Upload
scott
View
26
Download
0
Tags:
Embed Size (px)
DESCRIPTION
Gender, Labor and Inclusive Growth: Bringing the Global WEE Research Agenda to China. Xiao-Yuan Dong University of Winnipeg National School of Development, Peking University IDRC-DIFD Expert Meeting on WEE and SIG January 26-27, 2012. Contents. Background Research agenda - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Citation preview
Gender, Labor and Inclusive Growth: Bringing the Global WEE Research Agenda to China
Xiao-Yuan DongUniversity of WinnipegNational School of Development, Peking UniversityIDRC-DIFD Expert Meeting on WEE and SIG January 26-27, 2012
Contents
Background Research agenda Troops on the ground
- Introduction to Chinese Women Economists (CWE)
Research Training Program
Background
Chinese economy over the past three decades has undergone dramatic transformations and rapid economic growth.
The rapid economic growth has lifted more than 400 millions of people out of poverty and substantially improved the living standards of Chinese people.
However, the benefits of economic growth have not been distributed evenly; the rising income inequality in post-reform China has been a subject of considerable attention.
Studies based on national representative data also show that while the economic growth has raised the economic well-being of both Chinese men and women in absolute terms, the status of women relative to men in the labor market have deteriorated, especially after the SOE-sector restructuring in the late 1990s.
China's GDP per capita (1978=100), 1978 - 2009
0
200
400
600
800
1000
1200
1400
Source: NBS China Statistical yearbook, 2009 Table 2-5
Rising Human Development Index
China's Human Development Index, 1975 - 2008
0.53 0.5330.556
0.608
0.657
0.7190.756 0.763 0.772
0.793
0.40.450.5
0.550.6
0.650.7
0.750.8
0.85
1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2006 2007 2008
Year
HD
I
Trends of income and consumption inequality between 1988 and 2003
Gini coefficients Ratio of top 10% to bottom 10% in consumption
1988 1995 2003 1991 2003
National 0.39 0.44 0.45 2.43 5.66
Rural areas 0.32 0.38 0.37
Urban areas 0.23 0.28 0.32
Per capita income ratio
Urban/rural 2.0 2.8 3.1
Richest/poorest province
3.5 5.9 8.0
Source: Qian (2005)
Rising gender inequalities in the labor marketRising gender gaps in labor force participation
Urban female labor force participation rates, 1993, 2000, 2006
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
16-25 26-35 36-45 46-55 56-65 65 +
Age
%
1993
2000
2006
Urbam males' labor force participation rates, 1993, 2000, 2006
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
16-25 26-35 36-45 46-55 56-65 65 +
Age
%
1993
2000
2006
Source: CHNS
Prime-aged women withdrew from the labor market at higher rates than their male counterparts.
-30
-25
-20
-15
-10
-5
0
%
16-25 26-35 36-45 46-55 56-65 65 +
Age
Changes in labor force participation rates by gender and by age, 1993 - 2006
Female Male
Prime-aged women were also more likely than men to be laid off and had greater difficulty finding reemployment (Du and
Dong, 2009).
Urban unemployment rate by gender and by age, 2003
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
20-24 25-29 30-34 35-39 40-44 45-49 50-54 55-59 60-64
Age
%
Female
Male
Source: China’s urban labor survey
The decline in women’s employment was concentrated among those married to low-earning husbands (Ding, Dong and Li 2010).
Employment rates of wives by quintile of husbands' income distribution
60
65
70
75
80
85
90
95
100
1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th
Quintile of Husbands' income distribution
%
1988
1995
2002
Source: Chinese household income survey
Women were more likely than men to experience downward occupational mobility, moving into jobs with lower pay and less skill
requirement (Song and Dong, 2009).
Frequency distribution of occupational mobility by direction
37.2
25.2
37.6
42.9
28.5 28.6
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
45
Downward Horizontal Upward
%
Male
Female
Source: Chinese Women Social Status Survey (2000)
A growing number of urban workers, predominately women, have been pushed into the informal sector (Yuan and Cook
2010)
Share of informal employment, 1997-2006
20.5
24.2
33.9
39.9
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
45
Male Female
%
1997
2006
Source: CHNS
Growing gender wage disparities: The ratio of female to male earnings fell from 0.84 in 1987 to 0.76 in 2004 (Chi and Li, 2008)
Annual earnings by gender (yuan)
1542
2190
4215
1293
1822
3203
0
500
1000
1500
2000
2500
3000
3500
4000
4500
1987 1996 2004
Male
Female
Source: China’s urban household survey (Chi and Li, 2008)
The gender earnings gap went up from 1987 to 2004, more dramatically for lower deciles.
Raw gender earnings gaps by decile, 1987-2004
0
0.05
0.1
0.15
0.2
0.25
0.3
0.35
0.4
10th 20th 30th 40th 50th 60th 70th 80th 90th
Decile
1987
1996
2004
Source: China’s urban household survey (Chi and Li, 2008)
Economic disparities between urban and migrant workers
Urban workers Migrant workers
Male Female Male Female
Formal sector 82% 81% 45% 37%
Self-employed 9% 7% 30% 27%
Temporary
workers
9% 12% 25% 34%
Wages
(Yuan/month)
2,475 1,987 1,934 1,309
Working hours/week
42.2 36.3 65.0 61.6
Source: 2008 urban and migrant household survey.
Feminization of the rural economy
The share of work done by women aged 15 and older
55.1
23.6
80.9
55.455.4
41.9
80.8
55.558
44.2
80.6
57.6
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
Farm work Off-farm work Domestic work Total work time
%
1991
2000
2006
Sources: CHNS
Compared to men, working women have longer work hours and higher time poverty rates (Dong and An, 2011).
Men Women
Paid work (Hour/week)
41.3 37.7
Unpaid work (hour/week)
11.4 23.2
Total (hour/week)
52.7 60.9
Time poverty rate (>80 hours/week)
5.6% 10.2%
Source: China time use survey 2008
• Despite the aforementioned setbacks, due to the socialist legacy and rapid economic growth, gender inequalities in China remain lower relative to many countries at similar levels of development.
Human development index ranking
Gender inequality index ranking
GII-HDI
China 89 38 -51
The United States 4 37 33
Canada 8 16 8
Russia 65 41 -24
Brazil 73 80 7
South Africa 110 82 -28
India 119 122 3
Source: UNDP Human Development Report 2010, Table 4
New challenges to WEE and SIG in China
With the ending of “population dividends” and raising labor costs, the Chinese economy faces the massive destruction and reallocation of jobs in low-end manufacturing.
- If not handled properly, this process will further polarize China’s employment structure,
exacerbate income inequality, and worsen women’s position in the labor market. Chinese government’s response - Boost internal consumption
- Develop broad-based social protection and security schemes
- Raise official poverty line to 2,300 yuan (≈$1.25/day)
□ Bringing the WEE and SIG to China is of timely importance.
2. Research agenda
1. Need to improve methodologies Limitations of the existing research on gender and
economic transformations in China- Tend to stress the instrumental rationale of gender equality more than
the intrinsic rationale;
- Narrowly focus on the market sector and paid work;
- Lack of a macroeconomic perspective;
- Quantitative analysis and inadequate attention to policy relevance.
Methodological Improvements
- Place greater emphasis on the intrinsic rationale of WEE in the gender and development discourse;
- Look at women’s work in its totality, paying attention to the tradeoffs of paid work and unpaid family responsibility facing women, especially those from low-income families;
- Link the research on WEE to macroeconomic policies;
- Encourage pluralistic research methods and policy-oriented research.
2. Issues need to be explored Facilitating growth with decent jobs- Macro-issues • Examine the impacts of the industrial upgrading process on the gender patterns
of employment • Develop gender-sensitive labor policy and social protection schemes
- Issues concerning WEE in the formal sector• What obstacles are there to women’s entry to and career advancement in the
sector?
• What obstacles are there to women’s rising to managerial leadership positions?
• What policy measures may help foster family-friendly, gender equality-enhancing practices at the firm level?
• How do such practices affect both enterprise productivity and the well-being of male and female workers?
2. Issues need to be explored
• Issues concerning WEE in the informal sector- Special attention to two groups: - Migrant workers and paid domestic workers- Their earnings, working conditions, access to social protections and
financial services, organized voice and capacity to bargain for fairer returns to labor
• Issues concerning WEE in the rural sector - Impacts of the feminization of agriculture on labor productivity and the
wellbeing of female farmers and their families- Special attention to left-behind non-elderly women and the elderly
2. Issues need to be explored
Enhancing enterprise development, entrepreneurship and innovation
- What are the main reasons for women to start business?
- What factors are attributable to the performance differences between women and men entrepreneurs?
- What role do women play in enterprise innovation?
- Earnings, productivity, working conditions, access to finance and social protections, voice and organizations of self-employed women and men
3. Troops on the ground
The Chinese Women Economists (CWE) Research and Training Program of the National School of Development, Peking University (www.CEW.org.cn)
- Established in 2002 under the sponsorship of the Ford Foundation
- Have provide research trainings for more than 200 young CWEs from more than 100 Chinese universities and research institutes
- 32 established scholars from Australia, Canada, the UK, the US, returning west-trained Chinese scholars have participated in research mentoring
- Have published about 70 articles (with research mentors) in international refereed journals
- Hosted the 2011 IAFFE Annual conference in Hangzhou
3. Troops on the ground
The goals of the program in its second decade- Mainstream gender in economic education, research and
policy making in China
- Work together with Chinese male economists and returning
west-trained junior economists Needs for further capacity building
- Gender research, case study, policy analysis, writing skills