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Migrants as second-class workers in urban China? A decomposition analysis

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Titre

Migrants as second-class workers in urban China? A decomposition analysis

Sujet

[SHS:ECO] Humanities and Social Sciences/Economy and finances
Chinese labor market
earnings differentials
migration
discrimination

Description

In urban China, urban resident annual earnings are 1.3 times larger than long term rural migrant earnings as observed in a nationally representative sample in 2002. Using microsimulation, we decompose this difference into four sources, with particular attention to path dependence and statistical distribution of the estimated effects: (1) different allocation to sectors that pay different wages (sectoral effect); (2) hourly wage disparities across the two populations within sectors (wage effect); (3) different working times within sectors (hours effect); (4) different population structures (population effect). Although sector allocation is extremely contrasted, with very few migrants in the public sector and very few urban residents working as self-employed, this has no clear impact on differential earnings. Indeed, the sectoral effect is not robust to the path followed for the decomposition. We show that the migrant population has a comparative advantage in the private sector: increasing its participation into the public sector would not necessarily improve its average earnings. The second main finding is that the population effect is robust and significantly more important than wage or hours effects. This implies that the main source of disparity between the two populations is pre-market (education opportunities) rather than on-market.

Créateur

Demurger, Sylvie
Gurgand, Marc
Shi, Li
Ximing, Yue

Date

2008-03

Langue

ENG

Type

preprint

Identifiant

http://halshs.archives-ouvertes.fr/halshs-00586783
http://halshs.archives-ouvertes.fr/docs/00/58/67/83/PDF/wp200820.pdf