Type | Working Paper - Policy reform and Chinese markets: Progress and challenges |
Title | China's Evolving Labor Market |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2008 |
URL | https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Belton_Fleisher/publication/268054039_China's_Evolving_Labor_Market_1/links/5580f35808aea3d7096e570d.pdf |
Abstract | In the nearly three decades since the inception of reforms, the structure of China’s labor force has been fundamentally transformed. In 1978, an overwhelming majority of the labor force was either employed as agricultural workers in rural communes or as employees in urban stateowned enterprises (SOE), with virtually no labor flows between the rural and urban sectors. By 2004, however, over a third of the rural labor force had moved into nonfarm activities (see Table 1), and about three-quarters of the urban labor force had found employment outside of the state sector, in urban collectives, joint ventures and private enterprises (see Table 2). Today, there are more than 100 million rural migrants working temporarily in cities, establishing a direct connection between the rural and urban labor markets. |
» | China - Urban Household Survey 1995 |
» | China - Urban Household Survey 1999 |