Essays on Rural-Urban Migration in China

Type Thesis or Dissertation - Doctor of Philosophy in Economics
Title Essays on Rural-Urban Migration in China
Author(s)
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2006
URL http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-05192006-114512/
Abstract
Since the late 1980’s, China has experienced the world’s largest peacetime out-migration
of its rural labor force to urban areas. The temporary nature of the labor migration
complicates the control on this mobile population, and its multi-faceted influence on the
whole economy makes the migration policy controversial. Based on cross-sectional
Chinese rural household survey data, this study analyzes the effects of migration on rural
areas and explores the determinants of the participation and duration of the temporary
migration.
The first chapter investigates how parental migration affects the decision of enrolling
children in high school through migration’s effects on household income and the
opportunity cost of schooling in rural China. The opportunity cost of schooling is
approximated by the marginal productivity of children imputed from family production
estimation, which controls for potential endogeneity in the time allocation decisions of
family members. The empirical results show that temporary migration of parents raises
their children’s probability of high school enrollment by 3.2%, resulting primarily from a
positive income effect. These findings suggest that reductions in barriers to migration
raise rural household earnings, and foster the investment in children’s education.
The second chapter studies the determinants of participation and duration of temporary
rural-urban migration in China highlighting the role of education and migrant networks.
The Probit and Logit models are fitted to the dichotomous migration participation
estimation. To correct for the sample selection bias, Heckman’s two-step procedure is
used to estimate the length of migratory work. Empirical results confirm the existence of
a migrant network effect on both migration participation and migration length. Schooling
increases migration probability non-linearly and its effect on migration length is
insignificant once migration is controlled. Furthermore, the positive effect of migrant
networks on migration participation is especially prominent among individuals with
junior and senior high school education.

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