This paper explains the development of the urban housing system in China from 1949 to 2011 with an emphasis on the factors driving housing inequality in each policy period. We argue that the logic underpinning the housing policy had shifted from socialist redistribution to the stimulation of growth in the process of market economy reform and has been shifting toward social inclusionary growth since the 2010s. Over the course of time, two institutional factors (work units and household registration/hukou) have played a key role in determining individual households’ housing opportunities. The role of the work units has gradually waned since the 2000s, but the hukou system continues to be important. In the last part of the paper, we set forth ...
It has been more than three decades since China embarked on nationwide reforms directed towards esta...
Following decades of deep marketization, Chinese housing policy has recently revived public housing ...
Aiming to introduce market mechanisms to an administratively managed and heavily subsidized housing ...
This paper explains the development of the urban housing system in China from 1949 to 2011 with an e...
This paper reviews the housing policy of China from 1949-2013. It examines the housing tenure change...
This paper reviews the housing policy of China from 1949-2013. It examines the housing tenure change...
Within three decades, the urban housing reform in China has changed access to housing from a system ...
Abstract With the development of the market economy in China, does the effect of the original social...
The market transition in China has resulted in significant social inequality, including housing ineq...
lisiming@hkbu.edu.hkBased on household surveys conducted in the City of Guangzhou in 1996 and 2005, ...
ManuscriptChina's emerging housing market, as a critical element of ongoing economic reforms, has dr...
This paper shows that the transformation to market mechanism corrects distortions under the old welf...
Housing provision in Chinese cities has changed from a socialist welfare system to a marketised syst...
Housing provision in Chinese cities has experienced many changes since 1979 when the country embarke...
Unlike previous studies which used income as the main indicator to examine the changing mechanisms b...
It has been more than three decades since China embarked on nationwide reforms directed towards esta...
Following decades of deep marketization, Chinese housing policy has recently revived public housing ...
Aiming to introduce market mechanisms to an administratively managed and heavily subsidized housing ...
This paper explains the development of the urban housing system in China from 1949 to 2011 with an e...
This paper reviews the housing policy of China from 1949-2013. It examines the housing tenure change...
This paper reviews the housing policy of China from 1949-2013. It examines the housing tenure change...
Within three decades, the urban housing reform in China has changed access to housing from a system ...
Abstract With the development of the market economy in China, does the effect of the original social...
The market transition in China has resulted in significant social inequality, including housing ineq...
lisiming@hkbu.edu.hkBased on household surveys conducted in the City of Guangzhou in 1996 and 2005, ...
ManuscriptChina's emerging housing market, as a critical element of ongoing economic reforms, has dr...
This paper shows that the transformation to market mechanism corrects distortions under the old welf...
Housing provision in Chinese cities has changed from a socialist welfare system to a marketised syst...
Housing provision in Chinese cities has experienced many changes since 1979 when the country embarke...
Unlike previous studies which used income as the main indicator to examine the changing mechanisms b...
It has been more than three decades since China embarked on nationwide reforms directed towards esta...
Following decades of deep marketization, Chinese housing policy has recently revived public housing ...
Aiming to introduce market mechanisms to an administratively managed and heavily subsidized housing ...