-2001) |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | |
URL | http://www.albany.edu/chinanet/neworleans/White-Wu-Chen-Urbanization-Spatial-Inequality.pdf |
Abstract | It is no longer news that China has experienced enormous and virtually unparalleled economic growth since the introduction of market reforms. The overall impact of such shifts in production and labor force activity has received considerable discussion in the scholarly and lay literature. Also, considerable attention has been directed toward the growing individual economic inequality that has accompanied economic development. Yet only limited attention has been directed to the spatial manifestation of this growth across the landscape. Some discussion exists about the differential fortunes of individual provinces and regions. Less attention has been paid to the fate of cities and their surrounding metropolitan regions. Some cities and urban regions have perhaps benefited disproportionately from the sweeping changes. Even less information is available about the spatial differentiation of socioeconomic groups within cities, the traditional pattern of urban ecology. We have every reason to expect that the broad changes in China over the last two decades have brought with them significant shifts in spatial organization and inequality. That is the topic we investigate in this chapter. The most common spatial change resulting from such development is the differential between average rural and urban incomes, and this holds true for China. For instance, a recent report in the Shanghai Star (Shangyao, 2004) noted, “the urban-rural per capita income ratio was one the order of 1.7 to 1 in 1985 and widened to 3.1 to 1 in 2002.” (See also Wei, 2004). Yet the urban-rural gap is not the only spatial differential in China. Differentiation across wider geography (provinces) and increasing disparity in income levels within the urban settlement system is also in need of examination It is important to understand these spatial changes. First, they provide a window on overall social changes in Chinese society. Second, differences in organization of space have implications for individual lives. One the one hand, spatial differentiation is a manifestation of social stratification more generally. Second, the spatial organization of resources, particularly those that are publicly provided necessarily means that geographic location has implications for access to those resources. Individuals who reside in more economically dynamic cities and regions may benefit from this growth trajectory (schools, public services, etc.) and similarly, those in better provisioned neighborhoods or districts may benefit. This important backdrop, on which we do not elaborate in great detail here, helps motivate our approach. It also enables us to examine the current situation in China in Spatial Inequality 2 comparison to the Western experience, and we will see what similarities exist in these two very different spatial contexts. The organization of the remainder of our chapter is as follows. First, we introduce some of the theoretical concepts that form the underpinning for our concern and our analysis. In particular, we present a discussion of the relationship between economic growth, urban development, and issues of spatial scale. We then present some information on Chinese urban classification, noting how it differs from classifications used in the United States and Europe. We next turn to our empirical analysis. After a brief discussion of our data and methods, we present results on urban differentiation at increasingly refined geographic scales. We look initially at provincial differences overall; then we examine the patterns of growth and inequality across the system of cities, and finally, we focus on intra-urban spatial differentiation and inequality in Shanghai, one of China’s largest and most economically dynamic cities. |
» | China - National Population Census 1990 |