Abstract With the development of the market economy in China, does the effect of the original socialist institutional arrangements on social inequality fade? We examine this issue by considering the effect of people’s positions in the work unit system and their socioeconomic status on patterns of housing inequality in urban China. Using individual-level data from the 2007 Household Survey on the Housing Conditions of Urban Residents in Nanjing, China, we find that although people’s socioeconomic status (measured by household income and householder’s education) has become very important in shaping people’s housing outcomes in urban China, housing inequality is also determined to some extent by their position in the work unit system—such as b...
ManuscriptChina's emerging housing market, as a critical element of ongoing economic reforms, has dr...
The Chinese cities, once characterised by egalitarianism, are becoming the most unequal cities in th...
Possessing different land rights and distinct landscapes, and separated from the rest of the city by...
Within three decades, the urban housing reform in China has changed access to housing from a system ...
The market transition in China has resulted in significant social inequality, including housing ineq...
This paper explains the development of the urban housing system in China from 1949 to 2011 with an e...
Unlike previous studies which used income as the main indicator to examine the changing mechanisms b...
lisiming@hkbu.edu.hkBased on household surveys conducted in the City of Guangzhou in 1996 and 2005, ...
In this paper, we examine the roles of institutional sources in the spectacular rise of income inequ...
China has experienced a massive transformation over the past four decades. As China moves towards ma...
Aiming to introduce market mechanisms to an administratively managed and heavily subsidized housing ...
technique, we examine housing tenure choice in transitional urban China where households have been g...
A national urban household survey for China in 1986 is analyzed to examine the determinants and the ...
This article examines the division of housing class in the context of Chinese society since the mark...
Using data from a 1996 national probability sample of Chinese men, the effect of family background o...
ManuscriptChina's emerging housing market, as a critical element of ongoing economic reforms, has dr...
The Chinese cities, once characterised by egalitarianism, are becoming the most unequal cities in th...
Possessing different land rights and distinct landscapes, and separated from the rest of the city by...
Within three decades, the urban housing reform in China has changed access to housing from a system ...
The market transition in China has resulted in significant social inequality, including housing ineq...
This paper explains the development of the urban housing system in China from 1949 to 2011 with an e...
Unlike previous studies which used income as the main indicator to examine the changing mechanisms b...
lisiming@hkbu.edu.hkBased on household surveys conducted in the City of Guangzhou in 1996 and 2005, ...
In this paper, we examine the roles of institutional sources in the spectacular rise of income inequ...
China has experienced a massive transformation over the past four decades. As China moves towards ma...
Aiming to introduce market mechanisms to an administratively managed and heavily subsidized housing ...
technique, we examine housing tenure choice in transitional urban China where households have been g...
A national urban household survey for China in 1986 is analyzed to examine the determinants and the ...
This article examines the division of housing class in the context of Chinese society since the mark...
Using data from a 1996 national probability sample of Chinese men, the effect of family background o...
ManuscriptChina's emerging housing market, as a critical element of ongoing economic reforms, has dr...
The Chinese cities, once characterised by egalitarianism, are becoming the most unequal cities in th...
Possessing different land rights and distinct landscapes, and separated from the rest of the city by...