Abstract

For decades, China’s rural migrants have split their households between their rural origins and urban work locations. While the hukou system continues to be a barrier to urban settlement, research has also underscored split households as a migrant strategy that spans the rural and urban boundary, questioning if sustained migration will eventually result in permanent urban settlement. Common split-household arrangements include sole migration, where the spouse and children are left behind, and couple migration, where both spouses are migrants, leaving behind their children. More recently, nuclear family migration involving both the spouse and children has been on the rise. Based on a 2015 nationally representative “floating population” survey, this article compares sole migrants, couple migrants, and family migrants in order to examine which migrants choose which household arrangements, including whether specific household arrangements are more associated with settlement intention than others. Our analysis also reveals differences between work-related migrants and family-related migrants. The findings highlight demographic, gender, economic, employment, and destination differences among the different types of migrant household arrangements, pointing to family migration as a likely indicator of permanent settlement. The increase of family migration over time signals to urban governments an increased urgency to address their needs as not only temporary dwellers but more permanent residents.

Highlights

  • Over the past four decades, China has witnessed unprecedentedly speedy urbanization, where the level of urbanization increased from only 18% in 1978 to 56% in 2015 (Wu, 2016)

  • Nuclear family migration where the spouses and their children stay together in the host location has been on the rise, increasing from 41.46% to 44.96% of rural–urban migrants from 2011 to 2015 (Fan & Li, 2019)

  • We aim at describing which migrants tend to choose which household arrangements in order to better understand the phenomenon of split households

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Summary

Introduction

Over the past four decades, China has witnessed unprecedentedly speedy urbanization, where the level of urbanization increased from only 18% in 1978 to 56% in 2015 (Wu, 2016). Since the 1980s, a prominent feature of China’s rural–urban migrants has been their splithousehold arrangement, namely, migrants live and work in urban areas while leaving behind family members in the countryside. Common split-household arrangements include sole migration, where one of the spouses, usually the husband, leaves for migrant work, leaving be-. Social Inclusion, 2020, Volume 8, Issue 1, Pages 252–263 hind the wife and children; and couple migration, where both spouses pursue migrant work without their children. Nuclear family migration where the spouses and their children stay together in the host location has been on the rise, increasing from 41.46% to 44.96% of rural–urban migrants from 2011 to 2015 (Fan & Li, 2019).

Split Households and Permanent Settlement
Data and Definitions
Modeling
Family-Related Migrants
Work-Related Migrants
Findings
Conclusion
Full Text
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