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ID158545
Title ProperSmooth or troubled occupation transition?
Other Title Informationurbanization and employment of former peasants in Western China
LanguageENG
AuthorSong, Jing ;  Huimin, Du ;  Si-ming, Li
Summary / Abstract (Note)Given recent urbanization and land development projects in western China, this study examines how rural villages became part of the expanding municipality of Yinchuan, Ningxia, by focusing on former peasants' occupation transition—their transition into urban employment. Based on the survey and interview data in the outskirts of Yinchuan in 2014 and 2015, the study finds an increase in unemployment rates and the changing distribution of job categories. Quantitative findings highlight the importance of age, gender, and education after land expropriation when agriculture ceases to function as a "safety net," and illustrate the significant effect of pre-expropriation employment but not compensation from land development per se. Such findings are explained and enriched by analyses of in-depth interviews, that most available jobs for older and less educated peasants are unstable and low-end work in construction and service sectors created by urbanization. There are also limited chances to establish and develop one's career, either for those who had prior market experiences and financial capabilities to start private businesses, or for those received heavy education investment from their families in a hope of obtaining clerical or professional jobs. Men are more active in pursuing private businesses and formal white-collar jobs by pooling together the family resources, and women are underrepresented in both sectors. Speaking to the debates on the labor market outcomes for former peasants in urbanization, this study illustrates the emerging opportunities of entrepreneur-ship and economic mobility and the prevalent segregation and discrimination in labor markets.
`In' analytical NoteChina Review Vol. 18, No.1; Feb 2018: p.79-105
Journal SourceChina Review 2018-02 18, 1
Key WordsUrbanization ;  Employment ;  Western China ;  Private Businesses