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China's Income Distribution over Time: Reasons for Rising Inequality
Ximing Wu, University of Guelph
Jeffrey M. Perloff, University of California, Berkeley, and Giannini Foundation
ABSTRACT: We use a new method to estimate China’s income distributions using publicly available interval summary statistics from China’s largest national household survey. We examine rural, urban, and overall income distributions for each year from 1985-2001. By estimating the entire distributions, we can show how the distributions change directly as well as examine trends in
traditional welfare indices such as the Gini. We find that inequality has increased substantially in both rural and urban areas. Using an inter-temporal decomposition of aggregate inequality, we determine that increases in inequality within the rural and urban sectors and the growing gap in rural and urban incomes have been equally responsible for the growth in overall inequality over the last two decades. However, the rural-urban income gap has played an increasingly important role in recent years. In contrast, only the growth of inequality within rural and urban areas is responsible for the increase in inequality in the United States, where the overall inequality is close to that of China. We also show that urban consumption inequality (which
may be a better indicator of economic well-being than income inequality) rose considerably.
SUGGESTED CITATION: Ximing Wu and Jeffrey M. Perloff,
"China's Income Distribution over Time: Reasons for Rising Inequality"
(February 1, 2004).
Department of Agricultural & Resource Economics, UCB.
CUDARE Working Paper 977.
http://repositories.cdlib.org/are_ucb/977
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