China's Growth and Poverty Reduction : Trends between 1990 and 1999

The authors investigate recent rends in poverty, and inequality in China, decomposing data on poverty reduction to see who has benefited most from China's economic growth. They find that, by several measures, poverty declined significantly in the 1990s, across a wide range of poverty lines, except that a slight slowdown in China's export, and economic growth in 1997-99 might have hurt the poor. There was a slight increase in the poverty headcount between 1997 and 1999, using lower poverty lines, and a worsening of the poverty gap index. Average per capita consumption declined for farmers, especially those living in poor regions such as Gans, Heilongjiang, Sanxi, and Xinjiang. It is unclear whether this decline was attributable to Asia's economic crisis. Economic growth contributed significantly to poverty reduction, but rising inequality worsened both rural, and urban income distributions - except during the Asian crisis, when the distribution remained relatively stable. The poor benefited far less than the rich from economic growth. Income growth reached, or exceeded the average growth rate only for the richest twenty percent of the population. The authors then examine the relationship between human capital, growth, and poverty. They find that the accumulation of human capital had slowed, and that there is a huge regional disparity in human capital stock. And the distribution of education is becoming increasingly skewed. China must address this problem if it is to succeed in attacking poverty, and inequality.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Chen, Shaohua, Wang, Yan
Format: Policy Research Working Paper biblioteca
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2001-07
Subjects:ABSOLUTE POVERTY LINE, ANNUAL GROWTH, ANNUAL GROWTH RATE, ANNUAL INCOME, ASIAN CRISES, ASSET INEQUALITY, AVERAGE ANNUAL, AVERAGE GROWTH, AVERAGE GROWTH RATE, AVERAGE INCOME, AVERAGE PERSON, CAPITAL, CAPITAL ACCUMULATION, CAPITAL FLOWS, CONSUMPTION DISTRIBUTION, CONSUMPTION EXPENDITURES, COST OF LIVING, DATA COLLECTION, DEMAND SIDE, DEVELOPING COUNTRIES, DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS, DEVELOPMENT NETWORK, DEVELOPMENT RESEARCH, DISTRIBUTION DATA, DISTRIBUTIONAL DATA, DOMESTIC DEMAND, ECONOMIC CRISIS, ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT, ECONOMIC GROWTH, ECONOMIC POLICY, ECONOMIC REFORM, ECONOMIC REVIEW, EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT, EXPLAINING CHANGES, EXPLAINING INEQUALITY, EXTERNAL FACTORS, FACTOR INCOME, FINANCIAL CRISES, FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS, GINI COEFFICIENT, GINI INDEX, GROWTH, GROWTH COMPONENT, GROWTH MODEL, GROWTH MODELS, GROWTH PERFORMANCE, GROWTH PRO-POOR, GROWTH RATES, HEAD-COUNT INDEX, HEADCOUNT INDEX, HIGH POVERTY, HOUSEHOLD LEVEL, HOUSEHOLD SURVEY, HOUSEHOLD SURVEYS, HUMAN CAPITAL, INCOME DISPARITIES, INCOME DISTRIBUTION, INCOME DISTRIBUTIONS, INCOME GROUPS, INCOME GROWTH, INCOME GROWTH RATE, INCOME INEQUALITY, INCOME SHARE, INCOMES, INEQUALITY CONSTANT, INSTITUTIONAL CHANGE, INSTITUTIONAL CHANGES, INTERNATIONAL POVERTY LINE, INTERNATIONAL TRADE, LITERACY RATES, LIVING STANDARD, LONG RUN, MACRO POLICY, MARKET FAILURES, MEAN CONSUMPTION, MEAN INCOME, MIDDLE INCOME, NATIONAL INCOME, NATIONAL LEVEL, NATIONAL POVERTY, NATIONAL POVERTY LINES, NATURAL CAPITAL, NEGATIVE GROWTH, NEGATIVE IMPACT, NEGATIVE SIGN, PAPERS, PER CAPITA CONSUMPTION, PER CAPITA INCOME, POLICY DISCUSSIONS, POLICY ENVIRONMENT, POLICY REFORMS, POLICY RESEARCH, POLITICAL ECONOMY, POOR BENEFIT, POOR PEOPLE, POVERTY CHANGES, POVERTY COMPONENT, POVERTY GAP, POVERTY GROWTH, POVERTY HEADCOUNT, POVERTY INCIDENCE, POVERTY INCREASE, POVERTY LINE, POVERTY LINES, POVERTY MEASUREMENT, POVERTY MEASURES, POVERTY REDUCING, POVERTY REDUCTION, POVERTY TRAP, POVERTY TRENDS, PRO-GROWTH POLICIES, PRO-POOR, PRO-POOR GROWTH, PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH, PUBLIC POLICY, QUALITY OF GROWTH, REAL INCOME, REGIONAL DISPARITIES, REGIONAL DISPARITY, REGIONAL GROWTH, REGIONAL INEQUALITY, RELATIVE PRICES, RISING INEQUALITY, RURAL AREAS, RURAL POVERTY, SCHOOLING ATTAINMENT, SIGNIFICANT DIFFERENCES, SIGNIFICANT REDUCTION, SOCIAL, STAGNATION, STANDARD DEVIATION, STANDARD OF LIVING, SUSTAINABLE GROWTH, TECHNOLOGICAL CHANGE, TECHNOLOGICAL PROGRESS, UNEQUAL DISTRIBUTION, URBAN AREAS, VULNERABLE PEOPLE, WEALTH,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2001/07/1552067/chinas-growth-poverty-reduction-trends-between-1990-1999
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/19586
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!