You are here: Home / Publications / The Puzzle of Migrant Labour Shortage and Rural Labour Surplus in China

The Puzzle of Migrant Labour Shortage and Rural Labour Surplus in China

Knight, John; Deng, Quheng; & Li, Shi. (2011). The Puzzle of Migrant Labour Shortage and Rural Labour Surplus in China. China Economic Review, 22(4), 585-600.

Knight, John; Deng, Quheng; & Li, Shi. (2011). The Puzzle of Migrant Labour Shortage and Rural Labour Surplus in China. China Economic Review, 22(4), 585-600.

Octet Stream icon 2079.ris — Octet Stream, 1 kB (1588 bytes)

The paper examines the contentious issue of the extent of surplus labour that remains in China. China was an extreme example of a surplus labour economy, but the rapid economic growth during the period of economic reform requires a reassessment of whether the second stage of the Lewis model has been reached or is imminent. The literature is inconclusive. On the one hand, there are reports of migrant labour scarcity and rising migrant wages; on the other hand, estimates suggest that a considerable pool of relatively unskilled labour is still available in the rural sector. Yet the answer has far-reaching developmental and distributional implications. After reviewing the literature, the paper uses the 2002 and 2007 national household surveys of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences to analyse and explain migrant wage behaviour, to predict the determinants of migration, and to examine the size and nature of the pool of potential rural–urban migrants. An attempt is also made to project the rural and urban labour force and migration forward to 2020, on the basis of the 2005 1% Population Survey. The paper concludes that for institutional reasons both phenomena are likely to coexist at present and for some time in the future.




JOUR



Knight, John
Deng, Quheng
Li, Shi



2011


China Economic Review

22

4

585-600






1043-951X

10.1016/j.chieco.2011.01.006



2079