This paper introduces labor market transition as an intervening process by which the macro institutional transition to a market economy alters social stratification outcome. Rather than directly addressing income distribution, it examines the pattern of workers’ entry into self-employment in reform-era China (1978-1996), focusing on rural-urban differences and the temporal trend. Analyses of data from a national representative survey in China show that education, party membership and cadre status all deter urban workers’ entry into self-employment, while education promotes rural workers’ entry into self-employment. As marketization proceeds, the rate of entry into self-employment increases in both rural and urban China, but urban workers ar...
This paper examines the emergence of labour markets in China through the lens of returns to rural ed...
When examining questions regarding the Lewis model, one of the most salient set of facts involves th...
National Natural Science Foundation of China; National Social Science Foundation of Chin
This paper examines the patterns of entry into self-employment in urban and rural China and across d...
Prior to its economic reforms, China did not have an operating labor market. The government assigned...
Chinese urban workers are no longer shielded from market forces. They are bearing the brunt of the a...
There are some severely biased views in the on-going market transition debate: nearly all relevant r...
The overall goal of this paper is to contribute to the ongoing assessment of China's rural labor mar...
The paper examines earnings inequality and earnings returns to education in China among four types o...
Over the past few decades of economic reform, China's labor markets have been transformed to an incr...
Nee's market transition theory claims that redistributive power will decline and returns to human ca...
The overall goal of this paper is to contribute to the ongoing assessment of\r\nChina’s rural labor ...
In this project, we employ data from the Chinese population censuses of 1982, 1990, and 2000 to exam...
This paper proposes a model of selective mobility of workers from the state sector to the market sec...
Studies the move towards a free labor market in China, including the current status of the labor mar...
This paper examines the emergence of labour markets in China through the lens of returns to rural ed...
When examining questions regarding the Lewis model, one of the most salient set of facts involves th...
National Natural Science Foundation of China; National Social Science Foundation of Chin
This paper examines the patterns of entry into self-employment in urban and rural China and across d...
Prior to its economic reforms, China did not have an operating labor market. The government assigned...
Chinese urban workers are no longer shielded from market forces. They are bearing the brunt of the a...
There are some severely biased views in the on-going market transition debate: nearly all relevant r...
The overall goal of this paper is to contribute to the ongoing assessment of China's rural labor mar...
The paper examines earnings inequality and earnings returns to education in China among four types o...
Over the past few decades of economic reform, China's labor markets have been transformed to an incr...
Nee's market transition theory claims that redistributive power will decline and returns to human ca...
The overall goal of this paper is to contribute to the ongoing assessment of\r\nChina’s rural labor ...
In this project, we employ data from the Chinese population censuses of 1982, 1990, and 2000 to exam...
This paper proposes a model of selective mobility of workers from the state sector to the market sec...
Studies the move towards a free labor market in China, including the current status of the labor mar...
This paper examines the emergence of labour markets in China through the lens of returns to rural ed...
When examining questions regarding the Lewis model, one of the most salient set of facts involves th...
National Natural Science Foundation of China; National Social Science Foundation of Chin