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CHINA ECONOMIC REVIEW 2015-09 35 (17) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   143385


Asia's evolving role in global wine markets / Anderson, Kym; Wittwer, Glyn   Article
Anderson, Kym Article
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Summary/Abstract Over the past decade Hong Kong and China have become far more important to the world's wine markets, while Southeast Asia's imports of fine wine continue to grow steadily. This paper reviews recent developments in the light of comparative advantage theory before drawing on a model of global wine markets to project developments in Asia and elsewhere over the next five years under various economic growth, real exchange rate, and policy assumptions. It concludes that China is set to continue to be by far the most dominant player in Asia, and to change global markets for wines dramatically, just as it has been doing and will continue to do for so many other products.
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2
ID:   143391


Can money ‘buy’ schooling achievement? evidence from 19 Chinese cities / Zhao, Guochang   Article
ZHAO, Guochang Article
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Summary/Abstract This paper examines the causal effect of private tutoring on Chinese and mathematics test scores of primary school students in urban China. Because the unobserved determinants of schooling achievement often also influence private tutoring expenditure, the OLS estimate cannot provide a consistent estimate. This paper adopts a heteroskedasticity-based identification strategy proposed by Lewbel (2012) to handle this problem. These estimation results show that, on average, private tutoring expenditure has small but statistically significant effect on the mathematics test score of primary school students, but has no statistically significant effect on the Chinese test score. A 1000 yuan increase in private tutoring expenditure (i.e. 54% of a standard deviation) raises the primary school students' mathematics test score by 1.07 percentage point (i.e. 15% of a standard deviation). The instrumental variable quantile regression combining with Lewbel IV suggests that private tutoring is more likely to improve student achievement at the bottom end of test score distribution. When moving upward to the top end, the effect becomes smaller and even negative although not significant.
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3
ID:   143393


Chinese consumers’ preferences and willingness to pay for traceable food quality and safety attributes: the case of pork / Wu, Linhai; Wang, Shuxian ; Zhu, Dian ; Wang, Hongsha   Article
Wu, Linhai Article
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Summary/Abstract A survey was conducted among 1489 consumers in seven pilot cities designated by the Chinese Ministry of Commerce for constructing a meat circulation traceability system.This study set four attributes for pork: traceability information, quality certification, appearance, and price. The preferences and willingness to pay (WTP) of consumers for traceability information, quality certification, appearance attributes, and influencing factors were investigated using choice experiments. According to results from both mixed logit and latent class models, quality certification was the most important characteristic, followed by appearance, and traceability information. “Government certification,” “very fresh-looking,” and “traceability information covering farming, slaughter and processing, circulation and marketing” were the most preferred levels of quality certification, appearance, and traceability information, respectively. Significant heterogeneity was observed in the consumer preferences for these attributes. The preferences and WTP of consumers for traceability information and quality certification were significantly influenced by age, monthly family income, and education level.
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4
ID:   143396


Demography, urbanization and the environment in China’s economic development: symposium introduction / Brada, Josef C; Zhang, Jun ; Zhang, Xiaobo   Article
Brada, Josef C Article
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5
ID:   143398


Does local governments’ budget deficit push up housing prices in China? / Wu, Guiying Laura; Feng , Qu ; Li, Pei   Article
Wu, Guiying Laura Article
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Summary/Abstract Budget deficit has been a common fiscal pressure facing Chinese cities since the 1994 fiscal reform. Meanwhile, land lease sales have become a significant off-budgetary revenue to local governments since 2003. This paper investigates whether financing budget deficit is an important driving force of the recent soaring housing prices when local governments function as the monopoly supplier of urban land. A conceptual framework is developed to illustrate a transmission mechanism from budget deficit to housing prices. This leads to an empirical model consisting of two simultaneous structural equations for housing prices and land prices. Using data for the 35 major Chinese cities from 2003 to 2011, an empirical exercise shows that although budget deficit has a positive effect on land prices, it is the factors from demand side, such as amenities, income and the user cost of housing capital, that have been pulling up the housing prices.
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6
ID:   143400


Does urban concentration mitigate CO2 emissions? evidence from China 1998–2008 / Qin, Bo; Wu, Jianfeng   Article
Qin, Bo Article
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Summary/Abstract We provide evidence of first increasing and then decreasing CO2 emission intensity as the degree of urban concentration increases, based on data from 25 provincial regions in China over the period 1998–2008. This evidence is consistent with the environmentally desirable urban concentration argument identified in recent literature. Our findings indicate the importance of the spatial organization of activities and people in addressing regional CO2 emissions.
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7
ID:   143397


Environmental pollution emissions, regional productivity growth and ecological economic development in China / Chen, Shiyi   Article
Chen, Shiyi Article
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Summary/Abstract Environmental pollution emissions have become an extremely serious problem in China that makes its rapid economic growth unsustainable. This paper estimates the energy and emission adjusted total factor productivity (TFP) and reveals the ecological economic transition by province in the light of their contributions to output. The results indicate that China's ecological development fluctuated before 1992, then turned to improve, and peaked between 1999 and 2002. Due to the reappearance of heavy industrialization, China's ecological development process has reversed course since the beginning of this century.
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8
ID:   143390


Evaluating the effectiveness of China's financial reform—the efficiency of China's domestic banks / Hsiao, Cheng; Shen, Yan ; Bian, Wenlong   Article
Hsiao, Cheng Article
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Summary/Abstract This paper estimates the cost and profit efficiency of the Chinese domestic banking sector to evaluate the effectiveness of China's financial reforms since 1978. We use the performance of foreign banks as the benchmark because foreign banks, subject to intensive worldwide competition, are perceived as possessing superior governing structure and organization, more advanced technologies and better trained labor force. On the other hand, competition in China's banking sector is mainly in the form of nonprice measures, thus putting foreign banks at a disadvantage. We find domestic banks have gradually caught up the cost advantage of foreign banks in a manner consistent with the increased competitive pressure. On the other hand, the profit advantage of domestic banks over foreign banks is widening because of institutional arrangements, cultural and social networks as well as the profit scope and revenue scale economy.
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9
ID:   143392


How does agglomeration promote the product innovation of Chinese firms? / Zhang, Hongyong   Article
ZHANG, Hongyong Article
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Summary/Abstract This study empirically analyzes the effect of agglomeration economies on firm-level product innovation (new products), using Chinese firm-level data from 1998 to 2007. In terms of new product introduction and new product output, I find that Chinese firms benefit from urbanization economies (as measured by the number of workers in other industries in the same city and by the diversity of industries in the same city). Conversely, I find no positive effects of localization economies (as measured by the number of other workers working for neighboring firms in the same industry and in the same city). These results suggest that in China, urbanization economies play an important role in fostering product innovation by urban size and diversity.
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10
ID:   143401


Is social capital eroded by the state-led urbanization in China? a case study on indigenous villagers in the urban fringe of Bei / Zhang, Lei; Wang, Sophie Xuefei ; Yu, Li   Article
Zhang, Lei Article
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Summary/Abstract In the rapid urbanization process, indigenous villagers' social capital might be affected by the flooding-in of rural migrants and more importantly by the government's urbanization policies. Based on survey data collected from fifteen Beijing villages in 2011 and 2012, we study the relationship between social capital and urbanization for indigenous villagers in the urban fringe of Beijing. We find that the bottom-up urbanization measured by migrant-local ratio weakened social networks and social trust. However, the top-down urbanization measured by designating policy zone promoted social networks and social trust.
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11
ID:   143387


Multi-product firms, product scope, and the policy of export tax rebate / Tan, Yong; Han, Jian ; Ma, Yeqing   Article
Tan, Yong Article
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Summary/Abstract This paper extends the model of Nocke and Yeaple (2014) to analyze the impact of the export tax rebate (ETR) changes on multi-product firms' product scope. In response to ETR changes, firms optimally reallocate their organizational capital, and adjust the intensive and extensive margins of production. We test the model's predictions using firm-level export and ETR data from China. We find that less profitable products, facing larger ETR reductions, and products in which China has a comparative disadvantage, are more likely to be dropped.
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12
ID:   143394


Patent statistics: a good indicator for innovation in China? patent subsidy program impacts on patent quality / Dang, Jianwei; Motohashi, Kazuyuki   Article
Motohashi, Kazuyuki Article
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Summary/Abstract Using a merged dataset of Chinese patent data and industrial survey data, we make a bibliometric analysis of patenting activities of Chinese large and medium-sized enterprises under local patent subsidy programs and test whether patent statistics are a good indicator of innovation in China. Our empirical results show that patent count is correlated with R&D input and financial output, which suggests that patent statistics are meaningful indicators. However, patent subsidy programs increase patent counts more than 30%. We emphasize the necessity of adjustments and provide a novel method of using the number of nouns in claims to quantify the claim scope, thereby overcoming the shortcomings of Chinese patent data that have no citations or lack well-documented patent claim information. We extend prior studies on patent subsidy programs by providing a detailed clarification of policy designs and their impacts and by evaluating policy impacts on both the quantity and quality of patent applications.
Key Words China  Patent  Innovation  Quality  Subsidy 
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13
ID:   143388


Peer effects on childhood and adolescent obesity in China / Nie, Peng; Sousa-Poza, Alfonso ; He, Xiaobo   Article
Nie, Peng Article
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Summary/Abstract Using data from the China Health and Nutrition Survey (CHNS), this study analyzes peer effects on obesity in a sample of 3- to 18-year-old children and adolescents in China. Even after a rich set of covariates and unobserved individual heterogeneity are controlled for, it is evident that such peer effects do indeed exist. These effects are stronger in rural areas, among individuals at the upper end of the BMI distribution, and especially among females. All else being equal, female adolescents whose peers have a higher BMI are less likely to consider themselves overweight, suggesting that peer effects may be working through changed societal bodyweight norms.
Key Words China  Peer Effects  BMI  Children and Adolescents 
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14
ID:   143386


Population dynamics and economic growth in China / Golley, Jane; Wei, Zheng   Article
Golley, Jane Article
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Summary/Abstract This paper focuses on two major elements of China's population dynamics—the rising proportion of workers in the population and the shift of rural workers from agriculture into industry and services—in a provincial-level analysis of per capita income and productivity growth during the last three decades. We measure the ‘mechanical’ contributions of these dynamics to per capita income as revealed by growth decompositions, before assessing the determinants of per capita income and productivity growth in a series of regressions that include the growth of the working-age to total population (WAP) ratio and a measure of sectoral employment change. Our results indicate that sectoral change has made a significant positive contribution to both per capita income growth and aggregate productivity growth, stemming from its positive impact on agricultural productivity growth—as predicted by the Lewisian dual economy model. However, the negative impact of sectoral change on productivity growth in the industrial and service sectors, combined with the negative impact of growth of the WAP ratio on both per capita income and aggregate productivity growth, suggests that the benefits of China's population dynamics during the last three decades have been overstated.
Key Words Demography  China  Economic Growth  Productivity  Sectoral Change 
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15
ID:   143399


Sex imbalance, marital matching and intra-household bargaining: evidence from China / Du, Julan; Wang, Yongqin ; Zhang, Yan   Article
Zhang, Yan Article
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Summary/Abstract This paper studies the effects of sex imbalance on matching patterns in China's marriage markets. We hypothesize that the economic inequality caused by economic liberalization, together with sex imbalance, will lead to women's hypergamy (marrying up). Employing CGSS data, our empirical findings support the hypothesis. We also establish that sex imbalance enhances the postnuptial bargaining power of the wife vis-à-vis the husband in intra-household resource allocation. The findings are robust to IV estimation and robustness checks.
Key Words Bargaining Power  Sex Imbalance  Female Hypergamy  Sorting 
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16
ID:   143395


Social network, intra-network education spillover effect and rural–urban migrants' wages: evidence from China / Wang, Chunchao; Zhang, Chenglei ; Ni, Jinlan   Article
Wang, Chunchao Article
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Summary/Abstract This study examines the determinants of rural–urban migrant wages, paying special attention to the intra-network education spillover effect of the migrants' social network in China. Using the new migrant sample of Rural Urban Migration in China (RUMiC) 2009 survey data, we find that the migrants' social network does have a significant impact on their own earnings. In particular, we find evidence that there exists an education spillover effect of the migrants' social network, which indicates that the education level of the migrants' social network has a significant positive effect on their earnings. We also find that the education spillover effects differ with gender. The results are robust after considering the potential problem of endogeneity.
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17
ID:   143402


Yuan and Roubles: comparing wage determination in urban China and Russia at the beginning of the new millennium / Gustafsson, Björn; Li, Shi ; Nivorozhkina, Ludmila ; Wan, Haiyuan   Article
Gustafsson, Björn Article
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Summary/Abstract Earnings inequality and earnings determination in urban China 2002 and Russia 2003 are compared by using samples covering large parts of the two countries. The results from estimated earnings functions are put in perspective of the outcome from a similar comparison made at the end of the 1980s. We confirm that earnings inequality has increased rapidly in both countries and is found to be similar across countries. As at the end of the 1980s, the gender wage gap is larger in Russia where earnings reach a maximum at a lower age than in China. The association between education and income in China has increased to become stronger than in Russia. The earnings penalty of being employed in the public service sector in Russia has increased while the publically employed in China enjoy a positive payoff of limited magnitude.
Key Words China  Russia  Wages  Wage Inequality  Gender Wage Gap 
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