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Title: Chinas Floating Population: An Analysis of Spatial Structure


1
Chinas Floating PopulationAn Analysis of
Spatial Structure
  • GU Chaolin, YU Taofang
  • Department of Urban Planning, School of
    Architecture, Tsinghua University, CHINA
  • E-mailgucl_at_tsinghua.edu.cn
  • Ian G. COOK
  • Centre for Social Science, Liverpool John Moores
    University, UK
  • E-mail I.G.Cook_at_Livjm.ac.uk
  • ZHU Chuangeng, MA Ronghua
  • School of Geography, Xuzhou Normal
    University,CHINA

2
Abstract
  • This paper begins with a critical review of
    researches on the Chinese floating population.
    Then, based on floating population data in 1996
    from the Ministry of Public Security of China, it
    moves on to analyze the factors underlying the
    spatial transformation and spatial structure. The
    authors discover that two factors in particular,
    economic growth and city investment, underpin the
    spatial transformation of the urban floating
    population..
  • Keywords Chinas Floating Population, Spatial
    Transformation, Influential Factors, Spatial
    Structure, GIS analysis, Spatial Divisions.

3
  • I. Introduction
  • 1. Definition of Floating Population
  • 2. Overview of researches on the Chinese floating
    population
  • II. Critical Literatures Review on Migration
  • 1. Geographical approaches
  • 2. Economic approaches
  • 3. Sociological and psychological approaches
  • 4. Quantitative approaches
  • III. Research Assumption and Data Availability
  • 1. Research assumption
  • 2. Data availability
  • IV. Analysis of Influencing Factors
  • 1. Three-dimensional Spatial Model
  • 2. Spatial auto-correlation analysis
  • V. Spatial Division and Fundamental
    Characteristics
  • VI. Discussion and Conclusions

4
Introduction
  • The Peoples Republic of China has witnessed big
    changes in the last two decades. Spatial
    transformation has been wide-scale and
    far-reaching, with economic growth in Chinas
    Gold Coast reaching unprecedented levels,
    especially in the cities. An important feature
    of this spatial transformation has been the
    freeing up of previous restrictions on population
    mobility (Scharping, 1997), to the extent that
    Chinas floating population has become one of the
    most remarkable phenomena to bear witness to the
    changing nature of Chinas population structure.
    Perhaps an inevitable outcome of the shift to a
    market economy, this phenomenon of the floating
    population significantly affects the progress of
    social and economic development.

5
Definition of Floating Population
  • Operational definitions of migration are tedious
    affairs comprising five dimensions legal status,
    time, space, activity and actor.
  • In China, whereas it was used in the nation-wide
    establishment of the household registration(HUKOU)
    system after 1958 and the tightening of policy
    in the early 1960s limited the meaning of
    migration to persons moving with permission to
    change their place of permanent household
    registration.
  • Floating population (Liudong renkou) is a very
    broad category that covers a diverse bundle of
    people such as tourists, people on business
    trips, traders, sojourners, and peasants in the
    cities, both employed and unemployed (Chan,
    2001). It refers to population moving to or
    staying in cities, towns or townships other than
    the place of permanent household registration.
    These people could account for as much as 20-25
    of Chinese population.

6
II. Critical Literatures Review on Migration
7
  • There are too many literatures on migration since
    human being has a long history of movement and
    migration. With his Laws of Migration
    published in 1885 and 1889, Ernst Georg
    Ravenstein is the ancestor of all attempts at
    migration model building.
  • Although his rough sketch of general trends in
    migrant behavior does not justify the claim to
    elaborate universally valid laws of migration,
    it provides some applicable points today, such
    as, migration decreasing with the distance
    between two places. Geographical, economic,
    sociological and psychological, quantitative
    approaches have focused on different aspects of
    migration.

8
1. Geographical approaches
  • Economic geographers Walter Christaller and
    August Losch with their theories of central
    places and standard market areas have broken
    ground for an understanding of rural-urban
    linkages and movement caused by the availability
    of crucial goods in a hierarchically ordered
    system of urban settlements. Other geographical
    approaches in migration studies are represented
    by the gravity models developed by Zipf,
    Stouffer and Lowry, which have been elaborating
    on the function of spatial distance and city size
    in population movement.
  • William Skinner had got his inspire by his work
    and described the market areas in rural Sichuan,
    China in 1940s, and then his research on the role
    of regional systems extended to the whole of
    China.

9
  • Urban hierarchies are the major sources of
    hampering forces of migration in China. Migration
    is not only a horizontal occupational mobility,
    but also a hierarchical movement desired by most
    would-be migrants. Geographical and occupational
    migration is a market driving practice in which
    people migrate in search of better paid jobs,
    whereas hierarchical migration is rent-seeking
    practice by which people migrate to change their
    entitlements of access to a set of welfare
    provision. Here, we can list a host of
    differentials in welfare provisions between rural
    and urban areas and between smaller and larger
    cities (housing subsidy, pension provision,
    health care, job security, price subsidy etc.).
    Therefore, current migration in China is a
    two-goal practice. People move to search both
    market-determined betterment and hierarchy
    related benefits.

10
2. Economic approaches
  • The great majority of migration studies have
    documented the overwhelming importance of
    economic factors. Basic among them is economic
    structure in regard to shares of the primary
    sector, the various branches of industry,
    construction and the tertiary sector. Market
    access can be a major determinant of living
    standards as well as a direct cause of population
    movement. Another important economic factor is
    the volume and distribution of investment.
  • However, there are also sectors such as trade,
    transportation and a number of services that can
    generate employment without large outlays of
    capital. Following this kind of light, we
    discuss the migration theories in economic
    approaches as following three assumptions labor
    market, capital flow and human capital.

11
  • In China, the curve interrelated between inter
    province labor migration (1990's state census)
    and FDI (1979-1990) in each province showed the
    dynamic relationships between migration and FDI
    (Figure 1).

12
3. Sociological and psychological approaches
  • Economic approaches suffer from such defects as
    they operate with better defined and easier to
    quantify variables such as investment and growth
    rates in the non-agriculture sector, wage levels,
    employment figures and labor productivity. In
    particular, they were unable to explain why some
    people left their rural areas of origin while
    others stayed.
  • Furthermore, regional population dynamics and
    structure are an indispensable element of
    understanding. Besides absolute numbers
    determining population density, man-land-ratios
    and land use, fertility levels, age structure and
    household composition seem to be of special
    significance.

13
3. Sociological and psychological approaches
  • They are intimately connected with social
    structure involving groups defined by family
    relationships, occupation, income and property.
    White-collar professions, specific household
    types and income groups seem to have a
    particularity great propensity for migration.
    Educational attainment has been shown to exert a
    clearly recognizable influence on migration
    behavior, too.
  • One variable not mentioned by Lee but of
    paramount significance is the role of kinship
    ties. Stark and Bloom gave an interpretation of
    migration in the light of new economics.

14
  • In China, migrants tended to cluster in younger
    age groups entering the labor force and getting
    married. The majority of the qualification is
    most opportune for the Chinese case where
    political variable, legal regulations and
    information policies of the state have greatly
    influenced migration patterns, while personal
    networks have worked as a major force of
    circumvention and facilitation. In Lees list,
    only transportation costs can be discounted as a
    major of obstacles for migration in China.

15
4. Quantitative approaches
  • It is in recognition of this problem that more
    recent version of the migration theories and
    models have stretched many aspects such as
    differences in economic structure, labor market,
    social relationship, leisure time or housing
    conditions between places of out- and
    in-migration. A further question has been how to
    quantify and package a constant formulas group
    that has been worked into all factors and
    variables in order to express all parts of
    migration referred to above. Such factors would
    be important items as, for instance,
    geographical, economic and social structure, life
    cycles or different development level. Scharping
    (1997) gave a model which try to reconcile the
    analysis of macro-level data for the
    geographical, economic, demographic and social
    setting with the study of migration decisions on
    the micro-level of individual and household
    behavior.

16
  • Quite obviously, here the model would show great
    differences between various periods of Chinas
    history. Migration dynamics there resemble
    Western patterns much closer. They reflect the
    wide social distance that has developed as a
    result of different economic and political
    conditions.

17
III. Research Assumption and Data Availability
18
1. Research assumption
  • However, these Western migration theories and
    Chinas real situation have been anything but
    consistent. China have smacked heavy does of
    ideology and preoccupation with the own
    historical record and have had to be constantly
    adapted to new developments. Many economic
    theories have started from the basic assumption
    of the homo-economics, simplified to a rational
    maximize of profit and utility, acting in an open
    political system and a free market framework of
    full information and equal chances.

19
  • It is these migration theories and models that
    need modification even more thought they
    accumulated so far stimulate an attempt at
    synthesis in a migration model for China. The
    increasing complexity of formulas, however, has
    been offset by their decreasing suitability to
    account for temporal change. At best, they can
    elegantly sum up cross-sectional analyses.

20
2. Data availability
  • Chinese censuses and micro-censuses have adopted
    compromise solutions for counting population and
    classifying it by places. Thus, floating
    population having left their permanent
    registration place for more than one year plus
    more recently departed persons with fixed new
    abodes were included among the inhabitants of
    their actual place of stay. The censuses of 1982
    and 1990 embrace either a permanent household
    registration independent of residence permanency
    or a minimum residence of one year with
    registration elsewhere. The micro-censuses of
    1987 and 1995 reduced the minimum time
    requirements for persons with registration
    elsewhere to 6 months. This category of people
    exclude holders of provisional registration
    status temporary registration population (Zanzhu
    Hukou), no matter how long their duration of
    stay.

21
  • Chinas regulations required for all persons
    staying outside their permanent home to register
    themselves again within three months. However,
    surveys of floating population in some major
    cities result in 30- 50 of the respondents
    without permanent registration there staying
    longer than one year. Some local surveys in rural
    areas have hinted at up to 80 of rural-urban
    migrant workers without provisional registration.
    Another problem is that numbers for provisional
    registration actually do not define persons but
    rather records.

22
3 Floating population data in 1996
  • Based on floating population data for 1996
    supplied by the Ministry of Public Security of
    China, we shall explore these influential factors
    at the national scale. Also, via use of the
    visualization technique of GIS and the integrated
    methods, deeper analysis will be made concerning
    the spatial structure of the floating population
    in China.

23
  • The data in 1996 contains the national
    distribution of floating population for all 3406
    counties, cities and districts in metropolis. The
    data provides the total number of floating
    population, the male/female sex ratio, the length
    of dwelling time in the new location, and living
    conditions of the floating population. The data
    set also provides reasons for migration, the
    occupation of floating population as workers,
    farmers, in commerce, services, on official
    business, temporary studying and training,
    housekeeper or baby-sitter, visiting relatives,
    or tourists, meetings and other activities.

24
  • In order to analysis the data-set was reorganized
    as follows (1) Data in the urban areas (their
    boroughs or counties included). Based on these
    statistics, the outcome is a general table of 146
    city areas where the floating population exceeds
    50 thousand persons. (2) Full data-set of
    counties or the central city The first rows of
    each questionnaire for the more than 3000
    counties and central city is picked up, and then
    comes the general table of the floating
    population in the counties and central cities
    nationwide.

25
IV. Analysis of Influencing Factors
26
  • Statistics show that the floating populace in
    1996 was 28.8 of the total population in China.
    The cities are the concentration highlands both
    for the economy and for the floating population.

27
Table 1 Principal component-loading matrix
28
Table 2 Correlation analysis between size and
factors
Note(1) In the column of the testing result, the
symbol represents significant correlation at
the 0.01 level. (2) Size means the size of the
urban floating population and factors are urban
integrated factors
29
  • Table 2 shows that the urban economic growth and
    the urban investment are two main factors
    influencing the urban floating population in
    China. The migration of the floating population
    to urban areas mainly depends on the conditions
    of the economic growth and the investment level,
    i.e., the growth of new jobs.
  • Another two dimensions, the urban social
    development and the urban consumption for the
    population floating, are remarkable.

30
  • At first, the roles played by urban social
    development are relatively small, which
    illustrates that the movement of Chinese floating
    population is still in its elementary stage,
    i.e., survive strategy stage.
  • Secondly, that urban consumption plays only a
    minor role in the process of the population
    floating.
  • These mean that the most important things for
    Chinese urban floating population are to get jobs
    and have some work opportunities while they enter
    the cities. It is not pressing goals for these
    migrants to improve their present living
    standard.
  • From the consumption pulling perspective we
    can see, the population floating has not become a
    force for the development of the cities.

31
1. Three-dimensional Spatial Model
32
  • We extracted data of the layer for the
    administrative unit such as the county and the
    city in the Database of the Chinese Resources and
    Environments (14,000,000 series), and this is
    then used as the graphics data for the study of
    the Chinese floating population.

33
Figure 3 Three-dimensional model of the floating
population in China Note To increase the visual
effects and to avoid the blocking impact of the
Pearl River delta area, the observation angle is
adjusted correspondingly.
34
Figure 4 Isograms of the floating population in
China
35
2. Spatial auto-correlation analysis
36
The model of the spatial auto-correlation
analysis
(1) Moran I the model of the whole spatial auto-
correlation analysis
37
Figure 5 Analysis of spatial auto-correlation on
the floating population in China
38
V. Spatial Division and Fundamental
Characteristics
39
  • In order to depict the spatial structure of the
    Chinese floating population macroscopically, we
    extend further the studied unit of the floating
    population into the provincial level. Based on
    the outcomes of Figure 5, the spatial
    auto-correlation on the county level is
    classified and reassembled to the provincial
    level as Table 3 demonstrates.

40
Table 3 Classified Areas of the Spatial
Auto-correlation of the Floating Population in
Chinas Provincial Level ()
Note (1) Counted by area proportion of
provincial-level units (2)The bold italic
numbers in the table represent that province,
city or borough area where the area is bigger
than the average of its correspondence in the
country as a whole.
41
According to this interpretation, the Chinese
national floating population 1996 can be divided
into three clusters and five areas, illustrated
in Figure 6.
42
VI. Discussion and Conclusions
43
  • The spatial transformation factors of the urban
    economic growth and the urban investment are the
    main driving forces for the movement of the
    floating population of China. The locations
    where rapid economic development and associated
    investment continue apace are a great attraction
    to migrants from within the rural areas of these
    provinces as well as to those from other parts of
    China.

44
  • The cities, especially in eastern China, are the
    concentration areas of the floating population.
    In these areas, as the most urbanized area in
    China, the Pearl River delta and the Yangtze
    River delta are also the concentrated highlands
    of Chinese floating population. The second
    structural element is the existence of an
    outstanding tripartite structure between the
    east, the middle and the west of China. The east
    displays the concentration areas for the floating
    population, the middle a less dense area and the
    west a sparse area, while the frontier regions
    have relatively more floating population.

45
  • In all, the Chinese floating population makes
    both a significant contribution to, and is itself
    affected by, the massive spatial transformation
    that China is undergoing. The resultant
    structural change is still in its infancy, but
    will develop further to pose new questions for
    researchers and policy-makers alike, as China
    strives to incorporate this huge movement of
    people into its burgeoning cities.

46
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