Inequality in China: An Overview John Knight This paper provides an overview of research on income inequality in China over the period of economic reform. It presents the results of two main sources of evidence on income in- equality and, assisted by various decompositions, explains the reasons income inequality has increased rapidly and the Gini coefficient is now almost 0.5. This paper evaluates the degree of income inequality from the perspectives of people’s subjective well-being and gov- ernment concerns. It poses the following question: has income inequality peaked? It also discusses the policy implications of the analysis. The concluding comments of this paper propose a research agenda and suggest possible lessons from China’s experience that may be useful for other developing countries. JEL codes: D31, D63, O15. When China embarked on economic reform, it had too much income equality. The egalitarian arrangements in the communes and factories stifled incentives and pro- duced enormous inefficiency. The new Chinese leadership recognized that greater income inequality was necessary to provide the incentives essential to an economy that was in the process of making the transition from a central planned economy to a market-driven, private-sector-based economy. Inequality increased rapidly over the reform period. The Gini coefficient of household income per capita was 0.49 in 2007 (Li et al. 2013), and China was found to have the joint highest inequality in Asia (Asian Development Bank 2007: figure 1). Income inequality had become a matter of concern to the Chinese leadership. It is notoriously difficult to make reliable intercountry comparisons of income in- equality or its change. Nevertheless, table 1 reports the Gini coefficient in the 15 largest developing countries (for which data are available) in the late 1980s and the late 2000s. The table suggests that China is outstripped in its recent inequality only by Brazil and South Africa and in the rise of its inequality only by the Russian Federation. The World Bank Research Observer # The Author 2013. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development / THE WORLD BANK. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com doi:10.1093/wbro/lkt006 Advance Access publication July 18, 2013 29:1–19 Table 1. The Gini Coefficient of Income Inequality for Selected Large Developing Countries, Circa 1988 and Circa 2007 Circa 1988 Circa 2007 Change China (World Bank) 0.30 0.43 0.13 (CHIP surveys) 0.38 0.49 0.11 Bangladesh 0.29 0.32 0.03 Brazil 0.61 0.56 -0.05 Egypt 0.32 0.31 -0.01 India 0.32 0.33 0.01 Indonesia 0.29 0.34 0.05 Iran 0.44 0.38 -0.06 Nigeria 0.39 0.49 0.10 Pakistan 0.33 0.30 2 0.03 Philippines 0.41 0.43 0.02 Russian Federation 0.24 0.43 0.19 South Africa 0.59 0.63 0.04 Thailand 0.44 0.41 -0.03 Turkey 0.44 0.39 -0.05 Vietnam 0.36 0.36 0.00 Notes: All earlier figures fall within the 1986–1990 period except Vietnam (1993) and South Africa (1993), and all later figures fall within the 2005– 2010 period. The (alternative) CHIP estimates for China will be explained below. Source: worldbank.org/indicator/SI.POV .GINI; Griffin and Zhao (1993), Li et al. (2013). This paper is a timely and reflective overview of recent economic changes in inequality. It is not designed to provide a comprehensive and thorough empirical survey; rather, it concentrates on the aspects of China’s inequality and its rise that are likely to be of most interest beyond China. This paper focuses on the period of economic reform beginning in 1978 and is largely concerned with inequality of income and factors that generate this inequality. We address a series of important and serious questions. How well can China’s income inequality be measured? Can discrepancies in the evidence from alternative sources be explained? How and why has wealth inequality increased? What are the dimensions and components of increasing income inequality? How do the different components help to explain the remarkable rise in income inequality? What is the relationship of inequality to poverty? Why and how is income inequality of concern to people and to the government? Can China’s past and likely future income in- equality be interpreted in terms of the inverted-U of the Kuznets curve? What are the implications for Chinese policy? Are there lessons for research and for other de- veloping countries? 2 The World Bank Research Observer, vol. 29, no. 1 (February 2014) Measuring Inequality Some knowledge and understanding of the data sources and their limitations is nec- essary. There are two main sources of information on income inequality over time: the annual national household income and expenditure surveys of the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) and the periodic national household surveys of the China Household Income Project (CHIP). The NBS surveys contain many observations but a limited number of questions. They cannot be used as a panel (namely, longitudi- nal study over two or more points in time), and they are generally not available to researchers at disaggregated household and individual levels. Therefore, measures of income inequality such as the Gini coefficient, when derived from official statis- tics, must be based on province-level or percentile data. The CHIP surveys relate to the years 1988, 1995, 2002, and 2007, they use a subsample of the NBS surveys, and they ask many more questions. There is an edited volume on each of the CHIP surveys (Griffin and Zhao 1993; Riskin et al. 2001; Gustafsson et al. 2007a; Li et al. 2013). The two sources use different definitions of income; the CHIP definition is more comprehensive. Because of the sharp administrative and economic divide between urban and rural China and the need for different survey questionnaires, measures of inequality are generally reported for urban and rural areas separately as well as with a weight- ed national measure. The NBS surveys are based on urban or rural residence regis- tration (hukou), so they exclude most rural-urban migrants (who normally retain rural hukou) from the urban sample. By 2002, the number of rural-urban migrants exceeded 100 million. The 2002 and 2007 CHIP surveys added a separate sample of rural hukou households in urban China. China’s poverty and inequality decreased dramatically in 1978 –1985 during the years of rural reform, when farming was decollectivized, household production was restored, and farm incomes responded. It is possible to obtain a fairly consistent set of Gini coefficients from the 1988 –2007 CHIP surveys. In 1988, the urban Gini (0.24) was very low by international standards, the rural Gini (0.33) reflected re- gional income disparities, and the national Gini (0.38) was higher than both the urban and the rural Gini coefficients because of the high ratio of urban to rural household income per capita. There appeared to be a lull in this increase because the national Gini was 0.45 in both 1995 and 2002. However, in 2007, the urban Gini was 0.34, the rural Gini was 0.36, and the national Gini was no less than 0.50.1 Adjusted for regional price differences, the Gini was 0.43 in 2007, having risen from 0.40 in 2002 (Li et al. 2013). Ravallion and Chen (2007), who had partial access to the NBS microdata, found growing income inequality: all three Gini coefficients increased by 3 percentage points over the six years between 1995 and 2001. These authors’ estimate of the national Gini in 2001 was 0.45. NBS statistics for urban China show that income Knight 3 inequality continued to rise after 2001. The share of the lowest three quintiles fell monotonically over the period of 2000 –2008, whereas that of the highest quintile increased sharply. Moreover, the national Gini coefficient based on grouped NBS data was estimated to rise by 5 percentage points between 2000 and 2008 (Lin et al. 2010). Although there is no indication that income inequality in urban areas stopped increasing in the NBS data, the CHIP data suggest that it was no higher in 2007 than it had been in 1995. The explanation for this discrepancy is likely to be found in the definition of income. In contrast to the NBS’s definition, CHIP’s definition in- cludes various regressive subsidies received by urban hukou residents, particularly housing subsidies. The phasing out of subsidies over this period may have reduced urban income inequality. The various estimates of income discussed so far are for disposable income, which includes various private and public transfers as well as factor incomes (derived from productive activities). In fact, taxes and subsidies have done nothing to remedy factor income inequality, although the degree of fiscal regressivity (in which the effect on income is disproportionally greater on poorer than richer people) has fallen as reforms have progressed (Khan and Riskin 2007). In 2007, the urban Gini for income after the deduction of direct taxes was only 1 percentage point lower than its pretax counterpart (Xu and Yue 2013). A rich entrepreneurial class emerged remarkably rapidly in China. There were above-normal profits to be earned, and the combination of a semimarketized economy, weak legal system, and ill-defined or insecure property rights provided room for corruption, cronyism, and rent seeking. Because not all income derived from such activities is detectable in the NBS or CHIP surveys, incomes at the top of the income distribution are likely to be understated. An ingenious attempt to measure this effect claimed to find much “grey income” in the highest income group (Wang and Woo 2010)2. During the period of central planning, there was almost no personal wealth in China. Economic reform brought not only rapid accumulation but also considerable inequality of wealth. China thus provides an excellent case study of the various pro- cesses that generate wealth inequality. The Gini coefficient of wealth in 2002 was 0.55 (rural 0.40, urban 0.48), which was considerably higher than the coefficient of income per capita (Zhao and Ding 2007). The main cause of the higher Gini coef- ficient in both rural and urban areas was differences in the quality and value of housing, which, in the latter case, represented two-thirds of the inequality of net wealth. Urban dwellers who acquired ownership of the houses that they had occu- pied (while paying nominal rents) made huge capital gains; the housing subsidy was merely capitalized. Rationed access to cheap loans from state-owned banks pro- vided opportunities for capital accumulation. More generally, the acquisition or ap- propriation of state assets at below-market prices was a powerful disequalizing force. 4 The World Bank Research Observer, vol. 29, no. 1 (February 2014) The divergence of wealth was assisted by the fact that the household saving rate in- creases sharply with income. Decomposing Inequality To better understand income inequality in China, we need to decompose the com- plexity of the data. Thus, we consider the various dimensions and components of income inequality, starting with the urban sector. Under central planning, the work unit (danwei) served as a mini welfare state, providing lifetime employment, housing, pensions, and medical care to its members. Workers were allocated bureaucratically; wages were determined administratively and were highly egalitari- an. As an urban labor market gradually emerged, the wage structure widened and wage inequality increased. For instance, the Gini coefficient was 0.21 in 1988, 0.33 was in 1995, but was still 0.33 in 2007 (Deng and Gustafsson 2013). The increase was partly due to increasing rewards for productive characteristics and incentives for efficiency. For instance, the wage premium of a college degree over primary schooling was 9 percent, 39 percent, and 88 percent in 1988, 1995, and 2002, respectively. However, the increase was partly due to new or growing forms of discrimination and segmentation (Knight and Song 2007). For instance, these authors found that wages were increasingly sensitive to enterprise profitability due to informal profit sharing. Knight and Yueh (2008) identified an important and continuing role for social connections despite the growing strength of market forces. Appleton et al. (2004) showed that urban workers who had been retrenched as a result of the reform, privatization, and closure of state-owned enterprises had to enter a difficult new labor market and, if reemployed, were at a considerable wage disadvantage in comparison with nonretrenched urban workers. The same was true of rural-urban migrants, who generally retained their rural hukou (residence registration) and were treated as second-class citizens in the cities. Such distinctions were grounds for perceptions of distributive injustice. The presence of rural-urban migrants complicates the accuracy of estimates of urban inequality. Many of these people are temporary migrants who retain close links with their rural households and expect to return to them. Measures of rural household income include migrant remittances. Only the recent CHIP surveys include samples of urban resident households with rural hukou. The 2002 CHIP survey permitted an estimate of the urban Gini coefficient both with and without migrants. The inclusion of migrants raised the Gini by 2 percentage points (Khan and Riskin 2007), but this result may be an understatement if migrants living in households have higher incomes than independent sojourners. Nonfarm employment is important for rural household income and its distribu- tion. Both average and, especially, marginal income are higher in local nonfarm Knight 5 and migrant activities than in farming. The share of wages in rural income rose sharply as rural industry burgeoned and migration accelerated. Processes of cumu- lative causation were initially at work as some villages industrialized and some became migration villages. Wage income contributed 21 percent of rural income in- equality in 1988, 40 percent in 1995, and 41 percent in 2007.3 The slowdown was due to the reduction in rural spatial income inequality as wage employment opportu- nities spread more widely across provinces and counties. In principle, migration can either increase or decrease inequality depending on whether poor households, which have the greatest incentive to send migrants, have the ability to do so. An analysis of the effect of migrant members on the income of rural households using the 2007 CHIP survey showed that it reduced rural poverty and, by implication, inequality (Luo and Yue 2010). Benjamin et al. (2005) analyzed rural income inequality using a Ministry of Agriculture annual survey of 100 villages. Between 1987 and 1999, the (spatially price-deflated) Gini coefficient rose from 0.29 to 0.35. Most of this in- crease was at the local level. Whereas household access to local nonfarm employment increased inequality in this period, temporary migrant employment decreased it. Under central planning, China was characterized by a severe rural-urban divide. This divide was not reduced by the reform and marketization of the economy; the ratio of urban to rural household income per capita was greater than ever in 2007, at 4.10 according to the CHIP survey. However, it decreased to 2.91 after adjust- ment for spatial differences in prices. The corresponding CHIP ratios in 2002 were 3.35 and 2.28 (Li et al. 2013: table 2.8). Including various disguised subsidies (for health care, education, and pension contributions), the 2002 ratios were 4.35 and 3.10, respectively (Li and Luo 2010: 119). Rural-urban differences in the cost of living were offset by subsidies to urban people. The explanation for the high ratio is the underlying political economy that favors urban dwellers and the control of mi- gration (Knight and Song 1999). The contribution to overall inequality made by the mean difference in rural and urban incomes rose from 37 percent in 1988 to 54 percent in 2007. Even adjusting for spatial price differences, which reduces the 2007 figure to 41 percent (Li et al. 2013), this is far higher than that in most other developing countries. Much of China’s income inequality would vanish if mean income per capita in rural and urban China were equal. Regional Inequality It is inevitable that a country as large as China will have large spatial or geographi- cal differences in income levels. The more interesting question is whether there is regional divergence or convergence over time—that is, whether the processes of cu- mulative causation that produce “polarization” are outweighed by “spread effects.” The former are likely to be significant in the initial stages of economic development 6 The World Bank Research Observer, vol. 29, no. 1 (February 2014) but eventually give way to the latter as competitive advantages are eroded by rising costs. There is a good deal of research on this question in relation to China. The evi- dence tends to favor absolute divergence, but in line with economic theory, condi- tional convergence exists. This pattern was found by Lau (2010) in an examination of the GDP per capita among provinces over the 1978 – 2005 period. Unfortunately, the use of province-level GDP per capita as the dependent variable is liable to produce biased results (Tsui 2007; Li and Gibson 2012). Whereas GDP data relate to production in the province, population data generally refer to the pop- ulation registered in the province and exclude rural-urban migrants from other provinces who retain their rural hukou registration. This approach overstates the GDP per capita in the richer provinces that attract migrants. Because migration has grown rapidly, the GDP per capita growth rates of these provinces are exaggerated. Thus, evidence of absolute divergence might be an artifact. Income or consumption based on representative household surveys is therefore probably a more reliable guide to changes in regional income inequality. Kanbur et al. have studied regional income inequality in China using consumption per capita figures derived from the NBS annual household surveys (for instance, Kanbur and Zhang 2005; Fan et al. 2008, 2011). These authors generate a series for China’s income inequality aggregated to the province level (and thus exclude income inequality among households within a province). Over the period from 1980 to 2007, the Gini coefficient rose from 0.27 to 0.34 (Fan et al. 2011). Econometric analysis shows that fiscal decentralization and trade liberalization con- tributed to the rise in inequality (Kanbur and Zhang 2005). Fiscal decentralization enabled the richer coastal provinces to increase their revenues and thus to promote economic development. Trade liberalization enabled the coastal provinces to grow more rapidly through both their geographic advantage and preferential treatment from the central government (with respect, for instance, to infrastructure and foreign direct investment). Fan et al. (2011:50) found that inequality attributable to income differences between the coastal and inland regions increased from 3 percent to 10 percent of the total province-level inequality between 1980 and 2007. A further reason for the rise in income inequality among provinces in recent years involves the fiscal relationship between central and provincial governments. After the fiscal recentralization of 1994, the central government had greater power to redistribute revenue to the poorer provinces. Rule-based transfers tend to be equal- izing, but the two-thirds of transfers that are specific and subject to negotiation are found to be disequalizing because they require matching funds or produce rent seeking (Huang and Kang 2012). In recent years, fiscal transfers from the center to the provinces have done nothing to correct the income divergence among provinces. Inequality among provinces makes a larger contribution to inequality among households in rural China than in urban China. Using the CHIP surveys, Gustafsson et al. (2007b) found that the proportion of household inequality in urban China due Knight 7 to between-province inequality fell from 29 percent in 1988 to 19 percent in 2002. The main gain came from within eastern China, where this more developed economy was becoming more spatially integrated. The contribution of between-province in- equality to rural income inequality rose from 22 percent in 1988 to 39 percent in 1995 and remained at 39 percent in 2002 (Gustafsson et al. 2007b). It appears that the initial polarization effects were offset by the spread effects that were created by the growing scarcity of local resources. Evaluating Inequality It is well known that absolute income poverty in China has fallen dramatically. For instance, Ravallion and Chen (2007) report that the proportion of households who were under the official absolute poverty line decreased from 53 percent in 1980 to 18 percent in 1988 and to 8 percent in 2001. In each year, the great majority of the poor were rural. However, if poverty is defined in terms of relative income, it did not decrease. For instance, the proportion of households with no more than half of the national median household income per capita edged up from 13.2 percent to 13.3 percent in the five years from 2002 to 2007 (Li et al. 2013). Ultimately, the choice of how to measure poverty requires a value judgment. Concern for income inequality implies the introduction, wholly or partly, of a relative concept. Sen (1983 and elsewhere) has argued that concern for absolute poverty in terms of people’s “capabilities” (to be and to do things of intrinsic worth) can imply concern for more income equality—a reduction in relative poverty. The dramatic fall in abso- lute poverty in China over the reform period, reflecting the overall rise in personal income, strengthens the case for switching to the use of a poverty line that is ex- pressed in relative terms. The evaluation of income inequality requires a normative judgment. The eco- nomic literature on inequality commonly proceeds from the judgment that income inequality at the national level is the appropriate criterion and that the degree of in- equality measured in this way is too high and should be reduced. This section delves more deeply into the basis for such a judgment. How much concern is there about income inequality in China? We focus first on the people and then on the government. Research on subjective well-being in China shows why people are concerned about income inequality: “relative deprivation” is a common phenomenon (for instance, Knight and Gunatilaka 2011, using the 2002 CHIP survey). Regression analyses of happiness (or life satisfaction, or subjective well-being—we use the terms interchange- ably) in China produce well-fitting equations with understandable and significant co- efficients.4 Two consistent findings are the importance of relative income and the importance of the chosen reference group. 8 The World Bank Research Observer, vol. 29, no. 1 (February 2014) In rural China, where the happiness score ranges from 0 to 4 with a mean of 2.7, those who report being “much below” the mean income of the village (five answers are possible) have a happiness score that is 1.06 below those who report being “much above” the mean (Knight and Gunatilaka 2010). Respondents were asked with whom they compared themselves; in rural China, two-thirds of respondents claimed to compare themselves with others living within the village. This finding indicates that the reference groups are narrow. In rural China, the “relevant others” are households in the same village, and in urban China, the “relevant others” are households in the same city. In the cities, where a doubling of income raises the happiness score by 0.10 units, the happiness of respondents whose households fall into the lowest quarter of city income per capita is 0.81 points below those in the highest quarter (Knight and Gunatilaka 2010).5 Thus, income inequality matters, but it is inequality at the local and not the national or regional level that matters to people. The finding that subjective well-being in China is sensitive to relative income is in line with the evidence for many countries (surveyed by Clark et al. 2008, and by Graham and Felton 2006). The coefficient on group income is generally negative, but there are cases in which it is positive. For instance, Senik (2004) found a posi- tive coefficient for Russia (on income in the region), and Kingdon and Knight (2007) found a positive coefficient for South Africa (on income in the close neigh- borhood). The (usual) negative coefficient is normally interpreted to indicate feel- ings of relative deprivation, and the (unusual) positive coefficient is normally interpreted to indicate local opportunities for improvement (Russia) or fellow feeling (South Africa). The reference group may be crucial. In rural China, the neg- ative effect of being low in the village’s income distribution coexists with a positive effect of income inequality in the county in which it is located, as measured by the Gini coefficient (Knight et al. 2009). The former may represent relative deprivation, and the latter may represent perceived room for self-advancement. Over the period from 1990 to 2010, China’s income grew substantially, yet life satisfaction was no higher in 2010 than it had been in 1990 (Easterlin et al. 2012). This finding is based on an examination of the six available time series of life satis- faction in China over that period (including, for instance, the World Values Survey and the Gallup World Poll). The explanation for the stagnation in life satisfaction can be found in the increase in the reference group’s income, which offsets the effect of the increase in one’s own income, as well as the powerful socioeconomic changes that accompanied China’s rapid growth (Knight and Gunatilaka 2011). These changes included higher unemployment and redundancy, greater economic uncertainty and insecurity, and changing reference groups. Easterlin et al. (2012) found that inequality of income and inequality of the life satisfaction score rose over those two decades. This finding is consistent with the positive association between income and happiness found in the cross-section. Knight 9 However, it is plausible that subjective well-being becomes more sensitive to income inequality and that average subjective well-being decreases as income inequality at the national level rises and social cohesion is weakened. These hypotheses have yet to be tested for China, but if they were correct, they would strengthen the case for the central government to use policies to address and reduce income inequality. The failure of subjective well-being to rise across two decades should be a matter of concern for the Chinese government. China does not rank high in various recent in- ternational rankings reported in the World Happiness Report, being in the 27th percen- tile for quality of life, the 28th percentile for life satisfaction, and the 30th percentile for happiness (Helliwell, Layard, and Sachs 2012: figures 2.3, 2.5, 2.9). Inequality is very likely to explain, in part, this relatively lower subjective well-being.6 The Chinese government’s overriding objective of rapid economic growth has two implications for its policy on income inequality. On the one hand, there is some evidence that spatial income inequality has been bad for economic growth. For in- stance, Ravallion (1998) showed for rural China that asset inequality in the locality retarded the growth of individual household consumption, and Ravallion and Chen (2007) found that provinces with higher income inequality experienced slower eco- nomic growth. On the other hand, economic reforms, marketization, and institu- tional arrangements that promoted economic growth contributed to increases in inequality in various dimensions. The government’s unwillingness or inability to prevent income inequality from increasing signals a clear risk of rising social discontent. In common with leaders in many other countries, China’s leadership is concerned with its own political sur- vival. Specifically, in recent years, China’s leaders have expressed their concern about the possibility of “social instability.” Social instability, in turn, can impede China’s continued rapid growth (Knight and Ding 2012: 295 –306). One potential source of social instability is income inequality. We have seen that the increase in China’s income inequality takes three main forms: among households, across regions, and between rural and urban areas. However, comparisons in these dimensions of inequality at the national level may not be important. Because of the narrowness of people’s reference groups, it may be more important for a government concerned about social instability to remedy the causes of income inequality at the local level. However, extra-local orbits of compar- ison are widening owing to the increasing use of the Internet and the growth of “the greatest migration in human history.” The analysis of rural-urban migrants living in households showed that this group had the lowest mean happiness— owing to the transfer of their reference group to the city, with its higher incomes, and the unequal treatment of rural hukou households in matters of employment, residence, education, and other services (Knight and Gunatilaka 2011). A qualifi- cation is in order: unhappiness does not necessarily translate into social discontent. 10 The World Bank Research Observer, vol. 29, no. 1 (February 2014) This relationship might depend on the extent to which people perceive their unhap- piness to be manmade and capable of being remedied by the government. Government strategies for much of the reform period can be summed up in the words of a high official, Du Runsheng (1989: 192): “Prosperity to few, then to many, then to all.” Wherever there has been a tradeoff, efficiency considerations have taken precedence over equity considerations. In creating a “developmental state,” the government overwhelming prioritized economic growth. However, it appears that the leadership became more sensitive to rising income inequality in the mid-2000s, when policies to promote a more “harmonious society” were intro- duced. We examine the policies that have been introduced and those that seem promising for the future. Policy Implications Policy can be addressed at two levels: the redistribution of primary income through income transfers and alterations in the primary income generation processes. We focus on both of these in turn. “Harmonious society” policies have concentrated on the former and on people at the bottom of the national income distribution. In 2007, no less than 97 percent of poor households (defined as those with real income per capita of less than 1.25 dollars a day [ purchasing power parity]) were rural dwellers (Li et al. 2013). There was a series of pro-rural policies. One of these policies concerned agricultural taxes and fees, which had been oppressive and re- gressive, averaging 5.3 percent of rural household income overall and 13.9 percent for the lowest income decile in the 1995 CHIP survey. Agricultural taxes and fees were abolished in 2006, so the average tax rate on rural household incomes was only 0.3 percent in the 2007 CHIP survey (Li 2012). Several other policies were in- troduced to benefit farmers during the first decade of the new century. These includ- ed compensation policies to return farmland to forest, a farm support program involving agricultural subsidies, and rural infrastructure development. From 2004 to 2011, the growth rate of central government funds to support agriculture grew by nearly 30 percent per annum (Li 2012). In 2002, the poorest quintile of rural households spent a quarter of their income on education (Knight et al. 2009:317). An important redistributive policy with short- and long-term consequences was the abolition of all school fees in compulso- ry (nine-year) education. This policy was introduced in poor rural areas in 2005 and was extended to all rural areas in 2007. The minimum income guarantee (dibao) system became important in rural China only after 2005, reaching 52 million people in 2010. The dibao system had been introduced earlier in the cities; by 2010, it covered 23 million urban people (Li 2012). Dibao helped the unemployed, those in ill health, and the elderly. However, Knight 11 because of poor coverage and low benefit levels, it had a limited effect on urban poverty (Ravallion 2012) and even less of an effect on income inequality. Another form of intervention in urban China that was intended to be redistributive was the introduction and extension of minimum wages in many cities. Real minimum wages have risen rapidly in recent years, reflecting the central government’s direc- tions and incentives. Direct taxation is low in China. Because it is based on the individual and not the household and is open to evasion by high-income groups, it has little effect on urban income inequality. In 2008, personal income tax represented less than 0.01 percent of the household income of those in the lowest income decile, 0.12 percent in the sixth decile, and 2.1 percent in the highest decile (Li 2012). Personal income tax accounted for less than 7 percent of government revenue in 2010; indirect taxa- tion was much more important. There is room to make direct taxation a more im- portant source of revenue and to make it more progressive. There are institutional reasons why China’s social security provision remains highly segmented. Under central planning, the social security system was largely confined to urban residents, who enjoyed an “iron rice bowl” provided by employing enterprises. With enterprise reform, which began in earnest in the late 1990s, the enterprise provision of social security disintegrated. Unemployment insurance, health care insurance, and pension schemes were belatedly and incompletely taken over by broader groupings that were normally based on locality or an ownership sector. Urban informal sector workers and rural-urban migrants were poorly covered. Social security provision in rural China remains limited in both coverage and quality, although rural health care insurance expanded rapidly in just a few years to achieve a participation rate of 95 percent in 2010 (Li 2012). Although this type of inequality is not reflected in the measure of income inequality, its inclusion could be expected to exacerbate rather than diminish the extent of inequality in eco- nomic welfare. Movement toward a comprehensive system of social security provi- sion within a common and progressive framework would reduce inequalities in Chinese society. Income inequality among provinces can be addressed by increasing the impor- tance of (the equalizing) rule-based general revenue transfers from the central gov- ernment and by reducing the importance of (the disequalizing) specific transfers. However, there should be specific transfers solely or preferentially to the poorer provinces for development-promoting expenditures, such as infrastructure invest- ment, education, and health care. The stimulus package introduced in response to the world financial crisis of 2007 – 2008 marks some movement in that direction (Fan et al. 2011). We now focus on the policies that may be needed to equalize the distribution of factor income. The institutional arrangements that divide China’s society into urban (households with urban residence registration, hukou), rural-urban migrants 12 The World Bank Research Observer, vol. 29, no. 1 (February 2014) (most of whom retain rural hukou), and rural (with rural hukou) create unequal access to various income-earning opportunities, including jobs and human capital acquisition. Some of this income inequality could be reduced by permitting rural- urban migrants the freedom to settle and to compete on equal terms with urban residents in the labor market. Some of the inequality, however, is deep rooted and long lasting and requires attention to education policies. There is a great disparity in the quantity and quality of education that urban and rural children receive (for instance, Knight and Song 1995: ch.4). Moreover, there is inequality in access to education within rural China based mainly on the income and educational attain- ment of households and on the locality (Knight et al. 2009). Given the importance of education for income generation, this difference in access to education can give rise to a poverty trap (Knight et al. 2010). The trans- mission of education from one generation of a household to another is a powerful phenomenon in reform-era China and has become stronger in recent years (Knight et al. 2013). This phenomenon tends to carry forward educational inequality, and thus income inequality, from one generation to the next. Although the aboli- tion in 2007 of school fees for compulsory schooling in rural China helped to equal- ize educational opportunities, policy measures are needed to address unequal access to high-quality education at all levels, including high school and higher education. Little policy attention has been paid to inequality at the top of the income distri- bution. China’s system of governance is open to rent seeking and corruption and to profit opportunities for those with power or influence. According to the World Bank’s Worldwide Governance Indicators, China was ranked 148th on “control of cor- ruption” and 220th on “voice and accountability” out of 235 countries in 2009 (World Bank 2011). Policies to reduce the inequalities that arise in these ways would require reforms in China’s governance, such as the creation of a powerful an- ticorruption agency, the strengthening of the rule of law, greater press or media freedom, and arrangements that accord more “voice” to citizens. Primary income distribution also depends on the relative demand for and supply of the factors of production, including labor and human capital. Although China’s rapid economic growth and marketization have contributed to the rise in income in- equality, they may eventually generate equalizing market forces. Between 1995 and 2007, the labor force, affected by the one-child policies that were introduced at the beginning of economic reform, rose by only 1.3 percent per annum, and urban em- ployment rose from 28 percent to 37 percent of the labor force. Much of this in- crease was due to increased rural-urban migration; the employment of rural migrants in urban areas rose from 30 million to 132 million over that period (Knight et al. 2011). When unskilled labor eventually becomes scarce, unskilled wages can be predicted to rise relative to other incomes. The priority accorded to Knight 13 promoting rapid economic growth may thus eventually prove to be the policy re- sponsible for the most dramatic equalization of income. China’s proportion of labor with higher education has been small by internation- al standards, and access to higher education has been rationed. This scarcity raised the premium on higher education as market forces began to operate in the labor market. However, in the late 1990s, a dramatic change took place in China’s higher education policy. In 1998, higher education enrollment was 3.4 million; in 2008, it was 20.1 million, nearly six times its level a decade earlier. Short-term labor market consequences take the form of a rise in unemployment among graduates and the gradual acceptance of jobs previously entered by nongraduates or of “graduate” jobs at lower pay. The long-term graduate wage premium is also affected. The demand for university graduates is likely to grow rapidly as China responds to the rising price of unskilled labor and with industrial upgrading to technologically ad- vanced processes and products. However, a policy of rapidly expanding the supply of graduates in relation to their demand will likely narrow the wage structure. Whither Inequality? Inequality decreased during the brief period of dramatic rural reform but rose rapidly as urban reform progressed. The initial changes in national inequality were related much more closely to economic reforms than to the level of income, but the rise was consistent with the upward-sloping part of the hypothesized Kuznets curve relating inequality to income level (Kuznets 1955). Can China be predicted to follow the downward-sloping part of the hypothesized Kuznets curve as well? That is, will inequality decrease as income increases in the future? The answer to this question will depend on the balance of countervailing forces. On the one hand, various processes that have increased China’s income inequality during the reform period will continue to operate. On the other hand, there are three main equalizing forces that may weaken or entirely offset these processes. It is predictable that the labor market will tighten as China enters the second stage of the Lewis model and the fruits of economic development are extended. It appears very likely from projections of the labor force and of urban employment that this transition will occur in the 2011 –2020 decade (Knight et al. 2011). The growing scarcity of labor and other resources can be predicted to transfer production from the coastal provinces to the poorer interior provinces. These processes may have already begun; the NBS household surveys show that since 2009, rural household income per capita has grown faster than its urban counterpart and that overall pro- vincial income inequality appears to have leveled off and even slightly declined since 2005 (Fan et al. 2011). There are signs that Chinese society is becoming more so- phisticated and better informed and that people’s aspirations are rising. In this 14 The World Bank Research Observer, vol. 29, no. 1 (February 2014) situation, the government may selectively introduce stronger policies to diminish various dimensions of inequality as a protection against social disorder or instability. Concluding Comments It was inevitable that income inequality would increase significantly as China moved from a centrally planned economy, in which egalitarianism was a corner- stone, to a market-based economy. Material incentives were needed to induce greater effort, saving, investment in physical and human capital, and entrepreneur- ship. Similarly, economic efficiency was likely to be enhanced by disequalizing pro- cesses of cumulative causation. Nevertheless, some of the increase in income inequality was difficult to justify in terms of either efficiency or equity. Much of this unjustified inequality stemmed from the institutional framework within which China’s semimarketized economy operated. The research agenda on income inequality in China (and other developing coun- ties) could productively move in the following direction. A distinction can be made between inequality that is based on rewards for productive characteristics and in- equality that is based on market discrimination or segmentation and unequal access to income opportunities. In 2004, Whyte (2010) conducted a sociological survey of Chinese attitudes toward income inequality and concluded that Chinese people were not averse to the degree of inequality that they observed, particularly if it was based on merit, effort, or risk taking. Indeed, income inequality appeared to offer people incentives or other opportunities for improving their economic posi- tions. This interpretation corresponds to the first stage of the “tunnel effect” (see below) hypothesized by Hirschman and Rothschild (1973). By contrast, inequality based on unfairness or inequity in access to opportunities was generally disliked. Whyte (2010) found that farmers, despite being the poorest group, were the least discontented. Actual income is not necessarily a good guide to perceived distributional injustice because people’s information sets and aspirations not only matter but also vary. It is an important question whether China will enter the second stage of Hirschman’s tunnel effect—that is, whether or when a critical mass of people will begin to see inequality not as a sign of available opportunities but as a sign of unequal opportunities and distributional injustice. For the first quarter century of economic reform, China’s leaders gave overriding priority to the achievement of rapid economic growth, even at the cost of rising income inequality. When there was a policy tradeoff between equity and efficiency, the efficiency objectives normally won out. One of the few exceptions—to be ex- plained by the government’s concern for maintaining social stability—is the retention of leasehold arrangements in farming and the continued refusal to permit land own- ership in rural China. The system of fiscal decentralization and the nomenklatura Knight 15 system of state appointments created incentives at all levels to promote economic growth. Thus, China became a “developmental state” (Knight and Ding 2012). Only within the last decade have efforts to promote a “harmonious society” brought issues of income inequality—other than landlessness—to the policy agenda. We have argued that the new policies to redress inequality can be taken further by strengthen- ing transfers of income and by equalizing opportunities for income generation. The powers given to officials in pursuit of economic growth and their lack of ac- countability generated rent seeking, corruption, and procedural injustice, all of which contributed to the growth of localized and national income inequality. Can other developing countries follow China’s example to create a developmental state that drives rapid economic growth and yet avoids the rise in income inequality that this process has produced in China? The most important lesson that China’s experi- ence offers other countries lies in the answer to this question. Notes John Knight is an Emeritus Professor in the Department of Economics, Manor Road Building, University of Oxford, OX1 3UQ, and China Institute of Income Distribution, School of Economics and Business Administration, Beijing Normal University; email: john.knight@economics.ox.ac.uk. I am grateful to Ravi Kanbur, Li Shi, Martin Ravallion, Terry Sicular, and the editor and three referees for their helpful comments. 1. Migrants are excluded for comparison with earlier years. Including migrants, the urban and na- tional Ginis were 0.33 and 0.49 in 2007 (Li et al. 2013). 2. The authors’ methodology was criticized in Luo et al. (2012), but their general conclusion was not disputed. 3. These figures are derived from the CHIP volumes for the 1995, 2002, and 2007 surveys. There are discrepancies among the sources, but it is clear that the percentage rose strongly and then re- mained fairly constant. 4. Five categories of happiness are converted into a cardinal score, with “very happy” having a value of four and “not at all happy” having a value of zero. 5. It is possible to distinguish between absolute and relative income because of the wide range of mean household income per capita among cities and among villages. 6. Figures 2.3 and 2.5 are derived from the Gallup World Poll, and figure 2.9 is derived from the World Values Survey. References Appleton, S., J. Knight, L. Song, and Q. 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