Is China’s public bureaucracy overstaffed? To answer this basic question objectively, one needs to define public employment in the contemporary Chinese context; survey data sources available to measure public employment; and finally, compare China’s public employment size with that of other countries. Using a variety of new sources, this article performs all three tasks. It also goes further to clarify the variance between bianzhi (formally established posts) and actual staffing size, as well as other permutations of the bianzhi system, especially chaobian (exceeding the bianzhi). A key finding is that China’s net public employment per capita is not as large as often perceived; quite the contrary, it is one-third below the internat...
Leading cadres in China are subject to rotation. An interesting form of rotation takes place between...
A confusion over local population counts and employment counts in China persists throughout the econ...
This paper aims to bring to the fore some neglected implications of the dual employment systems in C...
From 1982 onwards, the Chinese State Council and the National People’s Congress have had a standing ...
The Chinese Communist Party has maintained tight control over the institutions and processes for cre...
What explains the persistent growth of public employment in reform-era China despite repeated and f...
This paper investigates the determinants of government size at the provincial level in China. We emp...
Using linked employer-employee data for all China's public listed firms over the period 2001-10, we ...
his paper investigates the determinants of government size at the provincial level in China. We empl...
Pressing new (and old) challenges has put systems of governance and public administration under pres...
Although cross-national evidence on public employment is rather fragmented or outdated, downsizing a...
This study starts with the observation that Chinese publications on the workforce refer to two sets ...
The idea that the wage gap (W.G.) between the public sector (P.U.S.) and private sectors (P.R.S.) h...
Using linked employer-employee data for all China's public listed firms over the period 2001-10, we ...
AbstractLocal state-owned enterprises (SOEs) in China continue to face government interference in th...
Leading cadres in China are subject to rotation. An interesting form of rotation takes place between...
A confusion over local population counts and employment counts in China persists throughout the econ...
This paper aims to bring to the fore some neglected implications of the dual employment systems in C...
From 1982 onwards, the Chinese State Council and the National People’s Congress have had a standing ...
The Chinese Communist Party has maintained tight control over the institutions and processes for cre...
What explains the persistent growth of public employment in reform-era China despite repeated and f...
This paper investigates the determinants of government size at the provincial level in China. We emp...
Using linked employer-employee data for all China's public listed firms over the period 2001-10, we ...
his paper investigates the determinants of government size at the provincial level in China. We empl...
Pressing new (and old) challenges has put systems of governance and public administration under pres...
Although cross-national evidence on public employment is rather fragmented or outdated, downsizing a...
This study starts with the observation that Chinese publications on the workforce refer to two sets ...
The idea that the wage gap (W.G.) between the public sector (P.U.S.) and private sectors (P.R.S.) h...
Using linked employer-employee data for all China's public listed firms over the period 2001-10, we ...
AbstractLocal state-owned enterprises (SOEs) in China continue to face government interference in th...
Leading cadres in China are subject to rotation. An interesting form of rotation takes place between...
A confusion over local population counts and employment counts in China persists throughout the econ...
This paper aims to bring to the fore some neglected implications of the dual employment systems in C...