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CHINA ECONOMIC REVIEW VOL: 21 SUPP, NO 1 (5) answer(s).
 
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ID:   100753


Heterogeneous production functions and regional disparity / Jia, Nan; Gan, Li   Journal Article
Jia, Nan Journal Article
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Publication 2010.
Summary/Abstract On explaining regional differences, the current literature emphasizes the difference in factor accumulations. This paper suggests an additional possibility that regions may differ in parameter values in their production functions. In terms of the Cobb-Douglas production function, regions may differ in the share of capital in income. Using the province-level data in China, this paper shows that capital shares have a very significant and positive effect on per capita GDP. In particular, the differences in production functions explain 46.6% of the difference in per capita output between the East region and West region in China. Further, using the firm-level data, we show that the differences in regional production function are likely due to different industry compositions.
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2
ID:   100756


How do consumers determine the safety of milk in Beijing, China / Zhang, Caiping; Bai, Junfei; Lohmar, Bryan T; Huang, Jikun   Journal Article
Huang, Jikun Journal Article
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Publication 2010.
Summary/Abstract In asymmetric information markets, consumers often rely on certain extrinsic indictors to assess the safety of food products. This study analyzes how consumers in Beijing determined milk safety when they purchased liquid milk using survey data conducted just before the melamine-contaminated infant formula event was disclosed. The key finding indicates that milk brand and purchase venue, on average, were ranked as the first two important safety indicators in fluid milk purchases, suggesting that China's milk safety regulators should put more monitoring resources toward supervising the safety of milk produced from branded firms and milk sold in ostensibly trustable stores and not allow exemptions to inspections. Meanwhile, the findings of this study indicate that the existing milk safety certification system in China might be significantly inefficient, suggesting potential waste of regulatory resources.
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3
ID:   100752


Income inequality, volatility, and mobility risk in China and t / Nichols, Austin   Journal Article
Nichols, Austin Journal Article
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Publication 2010.
Summary/Abstract A unified index of income inequality, volatility, and mobility risk is presented, and measurements based on US and Chinese panel data calculated. China is found to have higher-income volatility than the US in recent data, so that long-run inequality is comparable in the two countries, and short-run inequality overstates long-run inequality more in China than in the US. In both countries volatility and income inequality are increasing over time.
Key Words China  Inequality  Mobility  Income  Volatility  Trends 
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4
ID:   100755


Rural households' decisions towards income diversification: evidence from a township in northern China / Demurger, Sylvie; Fournier, Martin; Yang, Weiyong   Journal Article
Yang, Weiyong Journal Article
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Publication 2010.
Summary/Abstract Economic reforms in rural China have brought opportunities to diversify both within-farm activities and off-farm activities. Participation in these activities plays an important role in increasing rural households' income. This paper analyzes the factors that drive rural households and individuals in their income-source diversification choices in a Northern China township. At the household level, we distinguish three types of diversification as opposed to grain production only: within-farm (non-grain production) activities, local off-farm activities, and migration. We find that land availability stimulates on-farm diversification. Local off-farm activities are mostly driven by households' asset positions and working resources, while migration decisions strongly depend on the household size and composition. At the individual level, we analyze the determinants of participation in three different types of jobs as compared to agricultural work: local off-farm employment, local self-employment and migration. We find a clear gender and age bias in access to off-farm activities that are mostly undertaken by male and by young people. The households' asset positions as well as village networks are found to strongly affect participation in off-farm activities.
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5
ID:   100754


Spatial externalities in China regional economic growth / Tian, Lei; Wang, H Holly; Chen, Yongjun   Journal Article
Tian, Lei Journal Article
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Publication 2010.
Summary/Abstract Using spatial econometric techniques, this paper presents an empirical analysis of the growth performances of Chinese prefectures over 1991 to 2007 period. Based on the Solow growth theory with technology spillovers, a Spatial Durbin growth model recently developed is employed to capture the spatial externalities. We find strong evidence of positive spatial dependence between Chinese prefectures after 1991. Apart from the usual divergence conclusions, we find evidence for significant conditional convergence force when the spatial spillover effects are controlled. Our results also indicate the competition effect of capital accumulation and urbanization growth among neighboring regions. Moreover, spatial convergence clubs are detected and the spatial interactions and growth behavior varies.
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