This paper empirically estimates the returns to membership of the Chinese Communist Party using unique twins data that the authors collected from urban China. Our ordinary least squares estimate shows that being a Party member increases earnings by 28.1 percent, but when we use a within-twin-pair fixed-effects model, the effect of Party membership all but disappears, which suggests that much of the estimated value of Party membership that is given in the literature is due to the effects of omitted ability or family background. The findings suggest that Party members fare well not because of their special political status per se, but because of the superior ability that allowed them to pass through the strict Party membership selection proce...
Party membership and social networks, as two forms of nonmarket power, have significant effects on p...
August, 2006 (revised November, 2006)This paper, using nationally representative household surveys, ...
In this study contradictory hypotheses are tested about the changing income advantages of Communist ...
Because political party membership could potentially confer large economic benefits, economists have...
for very helpful comments and suggestions. We also thank Mark Rosenzweig for his generous help in th...
This study provides for the first time a systematic empirical examination of the relationship betwee...
Why is it that, as the Chinese Communist Party has loosened its grip, abandoned its core beliefs, an...
As the Chinese Communist Party has loosened its grip in a more market-oriented economy, why have mem...
Over the past two decades, China has experienced rapid economic growth, which has fundamentally alte...
Over the past three decades, economic reforms have brought about dramatic changes in China. The wave...
As the Chinese Communist Party has loosened its grip in a more market-oriented economy, why have mem...
As the Chinese Communist Party has loosened its grip in a more market-oriented economy, why have mem...
This paper examines the Communist Party's recruitment process and its impact on social inequality in...
How does the Communist Party in China recruit its members and reward them? This is the starting poin...
In Chapter 1 I estimate economic returns to communist party membership in China. To overcome the pro...
Party membership and social networks, as two forms of nonmarket power, have significant effects on p...
August, 2006 (revised November, 2006)This paper, using nationally representative household surveys, ...
In this study contradictory hypotheses are tested about the changing income advantages of Communist ...
Because political party membership could potentially confer large economic benefits, economists have...
for very helpful comments and suggestions. We also thank Mark Rosenzweig for his generous help in th...
This study provides for the first time a systematic empirical examination of the relationship betwee...
Why is it that, as the Chinese Communist Party has loosened its grip, abandoned its core beliefs, an...
As the Chinese Communist Party has loosened its grip in a more market-oriented economy, why have mem...
Over the past two decades, China has experienced rapid economic growth, which has fundamentally alte...
Over the past three decades, economic reforms have brought about dramatic changes in China. The wave...
As the Chinese Communist Party has loosened its grip in a more market-oriented economy, why have mem...
As the Chinese Communist Party has loosened its grip in a more market-oriented economy, why have mem...
This paper examines the Communist Party's recruitment process and its impact on social inequality in...
How does the Communist Party in China recruit its members and reward them? This is the starting poin...
In Chapter 1 I estimate economic returns to communist party membership in China. To overcome the pro...
Party membership and social networks, as two forms of nonmarket power, have significant effects on p...
August, 2006 (revised November, 2006)This paper, using nationally representative household surveys, ...
In this study contradictory hypotheses are tested about the changing income advantages of Communist ...