Essays on Rural-Urban Migration in China

Since the late 1980â s, China has experienced the worldâ s largest peacetime out-migration of its rural labor force to urban areas. The temporary nature of the labor migration complicates the control on this mobile population, and its multi-faceted influence on the whole economy makes the migratio...

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Main Author: Chen, Weijia
Other Authors: Economics
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/27798
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-05192006-114512/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-277982020-09-26T05:34:47Z Essays on Rural-Urban Migration in China Chen, Weijia Economics Yang, Dennis T. Salehi-Isfahani, Djavad Kats, Amoz Yau, Jeffrey Ashley, Richard A. Education Temporary Migration Rural-Urban Migration Migrant Networks China Since the late 1980â s, China has experienced the worldâ s largest peacetime out-migration of its rural labor force to urban areas. The temporary nature of the labor migration complicates the control on this mobile population, and its multi-faceted influence on the whole economy makes the migration policy controversial. Based on cross-sectional Chinese rural household survey data, this study analyzes the effects of migration on rural areas and explores the determinants of the participation and duration of the temporary migration. The first chapter investigates how parental migration affects the decision of enrolling children in high school through migrationâ s effects on household income and the opportunity cost of schooling in rural China. The opportunity cost of schooling is approximated by the marginal productivity of children imputed from family production estimation, which controls for potential endogeneity in the time allocation decisions of family members. The empirical results show that temporary migration of parents raises their childrenâ s probability of high school enrollment by 3.2%, resulting primarily from a positive income effect. These findings suggest that reductions in barriers to migration raise rural household earnings, and foster the investment in childrenâ s education. The second chapter studies the determinants of participation and duration of temporary rural-urban migration in China highlighting the role of education and migrant networks. The Probit and Logit models are fitted to the dichotomous migration participation estimation. To correct for the sample selection bias, Heckmanâ s two-step procedure is used to estimate the length of migratory work. Empirical results confirm the existence of a migrant network effect on both migration participation and migration length. Schooling increases migration probability non-linearly and its effect on migration length is insignificant once migration is controlled. Furthermore, the positive effect of migrant networks on migration participation is especially prominent among individuals with junior and senior high school education. Ph. D. 2014-03-14T20:12:16Z 2014-03-14T20:12:16Z 2006-05-10 2006-05-19 2009-06-28 2006-06-28 Dissertation etd-05192006-114512 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/27798 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-05192006-114512/ WeijiaChenDiss.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Education
Temporary Migration
Rural-Urban Migration
Migrant Networks
China
spellingShingle Education
Temporary Migration
Rural-Urban Migration
Migrant Networks
China
Chen, Weijia
Essays on Rural-Urban Migration in China
description Since the late 1980â s, China has experienced the worldâ s largest peacetime out-migration of its rural labor force to urban areas. The temporary nature of the labor migration complicates the control on this mobile population, and its multi-faceted influence on the whole economy makes the migration policy controversial. Based on cross-sectional Chinese rural household survey data, this study analyzes the effects of migration on rural areas and explores the determinants of the participation and duration of the temporary migration. The first chapter investigates how parental migration affects the decision of enrolling children in high school through migrationâ s effects on household income and the opportunity cost of schooling in rural China. The opportunity cost of schooling is approximated by the marginal productivity of children imputed from family production estimation, which controls for potential endogeneity in the time allocation decisions of family members. The empirical results show that temporary migration of parents raises their childrenâ s probability of high school enrollment by 3.2%, resulting primarily from a positive income effect. These findings suggest that reductions in barriers to migration raise rural household earnings, and foster the investment in childrenâ s education. The second chapter studies the determinants of participation and duration of temporary rural-urban migration in China highlighting the role of education and migrant networks. The Probit and Logit models are fitted to the dichotomous migration participation estimation. To correct for the sample selection bias, Heckmanâ s two-step procedure is used to estimate the length of migratory work. Empirical results confirm the existence of a migrant network effect on both migration participation and migration length. Schooling increases migration probability non-linearly and its effect on migration length is insignificant once migration is controlled. Furthermore, the positive effect of migrant networks on migration participation is especially prominent among individuals with junior and senior high school education. === Ph. D.
author2 Economics
author_facet Economics
Chen, Weijia
author Chen, Weijia
author_sort Chen, Weijia
title Essays on Rural-Urban Migration in China
title_short Essays on Rural-Urban Migration in China
title_full Essays on Rural-Urban Migration in China
title_fullStr Essays on Rural-Urban Migration in China
title_full_unstemmed Essays on Rural-Urban Migration in China
title_sort essays on rural-urban migration in china
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/27798
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-05192006-114512/
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