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Unequal Chances, Unequal Outcomes: Pension Reform and Urban Inequality*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 February 2009
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Since the Third Plenum of the 11th Party Congress in December 1978 China's leaders have moved decisively to restructure the nation's economy. However, it now appears that while the decollectivization of agriculture has dramatically reoriented rural society, entrenched urban bureaucracy prevents a comparable change in the cities. Analysis of personnel policy, and in particular examination of expanded pension programmes, further articulates the nature of these entrenched interests, revealing in detail why post-Mao urban reforms have maintained, even intensified, privileges which rural reforms have transcended or eliminated.
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References
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77. This is the pattern I observed during 11 weeks of interviewing in Shanghai in 1986 and 1987.
78. In Shanghai, at least among the getihu this transformation appears already to have occurred. In this sector, which originally was developed to employ young adults, retirees and rural emigrants now dominate. In a December 1985 survey of 111,937 getihu, only 7% were young people waiting for work (daiye). Zhongrui, Xia et al. , “Jiachang yindao guanli, fazhan geti jingji” (“Strengthen manage, develop the private economy”), Shehui kexue, No. 7 (1986), pp. 38–39.Google Scholar
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80. Among the 100 Shanghai retirees I interviewed in June 1987 average pensions were 61 yuan, or 83·5% of last wage, and average post-retirement income was 79 yuan. In addition all Shanghai pensioners received a monthly subsidy of 35 yuan, which meant that the average monthly cash income among those working after retirement was 175 yuan, a sum far in excess of wages among children between 25 and 35.
81. Comparing the number of new entrants to the ranks of the urban zhi yuan with the number of new retirements since December of the previous year, we can estimate that retirements created 31% of new urban jobs in 1979, 39% in 1980, 13% in 1981, 24% in 1982, 31% in 1983, 14% in 1984, and 28% in 1985. For total of retirements see the Table, for number of new entrants 1979–84, Chinese Statistical Yearbook 1985, p. 235Google Scholar, for entrants in 1985, Guangzhao, Yue, 01 1987.Google Scholar
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