China’s One Child Policy (OCP), introduced in 1979, changed fundamentally the nature of both existing and anticipated marriage arrangements and influenced family formation decisions in many dimensions, especially with respect to the number of and investment in children. The policy coincided with the Economic Reforms of 1979 and the trend toward greater urbanization, all of which may have influenced the wellbeing of children. This paper examines the mobility status consequence of children in urban China since the introduction of the OCP and the economic reforms using data drawn from urban household surveys in China. The analysis first makes the comparison between child poverty in Canada, the United Kingdom and urban India, where it was found...
In the last 30 years, China has undergone one of the largest rural-to-urban migrations in human hist...
This article studies the meaning of childhood and educational chances for children in modern China d...
The present article examines the need for family policy, acknowledging its potentially invasive natu...
China's One Child Policy (OCP), introduced in 1979, changed fundamentally the nature of both existin...
Education has been identified as one of the main transmission mechanisms of intergenerational mobili...
Education has been identified as one of the main transmission mechanisms of intergenerational mobili...
This paper is the first to examine the causal relationship between China's One-Child Policy (OC...
China’s rapid economic growth since the late 1980s has been accompanied by great economic and social...
China’s household income inequality has grown steadily over the last 30 years. While many analyses f...
In China, the population policy has been a major item on the political agenda since the early 1970s....
This paper estimates the intergenerational income elasticity for urban China, paying careful attenti...
Theories of modern economic growth assume the income and technological shocks of the industrial revo...
We investigate how the `one-child policy' has impacted China's household saving rate and human capit...
In this paper, I study the intergenerational mobility of education and income in China. Using the CH...
This article studies the meaning of childhood and educational chances for children in modern China d...
In the last 30 years, China has undergone one of the largest rural-to-urban migrations in human hist...
This article studies the meaning of childhood and educational chances for children in modern China d...
The present article examines the need for family policy, acknowledging its potentially invasive natu...
China's One Child Policy (OCP), introduced in 1979, changed fundamentally the nature of both existin...
Education has been identified as one of the main transmission mechanisms of intergenerational mobili...
Education has been identified as one of the main transmission mechanisms of intergenerational mobili...
This paper is the first to examine the causal relationship between China's One-Child Policy (OC...
China’s rapid economic growth since the late 1980s has been accompanied by great economic and social...
China’s household income inequality has grown steadily over the last 30 years. While many analyses f...
In China, the population policy has been a major item on the political agenda since the early 1970s....
This paper estimates the intergenerational income elasticity for urban China, paying careful attenti...
Theories of modern economic growth assume the income and technological shocks of the industrial revo...
We investigate how the `one-child policy' has impacted China's household saving rate and human capit...
In this paper, I study the intergenerational mobility of education and income in China. Using the CH...
This article studies the meaning of childhood and educational chances for children in modern China d...
In the last 30 years, China has undergone one of the largest rural-to-urban migrations in human hist...
This article studies the meaning of childhood and educational chances for children in modern China d...
The present article examines the need for family policy, acknowledging its potentially invasive natu...