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Inequality and Growth in Modern China
Guanghua Wan
236 pages
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numerous tables and figures
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234x156mm
978-0-19-953519-4
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Hardback
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03 April 2008
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This item is printed to order and supplied on a firm sale basis. Items which are printed to order are normally despatched and charged within 5-10 days.
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- Comprehensive coverage of topics relating to inequality and poverty in China
- Utilizes alternative data sets to produce roboust and reliable policy recommendations
- Discusses the impact of increasing inequality in China on the global economy, and specifically the US and EU
This volume provides comprehensive updated coverage of inequality and poverty issues in China. Some of the methodologies developed herein are published for the first time and may be used in other contexts and for other countries. The use of different data sources and state-of-art research techniques ensures that the findings and conclusions can be substantiated and that the policy recommendations are reliable and robust. Contributors to this volume are renowned experts in their respective areas, including, notably, Justin Lin, Xing Meng, Kai-yuen Tsui, and Guanghua Wan. For these reasons, those with an
interest in income distribution in general and China's development in particular, will find this volume essential reading.
Rapidly rising inequality in China has contributed to the sluggishness of domestic demand and emerging poverty. It has thus exerted considerable pressure for commodity exports and represents a root cause of increased trade disputes. These have profound ramifications for the US, EU, and other economies, and the international business community. Consequently, economists and sociologists, among others, are increasingly focused upon inequality and poverty issues in China and relevant policy implications.
This volume, arising from a two-year UNU-WIDER project, addresses issues that include the inequality-growth relationship,
regional/personal variation in incomes and human well-being such as education, the determinants of inequality and poverty or their changes, gaps in innovation capability, and the role played by China's development strategies in affecting inequality.Readership: Researchers and students of the Chinese economy, Chinese society, and China's development in general; Researchers and students of income distribution; and those with a more general interest in development studies and development economics.
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Guanghua Wan, Senior Research Fellow, UNU-WIDER Contributors: Patricio Aroca, Professor and Head of IDEAR at Universidad Católica del Norte, Antofagasta, Chile Zhao Chen, Professor of Economics at China Centre for Economic Studies (CCES), Fudan University, China Peilei Fan, Assistant Professor at the Urban and Regional Planning Program, Michigan State University Dong Guo, Université de Bourgogne, Dijon, France Geoffrey J. D. Hewings, Director of REAL Min-Dong Paul Lee, Assistant Professor of Management at the University of South Florida Zhicheng Liang, Université d'Auvergne,
France Justin Yifu Lin, Professor and the founding Director of the China Centre for Economic Research, Peking University, China Peilin Liu, Associate Research Fellow of Department of Development Strategy and Regional Economy, Development Research Centre of the State Council, China Ming Lu, Associate Professor of Economics at Fudan University, China Anthony Shorrocks Kai-yuen Tsui, Professor of Economics at the Chinese University of Hong Kong Guanghua Wan, Senior Research Fellow and Project Director at the World Institute for Development Economics Research (UNU-WIDER) Xiaolu Wang, Deputy Director and Senior Fellow of National Economic Research Institute, China Reform Foundation Yin Zhang, Lecturer in
Economics at the School of Social Sciences, University of Dundee
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"The book is a valuable read for scholars concerned with the relatonship bewteen economic growth and inequality. This book is timely because the rapid growth of inequality in China has caused domestic demand to diminish and poverty to expand."
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Anthony Shorrocks: Foreword
Guanghua Wan: Introduction
1: Guanghua Wan, Ming Lu, and Zhao Chen: The inequality-growth nexus in the short and long run: empirical evidence from China
2: Xiaolu Wang: Income inequality in China and its influencing factors
3: Yin Zhang and Guanghua Wan: Poverty reduction in China: trends and causes
4: Justin Yifu Lin and Peilin Liu: Development strategies and regional income disparities in China
5: Kai-yuen Tsui: Forces shaping China's interprovincial inequality
6: Zhicheng Liang: Financial Development, Growth and Regional Disparity in Post-Reform China
7: Patricio Aroca, Dong Guo, and Geoffrey J. D. Hewings: Spatial convergence in China: 1952-99
8: Peilei Fan and Guanghua Wan: China's regional inequality in innovation capability, 1995-2004
9: Min-Dong Paul Lee: Widening gap of educational opportunity? A longitudinal study of educational inequality in China
10: Guanghua Wan: Poverty accounting by factor components: With an empirical illustration using Chinese data
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