2005
DOI: 10.1086/428713
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The Evolution of Income Inequality in Rural China

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Cited by 226 publications
(146 citation statements)
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“…The sons born into the parents in non-farm occupation have gained in schooling attainment irrespective of the parental education level which suggests that higher income has played an increasingly important role in their educational attainment (recall that the low educated non-farm households have higher income than the better educated farmer households). This is consistent with the evidence that non-farm occupations have contributed significantly to the increase in rural inequality in 1990s (Benjamin et al (2005)). …”
Section: (42) Do the Children Of Reform Have More Educational Opportsupporting
confidence: 91%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The sons born into the parents in non-farm occupation have gained in schooling attainment irrespective of the parental education level which suggests that higher income has played an increasingly important role in their educational attainment (recall that the low educated non-farm households have higher income than the better educated farmer households). This is consistent with the evidence that non-farm occupations have contributed significantly to the increase in rural inequality in 1990s (Benjamin et al (2005)). …”
Section: (42) Do the Children Of Reform Have More Educational Opportsupporting
confidence: 91%
“…For insightful analysis of inequality in post-reform period see, among others, Shi et al (2013), Benjamin et al (2008), Gustafsson et al (2008), Khan et al (1999), Ravallion and Chen (1999), Griffin and Zhao (1993). Benjamin et al (2005) provide an in-depth and comprehensive analysis of the evolution of inequality during the transition in rural China. An important finding in Benjamin et al (2005) which is partly responsible for our focus on non-farm occupations is that non-farm income has 13 As we discuss later, the farm and nonfarm distinction carries different meanings before and after the reform, because the policies implemented during the Maoist era (in particular the cultural revolution) were aimed at enhancing the social position of peasants and improving educational mobility of their children (see, among others, Hannum and Xie (1994), Sato and Li (2007), and Hannum et al (2008)).…”
Section: (2) Related Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Table 2 presents the poverty lines used in the following econometric analysis. 4 The sample collection proceeds in a stratified way for the village data: First, every county is subdivided according to annual net income per capita into upper, middle, and lower levels (Benjamin, Brandt, & Giles, 2005). Second, the respective village is chosen from the three county groups according to geographic (plain, hilly or mountainous area), location types (city, suburb or not) and economic features such as production characteristics.…”
Section: Table 1 Around Herementioning
confidence: 99%
“…We use individual household data which are linked to a village level survey over the (2006) and Benjamin, et al (2005). Furthermore, the village survey provides information on the respective village's resource endowment, number of working days of inhabitants and aggregated production as well as welfare and social indicators.…”
Section: Table 1 Around Herementioning
confidence: 99%
“…First, economic growth has also seen a sustained rise in income inequality and falling absolute incomes at the bottom end of the income distribution in rural areas (Benjamin et al, 2005). This may have reduced happiness because individuals prefer equal society i.e.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%