Job mobility of residents and migrants in urban China

Type Journal Article - Journal of Comparative Economics
Title Job mobility of residents and migrants in urban China
Author(s)
Volume 32
Issue 4
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2004
Page numbers 637-660
URL http://www.economics.ox.ac.uk/Research/wp/pdf/paper163.pdf
Abstract
The large-scale reform of the state-owned sector and the development of a private sector in the 1990s
changed the nature of employment in urban China. The system of allocated, lifelong jobs (the "iron rice
bowl") that had previously prevailed under state planning was eroded, permitting more labor turnover and
mobility. The degree of mobility of urban workers in China appears not to have been researched, no doubt
because there was so little until recently. Using an urban household survey for 1999 that has rich data on
job duration, job change and the reasons for it, we provide a first analysis of inter-firm mobility in the urban
labor market, its evolution and its explanation. A distinction is made between the, institutionally favored,
urban residents and the rural-urban migrants. The mobility rate of migrants greatly exceeds that of urban
residents. For both groups the extent, patterns, determinants and consequences of mobility are explored.

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