logo

Papers

Welfare Schemes and Support Mechanisms

Social Protection and Migration in China: What Can Protect Migrants from Economic Uncertainty?

Author : Simon Appleton, Lina Song | 2008
Published By: IZA, Bonn

Job-related welfare entitlements are common in China. Migrants who do not hold urban registration are, in principle, not entitled to job-related welfare even if they are employees in the State sector. The official explanation is that rural-urban migrants are allocated access to farm land in their rural origins, and hence their welfare rights and security are covered by this entitlement to the use of land.This paper looks at whether migrants still benefited from these opportunities. Second, it investigates whether it is the poor, the unentitled and the vulnerable that are excluded from public protection programs. Chinese official social protection programs are, like in most western countries, officially designated as being for poverty alleviation. However would such programs still be targeted in ways that limit their coverage, curtail the range of basic needs provided for and allocate benefits very unequally? Thirdly, this paper explores whether households with favourable productive characteristics are more likely to get into social protection programs. Here, the ongoing debate concerning equality of opportunity and equality of outcomes has some relevance. Finally, we examine the roles social networks or Guanxi (the Chinese term for social connections) may play in dealing with economic shocks.

URL : http://ftp.iza.org/dp3594.pdf

Website developed and maintained by IRIS Knowledge Foundation