Type | Journal Article - China: linking markets for growth |
Title | Regional labour market integration since China’s WTO entry |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2007 |
Page numbers | 133-150 |
URL | http://www.oapen.org/download?type=document&docid=458870#page=149 |
Abstract | For an economy in transition, development of the market is a sign of a successful transition and a premise for a sustainable form of economic growth. Development and integration of labour markets are key components that indicate the move towards a market system. Despite wide acknowledgment of success in China’s market-oriented reform, there is disagreement about the effects of marketisation, especially in regard to the level of regional market integration. Reforms of production factor markets, for instance—especially in the labour and capital markets—have been considered less far reaching than the reform efforts made in commodity markets (Lardy 1994:8–14). There are also scholars who believe that segmentation of the market has become severe as a result of decentralisation in the reform process. Such scholars argue that although decentralisation rectified the concentration of decision making and resource allocation, it has also generated a ‘border effect’—something present in independent economies and in administratively divided regions—thus preventing the labour markets of separate regions from integrating into a national market (Poncet 2002, 2003a, 2003b; Young 2000). Others suggest that the deepening of the Chinese reform process will increase the degree of marketisation in the country, including the regional integration of production factor markets (Fan and Wang 2001; Wang and Fan 2004; Fan et al. 2003). |
» | China - Rural Household Survey 2002 |