Type | Journal Article - Doing fieldwork in China |
Title | Surveys - three ways to obtain household income data |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2006 |
Page numbers | 129-52 |
URL | https://books.google.com/books?hl=en&lr;=&id=kzLzQJ3os5gC |
Abstract | China is changing rapidly. The industrial sector is growing swiftly and the economy is in transition towards a market economy. Labor markets are developing in a situation with great differences in living standards between rural and urban areas. These processes occur at different speeds in various regions of this very large and populous country. While some households are improving their standards of living, others are left behind. Therefore economic inequality in China is on the rise. To describe and analyse this development poses a considerable challenge to economists and other social scientists. Today researchers are much better equipped than previously to study poverty, income inequality, earnings inequality, incomeand earnings-determination, the gender earnings gap and the economic situation of ethnic minorities. Present-day researchers into China are not constrained to begin their statistical analysis with what is available in official statistical publications. They can apply modern quantitative methods to analyse microdata on individuals and households. This paper describes and discusses quantitative data which have been used to study research questions relating to household income in China in order to illuminate their advantages and disadvantages. We will draw on our own experience as well as on what others have written. As the literature is far from limited we do not claim that our coverage of the issue is complete. |
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