Migration, remittances and rural employment patterns: Evidence from China

Type Working Paper
Title Migration, remittances and rural employment patterns: Evidence from China
Author(s)
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2012
URL https://halshs.archives-ouvertes.fr/halshs-00744438/document
Abstract
This paper explores the rural labor market impact of migration in China using crosssectional
data on rural households for the year 2007. A switching probit model is used to
estimate the impact of belonging to a migrant-sending household on the individual occupational
choice categorized in four binary decisions: farm work, wage work, self-employment
and housework. The paper then goes on to estimate how the impact of migration differs
across different types of migrant households identified along two additional lines: remittances
and migration history. Results show that individual occupational choice in rural China is
responsive to migration, at both the individual and the family levels, but the impacts differ:
individual migration experience favors subsequent local off-farm work, whereas at the family
level, migration drives the left-behinds to farming rather than to off-farm activities. Our
results also point to the interplay of various channels through which migration influences
rural employment patterns.

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