Relative Concerns of Rural-to-Urban Migrants in China

Alpaslan Akay, Olivier Bargain, Klaus F. Zimmermann

    Research output: Working paper

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    Abstract

    How the income of "relevant others" a?ects well-being has received renewed interest in the recent literature using subjective data. Migrants constitutes a particularly interesting group to study this question: as they changed environment, they are likely to be concerned by several potential reference groups including the people "left behind", other migrants and "natives". We focus here on the huge population of rural-to-urban migrants in China. We exploit a novel dataset that comprises samples of migrants and urban people living in the same cities, as well as rural households mostly surveyed in the provinces where migrants are coming from. After establishing these links, we ?nd that the well-being of migrants is largely affected by relative concerns: results point to negative relative concerns toward other migrants and workers of home regions ?this status e?ect is particularly strong for migrants who wish to settle permanently in cities. We ?nd in contrast a positive relative income e?ect vis-à-vis the urban reference group, interpreted as a signal e?ect: larger urban incomes indicate higher income prospects for the migrants. A richer pattern is obtained when sorting migrants according to the duration of stay, expectations to return to home countries and characteristics related to family circumstances, work conditions and community ties.
    Original languageEnglish
    PublisherCEPS/INSTEAD
    Number of pages40
    Publication statusPublished - 2011

    Publication series

    NameWorking Papers
    PublisherCEPS/INSTEAD
    No.2011-12

    Keywords

    • China
    • relative concerns
    • well-being

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