This book explores China’s hukou system, by which individuals are registered in a specific geographic region, and the prospects for reform. The history of the hukou system and its instrumental role in Chinese urbanization and labor markets is explained, and readers get a sense of what issues are prioritized by Chinese policymakers as they contemplate reform or change to this system, from hukou-based labor market discrimination, inequality of opportunity, multi-dimensional poverty of rural migrants, the public health consequences of non-hukou migration, and old age insurance for migrants without hukous. The author concludes with a stirring and practical call for hukou reform, articulating a cost-benefit model and providing an array of policy suggestions. This book will interest scholars of Chinese society, demographics and future urbanization.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Part I Brief Introduction to China’s Hukou System.- Chapter 1: Introduction.- Chapter 2: Current Situation of China’s Hukou System.- Part II Comprehensive Impact of the Hukou System.- Chapter 3: Labour Market Discriminations Induced by the Hukou System.- Chapter 4: Unequal Opportunities Induced by the Hukou System.- Chapter 5: The Hukou System and Migrant Workers’ Multidimensional Poverty.- Chapter 6: Health Impact of the Hukou System on Migrant Workers.- Chapter 7: Impact of the Hukou System on Old-age Care for Migrant Workers.- Part III Hukou System Reform Path Analysis.- Chapter 8: Significance, Current Situation and Difficulties of Hukou System Reform.- Chapter 9: Is Hukou System Reform Cost-effective — A Simulation Analysis Based on the Labour Market Model.- Chapter 10: Policy Analysis of Hukou System Linkage Reform.- Chapter 11: Policy Recommendations for Hukou System Reform.
Über den Autor
Yang Song is currently a Professor and Assistant Dean of School of Economics at Renmin University of China; he obtained a Ph. D degree in Economics from the Department of Economics at Cornell University in 2013. His research interest mainly lies in labor and development economics with a focus on income distribution and labor market issues in China.