Abstract

No study has been conducted linking Chinese migrants’ subjective well-being (SWB) with urban inequality. This paper presents the effects of income and inequality on their SWB using a total of 128,000 answers to a survey question about “happiness”. We find evidence for a satiation point above which higher income is no longer associated with greater well-being. Income inequality is detrimental to well-being. Migrants report lower SWB levels where income inequality is higher, even after controlling for personal income, a large set of individual characteristics, and province dummies. We also find striking differences across socio-economic and geographic groups. The positive effect of income is more pronounced for rural and western migrants, and is shown to be significantly correlated with the poor’s SWB but not for the well-being of more affluent respondents. Interestingly, high-income earners are more hurt by income inequality than low-income respondents. Moreover, compared with migrants in other regions, those in less developed Western China are found to be more averse to income inequality. Our results are quite robust to different specifications. We provide novel explanations for these findings by delving into psychological channels, including egalitarian preferences, social comparison concerns, expectations, perceived fairness concerns and perceived social mobility.

Highlights

  • China has been witnessing a surge of internal labor migration since the late 1980s

  • The current understanding concerning the determinants of subjective well-being (SWB), how the social environment, such as income inequality, affects Chinese migrants’ SWB remains unknown

  • We examine the relationship between absolute income, income inequality, and SWB, using data from an extremely large and nationally representative migrant population survey in China

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Summary

Introduction

The latest official figures estimate the total number of migrant workers in 2017 at 244 million [1]. With an increasing number of migrants temporarily or permanently settling in host cities, migrants will inevitably become a significant proportion of the urban population. As the case in Shenzhen, migrants have even exceeded urban local residents [3]. Related to this massive inflow, understanding how these huge migrants feel about their lives and what drives their subjective well-being (hereafter called SWB or happiness) in destination cities has attracted increasing attention from both scholars and policymakers. Paper for the Perspectives on Global Development; OECD.

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