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Inequality in China: Recent Trends and Future Prospects. Li Shi (Beijing Normal University, China) Terry Sicular (University of Western Ontario, Canada). Introduction. Economic reforms of 1980s & 1990s brought rapid economic growth
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Inequality in China: Recent Trends and Future Prospects Li Shi (Beijing Normal University, China) Terry Sicular (University of Western Ontario, Canada)
Introduction • Economic reforms of 1980s & 1990s brought rapid economic growth • But accompanied by erosion of social safety net and public goods provision • Institutional reforms: rural collectives and urban work units no longer provided social welfare and public goods • Fiscal decline (through mid 1990s)
Since 2000 under Harmonious Society agenda, China has entered a new policy era • Concerted effort to rebuild, extend social welfare policies and social programs • Step by step movement towards nationwide, universal, comprehensive social programs • World Financial Crisis (WFC) has brought new challenges, new policies aimed at stabilization • But: Social policy agenda has continued through and since WFC
Despite shift in policy emphasis from growth to social policy, and despite WFC, overall GDP growth in past decade was rapid • Size of the economic pie roughly doubled in the 2002-2012 decade • Questions • What happened to the distribution of the pie? • What happened to trends in inequality and poverty? • What was the impact of the new social policies?
Aim of this talk • In the spirit of, and following in footsteps of the Social Policy Network • Provide a broad overview of past and recent trends in inequality and poverty • Discuss some key recent policies aimed at redistribution and social welfare • Draw some lessons, provide some food for discussion
Distributional Outcomes in Past Decade: Rising Inequality, Declining Poverty • Income inequality in China as a whole has risen markedly since 1980s
China’s Gini Coefficient Sources: Ravallionand Chen (2004), Gustafssonet al. (2008), NBS.
National Inequality • By 2007-08, Gini coefficient was 0.49 • Latest estimate from NBS: 0.47 in 2012 • This level of inequality is moderately high by international standards • Among the top quarter of countries worldwide ranked by degree of inequality • Near the top in Asia
Two periods of substantial increase • Mid-1980s to mid-1990s • Late 1990s to late 2000s • Leveling off since WFC • Trends reflect underlying trends in rural and urban sectors • Through 1990s, both rising inequality within sectors and widening urban-rural gap • Since 2000, mainly reflects widening urban-rural gap
Rural Gini Coefficient Source: NBS.
Rural Inequality • Rural inequality increased in 1980s and 1990s • Partly associated with expansion of unequally distributed income from off-farm wage employment in rural enterprises • Mid-1990s: increases in farm prices raised rural incomes, moderated inequality • Late 1990s: inequality resumed its increase • Since 2000: rural inequality stabilized • Robust growth in income from agriculture • Expansion of migrant employment • Related to policy changes
Urban Gini Coefficient Source: NBS.
Urban Inequality • Increased in 1980s through mid-1990s • Late 1990s: Asian Financial Crisis, enterprise restructuring moderated urban inequality • Since 2000: some increase, relatively modest • Associated with incomes from private business and assets and in monopoly industries • Moderated by expanded urban social programs • Understatement of inequality may increased due to difficulty of capturing high income groups in surveys
Urban:Rural Income Ratio Source: NBS.
Urban-Rural Income Gap • Overall, marked increase in urban-rural income ratio has increased markedly • From around 2.0 in 1980s • To well over 3.0 in 2000s • High by international standards • Bangladesh, India, Indonesia, Malaysia < 2.0 • Thailand, Philippines 2.2-2.3 • South Africa, Zimbabwe > 3.0
Changes in national inequality correlated with urban-rural income ratio, especially in recent years • Can see this visually…
Inequality decompositions tell a similar story • Contribution of urban-rural gap to national inequality increased in 2000s (Li, Luo, Sicular 2013) • 2002: 43% • 2007: 47%
Poverty • Although inequality has increased, absolute poverty in China has declined substantially since the 1980s • This finding confirmed by many studies, regardless of methodology and choice of poverty line
Observations • Major reduction in poverty in 1980s, 1990s • After 2000: remaining poverty more difficult to solve, but even so poverty reduced further • Poverty reduction continued during WFC • But: Many people remain close to poverty line • Reflected in the sensitivity of poverty estimates to choice of poverty line • And: Relative poverty has been stubborn • For relative poverty line of 50% of median income, poverty rate remained at or above 13 percent in 2002-2007 (Li, Luo & Sicular 2013)
Redistributive Policies • Rising inequality in 1980s-90s raised concerns about income distribution and social welfare • Response: the Harmonious Society policy agenda • Concerted policy effort since early 2000s • Wide array of policies, some new, some building on earlier programs • Step by step development of universal programs available to eligible individuals and households nationwide
Elements of the Harmonious Society policy program discussed in paper include • Tax reforms: personal income tax, removal of taxes on rural households • Minimum living standard guarantee (dibao) program • Urban labor market policies, e.g., minimum wage regulations, collective bargaining • Easing of restrictions on mobility & migration • Pension and health care programs • Agricultural support programs • Regional development strategy • Poverty alleviation program
Discuss evidence on the impact of some of these recent policies • In talk discuss a few of these policies; more in the paper • Detailed analysis beyond the scope of this talk; nevertheless, discuss some informative evidence • Keep in mind that overall distributional outcomes reflect other policies and macroeconomic trends • Main theme: The impact of recent distributional policies on inequality and poverty has ben uneven: some have been more effective than others
Tax Reforms: Rural Taxes and Fees • Historically, rural population has had to pay agricultural taxes • During 1980s & 1990s, burden of taxes and fees on rural population increased • E.g., Development Research Center field study of several counties found that in 1997 the tax rate for farmers averaged 12%, and with the tax rate in one county as high as 28% (Chen Xiwen, ed.) • Structure of these taxes and fees was regressive
Government undertook to address this problem with a series of policy measures • Elimination of fees on rural households • Abolition of agricultural taxes in 2006 • Aim was to ease burden on lower income rural households
Average tax (fees) rate of different income groups in rural China(estimates based on CHIP data)
Impact of these tax changes • Helped reduce poverty • Analysis by Luo & Sicular (2013) finds that in 2002 taxes and fees paid by poor households were equivalent to 25% of the poverty gap • After abolition of rural taxes, taxes and fees paid by the poor were close to zero • Note: some concerns, though, that the policy reduced local fiscal resources for social programs in poor areas
But: Impact on inequality was mixed • Within rural areas: little impact • Difference between pre- and post-tax rural Gini coefficient was less than 1% even in mid-1990s • May have moderated national inequality, as it reduced the urban-rural income gap by about 5%
Tax Reforms: Personal Income Tax • China began to implement a personal income tax in 1980s • This tax applied to earnings in urban areas • Tax rates were progressive (5% to 45%) • Threshold was very high, so initially few people paid income tax, and no impact on income distribution
Ensuing years • With income growth, number of taxpayers and amount of income tax collected has increased substantially • This is true despite increases in the minimum threshold over time • Total personal tax reached 483.7 billion yuan in 2010, with a growth rate of 23% in real terms from 1999 to 2010
Impact of Personal Income Tax on Urban Inequality(source: Li et al. 2011)
Analysis by Li et al. and others finds impact on inequality is minimal • Tax is on individual incomes rather than integrated tax based on family income and household size • Problems with tax administration and collection allow higher income groups to avoid taxes • Increases in thresholds exempt too many households • E.g., after threshold increase in 2011, fewer than 10% of income earners pay income tax • Without significant reconfiguration, personal income tax not effective mechanism for addressing distributional concerns
Minimum Wage • Introduction of minimum wage began in 1999 • In 2004 the central government issued a Minimum Wage Regulation, required provincial governments to set and implement minimum wage standards for their cities. • In practice, minimum wage standards vary among cities and provinces • In principle, intended to help lower-wage workers
Few empirical studies have assessed the impact of the minimum wage regulations • Evidence, however, suggests it has had little impact on inequality • Problems include: • Incomplete coverage and enforcement: difficulties implementing minimum wages in the informal sector (Ngok, 2008) • Applies only to wage earnings, but a substantial portion of urban incomes is non-wage income • Relatively low minimum wage standard
Minimum wage as a % of the average urban wage(Li and Ye 2012).
Wage growth has outpaced minimum wage standards • By 2010, on average, minimum was well below 30% of the average wage • Therefore, even with increasingly strict enforcement in recent years, likely plays a limited role in reducing urban inequality
Rural-Urban Migration • Since 1990s and through 2000s easing of restrictions on short-term migration • Accompanied by rapid growth in number of migrants • 1999: 50 million / 15% of rural labor force • 2006: 130 million / 26% of rural labor force • Sheng (2008) • By 2007, 40+% of rural household participate in migration (Luo & Sicular 2013)
All else equal, would expect increased migration to narrow the urban-rural gap, moderate inequality • Recent studies find that rural households’ earnings from migrant work is quite equally distributed across income groups, and so has moderated inequality within rural areas • Also, it has contributed to solid growth in rural incomes, so moderating the urban-rural gap
Relationship b/ Poverty and Migration • Migration also appears to be poverty reducing • Luo and Sicular (2013)
In 2002, the poverty rates for migrant and nonmigrant households similar, 26% and 28% • By 2007, poverty rates had declined both for households with and without migrant earnings, but more so for households with migrant earnings • These statistics are consistent with a scenario in which migrant work provided a path out of poverty • Similar results from World Bank study (2009)
Minimum Living Guarantee (dibao) Program • Urban dibao program began in early 1990s, extended nationwide by early 2000s • Rural dibao program began later in 1990s, widened in early 2000s, adopted nationwide in 2007 • Basic design: • Localities set minimum income thresholds • Poor households with incomes below the threshold are eligible • Beneficiary households receive income transfers to bring them up to or above the threshold
Expansion of DibaoPrograms since 2000(numbers of beneficiaries, millions) • Urban program stabilized at 20+ million after 2002 • Rural program stabilized at 50+ million after 2010 • Government spending on the programs also grew, e.g., 2011 rural dibao expenditures 67 billion yuan, or 1250 yuan per recipient
Impact of urban dibaosources: Li and Yang 2009; Chen et al. 2006 • Targeting is fairly effective: benefits mostly go to the urban poor • Impact on poverty: findings differ • Li and Yang (2009) find the program significantly reduces poverty—poverty incidence reduced by >40% • Chen et al. (2006) find the impact is small—poverty incidence declines by less than 10% • More research needed • Agreement that impact on urban inequality is small • Main reason: the number of beneficiaries is small relative to total number of low income urban residents
Impact of rural dibao sources: Deng and Li 2010; Luo and Sicular 2013; Golan et al. 2013; World Bank 2010 • Rural dibao program does largely benefit the poor, but there is leakage • For dibao recipients, the dibao allowance has a noticeable impact, reducing poverty incidence by 21%, the poverty gap by 33% and the squared poverty gap by 38% (Deng & Li) • Overall impact on rural poverty, however, is small: poverty rate reduced by less than 3% • Can infer that impact on inequality is minimal
Reasons for limited impact of rural dibao on poverty and inequality • Coverage is small relative to the total poor and low-income rural population • Thresholds and funding vary and are lower in poorer localities • Difficulties in measuring rural incomes and thus targeting • Large scale of program with limited resources for administration, implementation • Insufficient checks and oversight
Summary/Conclusions • Ambitious redistributive policy program commendable • Results mixed • Successful poverty reduction • Inequality continued to rise • Some policies more effective than others • Of course, these broad outcomes reflect other influences • Macro trends • Other policies and programs with distributional impacts • Also, must acknowledge that reducing poverty & inequality is hard to do anywhere
Lessons • Uneven impact of redistributive policies reflects • Problems with effective administration • Insufficient monitoring, oversight on the ground • Lack of sufficient administrative resources • Competing interests or goals dilute the impact • Target group is appropriate, but leakage • Programs not well targeted in design: measures benefit not just the poor, but also middle and higher income groups • Insufficient or limited coverage • Beneficiaries benefit, but benefits limited • Share of poorer population reached is insufficient
Lessons, cont. • Aiming at a moving target • For poverty: with growth and development, relative poverty, not just absolute poverty, an increasing concern • For inequality: Emergence of new factors and new sources of inequality • Asset and property ownership an important issue • Role of WFC, as yet unexplored • Need to constantly review, reshape, and develop new policy approaches
Final message for this audience: • Senior researchers working on social policy: No rest for the weary! • Junior researchers interested in social policy: Plenty of opportunities and work ahead!