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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
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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 • 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.
Trends of income and consumption inequality between 1988 and 2003 Source: Qian (2005)
Rising gender inequalities in the labor marketRising gender gaps in labor force participation Source: CHNS
Prime-aged women withdrew from the labor market at higher rates than their male counterparts.
Prime-aged women were also more likely than men to be laid off and had greater difficulty finding reemployment (Du and Dong, 2009). 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). 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). 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) 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) 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. Source: China’s urban household survey (Chi and Li, 2008)
Economic disparities between urban and migrant workers Source: 2008 urban and migrant household survey.
Feminization of the rural economy Sources: CHNS
Compared to men, working women have longer work hours and higher time poverty rates (Dong and An, 2011). 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. 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 concerningWEE 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