Abstract

This article focuses on Chinese female rural migrant workers. Based on the survey data collected in Anhui and Sichuan provinces of China, the article investigates gender aspects of Chinese rural-urban migrants in the context of the household migration model.Results of the examination indicate that the rapid economic development that China is undergoing makes it possible for rural women to go from traditional villages to modern and post-modern cities and gain employment in urban areas and VTEs (village and township enterprises). The young, unmarried, and well-educated rural women are much more likely to migrate or to get off-farm jobs, and the occupations held by these rural female workers are more varied. There are gender features among the rural-urban migrant workers. The proportion of the returnees among married women is much higher than that of their male counterparts. Income also differs between female and male laborers. While the proportion of women in the lower income group is higher than men, the proportion of female workers in the higher income groups is lower. The lack of social security for rural residents proves to be a highly signi? cant institutional barrier for rural women to access the new opportunities offered by a more open economy and the modernization process.On a more general level, the results of the study suggest that market-oriented economic reform brought about diverse effects on Chinese women in terms of labor market status. Though the institutional barriers put Chinese female rural workers in a position of disadvantage, the performance of female rural-urban migrant workers suggests that they are active beings rather than passive victims merely adapting to the social transformation. Female rural-urban migrant workers have been and still are playing important and speci? c roles at the crossover between the emerging capitalist economy and the traditional rural society. In doing so they are positive participants of globalization in a wider development perspective.

Highlights

  • According to the new economics of labor migration theory, migration is hypothesized to be an effort made by households to overcome market failures that constrain local production (Taylor 1999)

  • This paper investigated gender aspects of Chinese rural-urban migrants in the context of the household migration model

  • It was found that the rapid economic development that China is undergoing makes it possible for rural women to go from traditional villages to modern and post-modern cities and gain employment in urban areas and village and township enterprises (VTEs) with better wages than they get from farm work

Read more

Summary

Introduction

According to the new economics of labor migration theory, migration is hypothesized to be an effort made by households to overcome market failures that constrain local production (Taylor 1999). The first two first factors reveal whether these individual attributes affect rural female workers’ labor market status when the household makes the decision on who should move out and get off-farm employment, and who should remain in family-based agricultural work.

Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call