Since the start of far-reaching economic reforms in the late
1970s, growth has fueled a remarkable increase in per-capita income,
helping to lift more people out of poverty than anywhere else in the
world: China's per capita income has increased fivefold between 1990 and
2000, from $200 to $1,000. Between 2000 and 2010, per capita income
also rose by the same rate, from $1,000 to $5,000, moving China into the
ranks of middle-income countries. Between 1990 and 2005, China's
progress accounted for more than three-quarters of global poverty
reduction and a big factor in why the world reached the UN millennium
development of dividing extreme poverty by two. This incredible success
was delivered by a combination of a rapidly expanding labour market,
driven by a protracted period of economic growth, and a series of
government transfers such as an urban subsidy, and the introduction of a
rural pension. Independent studies by Gallup indicate the poverty rate in China fell from 26% in 2007 to 7% by 2012,
although World Bank extrapolations suggest that the percentage of the
population living below the international poverty line continued to fall
to 4.1 percent in 2014.
As of 2018 the number of people in poverty living below the national
poverty line is around 30 million, about 2% of the population with hopes of totally eradicating poverty by 2020.
At the same time, however, income disparities have increased. The growing income inequality is illustrated most clearly by the differences in living standards between the urban, coastal areas and the rural, inland regions. There have also been increases in the inequality of health and education outcomes, and increased attention to unequal outcomes for ethnic minorities. To alleviate the situation, the Chinese government shifted its policy in recent years to encourage urban migration, fund education, health, and transportation infrastructure for poor areas and poor households. In addition the government is attempting to rebalance the economy away from investment and exports toward domestic consumption and public services, to help reduce social disparities. Relocation of the poor from poverty stricken regions to more developed urban areas is also being implemented as part of the holistic plan to tackle rural poverty.
At the same time, however, income disparities have increased. The growing income inequality is illustrated most clearly by the differences in living standards between the urban, coastal areas and the rural, inland regions. There have also been increases in the inequality of health and education outcomes, and increased attention to unequal outcomes for ethnic minorities. To alleviate the situation, the Chinese government shifted its policy in recent years to encourage urban migration, fund education, health, and transportation infrastructure for poor areas and poor households. In addition the government is attempting to rebalance the economy away from investment and exports toward domestic consumption and public services, to help reduce social disparities. Relocation of the poor from poverty stricken regions to more developed urban areas is also being implemented as part of the holistic plan to tackle rural poverty.
Overview
Since Deng Xiaoping
began instituting market reforms in the late 1970s, China has been
among the most rapidly growing economies in the world, regularly
exceeding 10 percent GDP growth annually. This growth has led to a
substantial increase in real living standards and a marked decline in poverty.
Between 1981 and 2008, the proportion of China's population living on
less than $1.25/day is estimated to have fallen from 85% to 13.1%,
meaning that roughly 600 million people were taken out of poverty. At the same time, this rapid change has brought with it different kinds of stresses. China faces serious natural resource scarcity and environmental degradation.
It has also seen growing disparities as people in different parts of
the country and with different characteristics have benefited from the
growth at different rates.
Starting from the pre-reform situation, some increase in income inequality was inevitable, as favored coastal urban
locations benefited first from the opening policy, and as the small
stock of educated people found new opportunities. However, particular
features of Chinese policy may have exacerbated rather than mitigated
growing disparities. The household registration (hukou) system
kept rural-urban migration below what it otherwise would have been, and
contributed to the development of one of the largest rural-urban income
divides in the world. Weak tenure over rural land also limited the ability of peasants to benefit from their primary asset.
Aside from income inequality, there has also been an increase in inequality of educational outcomes and health
status, partly the result of China's uniquely decentralized fiscal
system, in which local government has been primarily responsible for
funding basic health and education. Poor localities have not been able
to fund these services, and poor households have not been able to afford
the high private cost of basic education and healthcare.
The large trade surplus
that has emerged in China has exacerbated the inequalities, and makes
them harder to address. The trade surplus stimulates the urban manufacturing sector, which is already relatively well off. It limits the government's scope to increase funding for public services
such as rural health and education. The government has been trying to
rebalance China's production away from investment and exports towards
domestic consumption and services, to improve the country's long-term macroeconomic health and the situation of the relatively poor in China.
Recent government measures to reduce disparities including relaxation of the hukou system, abolition of the agricultural tax, and increased central transfers to fund health and education in rural areas.
Poverty reduction
China has maintained a high growth rate for more than 30 years
since the beginning of economic reform in 1978, and this sustained
growth has generated a huge increase in average living standards. 25
years ago, China had many characteristics in common with the rest of
developing Asia: large population, low per capita income, and resource
scarcity on a per capita basis. But in the 15 years from 1990–2005,
China averaged per capita growth of 8.7%.
The whole reform program is often referred to in brief as the "open door policy". This highlights that a key component of Chinese reform has been trade liberalization and opening up to foreign direct investment, but not opening the capital account
more generally to portfolio flows. China improved its human capital,
opened up to foreign trade and investment, and created a better
investment climate for the private sector.
After joining the WTO China's average tariffs have dropped below 100%, and to around 5% for manufactured imports. It initially welcomed foreign investment into "special economic zones". Some of these zones were very large, amounting to urban areas of 20 million people or more. The positive impact of foreign investment
in these locations led to a more general opening up of the economy to
foreign investment, with the result that China became the largest
recipient of direct investment flows in the 1990s.
The opening up measures have been accompanied by improvements in
the investment climate. Particularly in the coastal areas, cities have
developed their investment climates. In these cities, the private sector
accounts for 90% or more of manufacturing assets and production. Out
2005, average pretax rate of return for domestic private firms was the
same as that for foreign-invested firms. Local governments in coastal cities have lowered loss of output due to unreliable power supply to 1.0% and customs clearance time for imports has been lowered in Chinese cities to 3.3 days.
China's sustained growth fueled historically unprecedented poverty reduction. The World Bank uses a poverty line
based on household real consumption (including consumption of
own-produced crops and other goods), set at $1 per day measured at Purchasing Power Parity. In most low-income countries this amount is sufficient to guarantee each person about 1000 calories of nutrition per day, plus other basic necessities. In 2007, this line corresponds to about 2,836 RMB
per year. Based on household surveys, the poverty rate in China in 1981
was 63% of the population. This rate declined to 10% in 2004,
indicating that about 500 million people have climbed out of poverty
during this period.
This poverty reduction has occurred in waves. The shift to the household responsibility system propelled a large increase in agricultural output, and poverty was cut in half over the short period from 1981 to 1987.
From 1987 to 1993 poverty reduction stagnated, then resumed again. From
1996 to 2001 there was once more relatively little poverty reduction.
Since China joined the WTO in 2001, however, poverty reduction resumed at a very rapid rate, and poverty was cut by a third in just three years.
Taken from the Asian Development Bank,
there was an estimated average annual growth rate of 0.5% in China
between 2010-2015. This brought the Chinese population to 1.37 billion
in 2015. It is important to note that 7.2% of the Chinese population
live below the national poverty line.
Increased inequality
China's
growth has been so rapid that virtually every household has benefited
significantly, fueling the steep drop in poverty. However, different
people have benefited to very different extents, so that inequality has
risen during the reform period.
This is true for inequality in household income or consumption, as well
as for inequality in important social outcomes such as health status or
educational attainment. The Gini measure of inequality
- an approximate measure of the national wealth gap with a range of 0
to 1, with the former representing perfect equality - increased from
0.31 at the beginning of reform to 0.45 in 2004; it has since risen to
.49 in 2009.
To some extent this rise in inequality is the natural result of the
market forces that have generated the strong growth; but to some extent
it is "artificial" in the sense that various government policies
exacerbate the tendencies toward higher inequality, rather than mitigate
them. Changes to some policies could halt or even reverse the
increasing inequality.
The Nobel Prize-winning economist Sir Arthur Lewis
noted that "development must be inegalitarian because it does not start
in every part of the economy at the same time" in 1954. China
classically manifests two of the characteristics of development that
Lewis had in mind: rising return to education and rural-urban migration.
As an underdeveloped country, China began its reform with relatively
few highly educated people, and with a small minority of the population
(20%) living in cities, where labor productivity was about twice the level as in the countryside.
In pre-reform China there was very little return to education
manifested in salaries. Cab drivers and college professors had similar
incomes. Economic reform has created a labor market in which people can
search for higher pay, and one result of this is that salaries for
educated people have gone up dramatically. In the short period between
1988 and 2003, the wage returns to one additional year of schooling
increased from 4% to 11%. This development initially leads to higher
overall inequality, because the initial stock of educated people is
small and they are concentrated at the high end of the income
distribution. But if there is reasonably good access to education, then
over time a greater and greater share of the population will become
educated, and that will ultimately tend to reduce inequality.
The large productivity and wage gap between cities and
countryside also drives a high rate of rural-urban migration. Lewis
pointed out that, starting from a situation of 80% rural, the initial
shift of some from low-productivity agriculture to high productivity
urban employment is disequalizing. If the flow continues until the
population is more than 50% urban, however, further migration is
equalizing. This pattern is very evident in the history of the U.S., with inequality rising during the rapid industrialization
period from 1870–1920, and then declining thereafter. So, the same
market forces that have produced the rapid growth in China predictably
led to higher inequality. But it is important to note that in China
there are a number of government policies that exacerbate this tendency
toward higher inequality and restrict some of the potential mechanisms
that would normally lead to an eventual decline in inequality.
Rural-urban divide
Much of the increase in inequality in China can be attributed to the
widening rural-urban divide, particularly the differentials in
rural-urban income. A household survey conducted in 1995 showed that the
rural-urban income gap accounted for 35% of the overall inequality in
China.
In 2009, according to the China's National Bureau of Statistics,
the urban per capita annual income at US$2,525 was approximately three
times that of the rural per capita annual income. This was the widest income gap recorded in China since 1978.
Urban-biased economic policies adopted by the government contribute to
the income disparities. This is also known as the ‘artificial’ result of
the rural-urban divide. In terms of the share of investments allotted
by the state, urban areas were given a larger proportion when compared
with rural areas.
In the period 1986-1992, investments to urban state-owned enterprises
(SOE) accounted for more than 25% of the total government budget.
On the other hand, less than 10% of the government budget was allocated
to investments in the rural economy in the same period by the state
despite the fact that about 73-76% of the total population lived in the
rural areas.
However, the burden of the inflation caused by the fiscal expansion,
which at that time was at a level of approximately 8.5%, was shared by
all including the rural population.
Such biased allocation of government finances to the urban sector meant
that the wages earned by urban workers also include these government
fiscal transfers. This is in addition to the relatively higher
proportions of credit loans the government also provided to the urban
SOEs in the same period. Meanwhile, the wages earned by the rural workers came mainly from growth in output only. These urban-biased policies reflect the importance of the urban minority to the government relative to the rural majority.
In the period when reforms in urban areas were introduced, the
real wages earned by urban workers rose inexorably. Restrictions to
rural-urban migration protected the urban workers from competition from
the rural workers,
which therefore also contributed to rural-urban disparities. According
to a report by the World Bank published in 2009, 99% of the poor in
China come from rural areas if migrant workers in cities are included in
the rural population figures. Excluding migrant workers from the rural population figures indicates that 90% of poverty in China is still rural.
Inequality in China does not only occur between rural and urban
areas. There exist inequalities within rural areas, and within urban
areas themselves.
In some rural areas, incomes are comparable to that of urban incomes
while in others, income remains low as development is limited.
Rural-urban inequalities do not only refer to income differentials but
also include inequalities in areas such as education and health care.
Urban poverty in China
The
structural reforms of China's economy have brought about a widening of
the income gap and rising unemployment in the urban cities. The
increasing challenge for the Chinese government and social organizations
is to address and solve poverty issues in urban areas where the people
are increasingly being economically and socially marginalized. According
to the official estimates, 12 million people were considered as urban
poor in 1993, i.e. 3.6 per cent of the total urban population, but by
2006 the figure had jumped to more than 22 million, i.e. 4.1 per cent of
the total urban population and these figures are estimated to grow if
the government fails to institute any effective measures to circumvent
this escalating problem.
China's “floating population” has since helped spur rapid
development in the country because of the cheap and plentiful labor they
can offer. On the flip side, many people who came from the rural areas
are not able to find jobs in the cities. This surplus of rural laborers
and mass internal migration will no doubt pose a major threat to the
country's political stability and economic growth. Their inabilities to
find jobs compounded by the rising costs of living in the cities have
made many people fall below the poverty line.
There are also large numbers of unemployed and laid-off workers
from state-owned enterprises (SOEs). These enterprises have since failed
to compete efficiently with the private and foreign-funded companies
when China's open-door policy was introduced. In the years 1995 to 2000,
the state sector lost 31 million jobs, which amounted to 28 per cent of
the jobs in the sector. The non-state sector has been creating new jobs
but not in sufficient numbers to offset job losses from the state
sector.
SOEs’ roles were more than employers, they are also responsible
in the provision of welfare benefits, like retirement pensions,
incentives for medical care, housing and direct subsidies and the like
to its employees, as such these burdens greatly increased production
costs. In 1992, SOE expenses on insurance and welfare took up 35% of the
total wages.
Therefore, many people not only lost their jobs but also, the social
benefits and security that they were once so reliant on. The adverse
consequences arising from the market reforms are evidently seen as a
socially destabilizing factor.
Lastly, the government provided little or no social benefit for
the urban poor who needed the most attention. Ministry of Labor and
Social Security (MLSS) was the last line of defense against urban
poverty in the provision of social insurance and the living allowance
for laid-off employees. However, its effectiveness was limited in scope
in which less than a quarter of the eligible urban poor actually
receiving assistance.
The Minimum Living Standard Scheme was first implemented in
Shanghai in 1993 to help supplement the income of the urban poor. It is
a last resort program that is meant to help those that don’t qualify
for other forms of government aid. The Minimum Living Standard Scheme
set regional poverty lines and gave recipients a sum of money. The
amount of money received by each recipient was the difference in their
income and the poverty line. The Scheme has grown rapidly and has
since been adopted by over 580 cities and 1120 counties.
Rural Poverty
While poverty has been reduced immensely in China over the past decade, it still remains a large problem in rural China.
Rural China has historically been disproportionately taxed and also
have received fewer benefits from the recent economic development and
success of China.
Agriculture has been the main occupation for the inhabitants of rural
China, and in villages the produce generated is used to feed the village
and not for selling on the market. Even in the heartlands of China
where agriculture is used for commercial purposes, the economic boom of
China has actually led to a decrease in the price of produce which has
resulted in a loss of income for these producers.
Children growing up in poverty are more likely to be
undernourished, have less educational opportunity, and have lower
literacy levels.
The disproportionate amount of inequality in China's rural sector
along with correlation between poverty and education shows that children
born in rural China are much more likely to score lower on literacy
tests and not have the opportunity to pursue higher education.
The implementation of Chinese policy has exacerbated the issue of
rural poverty en lieu of increased urban poverty. Typically the
urbanization of a country leads to mass migration from the rural areas
to the urban. However, the Chinese government implemented policy that
restricts the migration of people born in rural China from coming to
urban China.
This restriction is based on the citizen's registration under the hukou
system which states if the individual was born in an agricultural
(rural) or non-agricultural (urban) area.
Additionally, Chinese officials have been cracking down on Chinese
migrants from rural communities that have moved to Beijing. In 2017,
thousands of migrant workers living in Beijing were evicted because they
did not possess an urban hukou.
This process of removing migrants from rural to urban China, relocates
them back to rural China where they no longer have a job or source of
income. This is a relocation of poverty from the urban sector to the
rural sector.
The political response of China's government to the issue of
rural poverty has been both lauded and criticized. China has been
criticized for its high rate of rural poverty and the policies that the
government has put in place to ameliorate the poverty. In Transformation of Rural China,
Jonathan Unger points out that the lack of taxation at the village
level restricts the villages from dealing with the problems they face.
This means problems such as food instability and lack of education are
not able to be addressed by local officials. Supporters of government
policy point out that over the time period of 1978 to 2014, China has
reduced rural poverty from 250 million people to just over 70 million
people.
China's Rural Poverty Alleviation and Development Outline from 2001 to
2010 led to certain government policy directly dealing with the issue of
poverty with the removal of agriculture tax in 2006 and a program which
the government paid rural families to plant trees on degraded land.
Unequal educational opportunity
Education is a prerequisite for the development of human capital
which in turn is an important factor in a country's overall development.
Apart from the increasing income inequality, the education sector has
long suffered from problems such as funding shortages and unequal
allocation of education resources,
adding to the disparity between China's urban and rural life; this was
exacerbated by the two track system of government's approach to
education. The first track is government -supported primary education in
urban areas and the second is family -supported primary education in
the rural areas.
Rural education has been marginalized by the focus on immediate
economic development and the fact that urban education enjoys more
attention and investment by the central government.
This lack of public funding meant that children of rural families were
forced to drop out of school, thus losing the opportunity to further
their studies and following the paths of their parents to become low
skilled workers with few chances of advancements.
This leads to a vicious cycle of poverty. Because of limited
educational resources, urban schools were supported by the government
while village schools were provided for by the local communities where
educational opportunities were possibly constrained depending on local
conditions. Thus, there still exist a huge gap in teacher preparation and quality of facilities between rural and urban areas.
The two track system was then abolished in 1986 & 1992, to be
replaced by the Compulsory Education Law and the Rule for the
Implementation of the Compulsory Education Law respectively.
Despite the emphasis of China's education reform on providing quality
and holistic education, the rural schools still lack the capacity to
implement such reforms vis-à-vis their urban counterparts.
The rural areas lack the educational resources of the urban areas and
the rural areas are considered to be falling below the educational
benchmark set in the cities.
Teachers are more attracted to urban sectors with higher pay and a slew
of benefits. In addition, rural villages have a difficult time finding
quality teachers because of the relatively poorer standard of living in
villages. As a result, some rural teachers are not qualified as they
received college degrees from continuing-education programs, which is
not the best type of further education one could receive.
As a result, rural students often find themselves neither
competitive enough to gain admissions to colleges nor employable for
most occupations.
Rural residents are increasingly being marginalised in higher
education, closing off their best opportunities for advancement. This is
especially prominent in Tsinghua and Peking University where the
percentage of rural population studying in the two universities have
shrunk to 17.6 percent in 2000 and 16.3 percent in 1999, down from 50 to
60 percent in the 1950s. These numbers are the most recent reliable
data that has been published and experts agree that the number might be
as low as 1 percent in 2010.
Even the attainment of an education, however, many not lead to
escaping poverty. For some of China's ethnic minorities, specifically
the Uyghur and Tibetans, ethnic discrimination is a barrier even for the
most educated. In minority areas, regardless of education, the best jobs go to Hans.
Restrictions on migration
Pre-reform China had a system that severely restricted people's
mobility, and that system has only slowly been reformed over the past 25
years. Each person has a registration (hukou) in either a rural area or an urban area, and cannot change the hukou without the permission of the receiving jurisdiction.
In practice cities usually give registration to skilled people who have
offers of employment, but have generally been reluctant to provide
registration to migrants from the countryside. Nevertheless, these
migrants are needed for economic development,
and large numbers have in fact migrated. Many of these fall into the
category of "floating population". There are nearly 200 million rural
residents who spend at least six months of the year working in urban
areas. Many of these people have for all practical purposes moved to a
city, but they do not have official registration. Beyond the floating
population, there are tens of millions of people who have left rural
areas and obtained urban hukous.
So, there is significant rural-urban migration in China, but it
seems likely that the hukou system has resulted in less migration than
otherwise would have occurred. There are several pieces of evidence to
support this view. First, the gap in per capita income between rural and
urban areas widened during the reform period, reaching a ratio of three
to one. Three to one is a very high gap by international standards.
Second, manufacturing wages
have risen sharply in recent years, at double-digit rates, so that
China now has considerably higher wages than much of the rest of
developing Asia (India, Vietnam, Pakistan, Bangladesh). This rise is
good for the incumbent workers, but they are relatively high up in
China's income distribution, so that the wage increases raise
inequality. It is hard to imagine that manufacturing wages would have
risen so rapidly if there had not been such controls on labor migration.
Third, recent studies focusing on migrants have shown that it is
difficult for them to bring their families to the city, put their
children in school, and obtain healthcare. So, the growth of the urban
population must have been slowed down by these restrictions.
Though, it should be noted that China's urbanization
so far has been a relatively orderly process. One does not see in China
the kinds of slums and extreme poverty that exist in cities throughout
South Asia, Eastern Europe, Latin America, and Africa. Nevertheless,
urbanization goes on: the urban share of China's population has risen
from 20% to 40% during the course of economic reform. But at the same
time the hukou system has slowed and distorted urbanization, without
preventing it. The system has likely contributed to inequality by
limiting the opportunities of the relatively poor rural population to
move to better-paying employment.
Land policy and corruption
Just as Chinese citizens are either registered as urban or rural under the Hukou system, land in China is zoned as either rural or urban. Under Chinese property law,
there is no privately held land. Urban land is owned by the state,
which grants land rights for a set number of years. Reforms in the late
1980s and 1990s allowed for transactions in urban land, enabling
citizens to sell their land and buildings, or mortgage them to borrow, while still retaining state ownership.
Rural, or “collectively owned land”, is leased by the state for
periods of 30 years, and is theoretically reserved for agricultural
purposes, housing and services for farmers. Peasants have long-term tenure
as long as they sow the land, but they cannot mortgage or sell the use
rights. The biggest distortion, however, concerns moving land from rural
to urban use. China is a densely populated, water-scarce country whose comparative advantage
lies more in manufacturing and services than in agriculture. The fact
that many peasants cannot earn a decent living as farmers is a signal
that their labor is more useful in urban employment, hence the hundreds
of millions of people who have migrated. But, at the same time, it is
efficient to allocate some of the land out of agriculture for urban use.
In China, that conversion is handled administratively, requiring
central approval. Farmers are compensated based on the agricultural
value of the land. But the reason to convert land – especially in the
fringes around cities – is that the commercial value of the land for
urban use is higher than its value for agriculture. So, even if China's
laws on land are followed scrupulously, the conversion does not generate
a high income for the peasants. There are cases in which the conversion
is done transparently, the use rights over the land auctioned, and the revenue collected put into the public budget
to finance public goods. But still the peasants get relatively poor
recompense. One government study found that 62% of displaced peasants
were worse off after land conversion.
Secure land tenure
is recognized as a powerful tool to reduce poverty, and the central
government has begun guaranteeing all farmers 30-year land rights,
strictly limiting expropriations, documenting and publicizing farmers’
rights, and requiring sufficient compensation when farmers’ lands are
expropriated. A 2010 survey of 17 provinces by Landesa
found improved documentation of farmer's land rights, but much room for
improvement: 63% of farming families have been issued land-rights
certificates and 53% have land-rights contracts, but only 44% have been
issued both documents (as is required by law) and 29% have no document
at all; farmers who have been issued these documents are far more likely
to make long-term investments in their land and are financially
benefiting from those investments.
There have been reports of cases where peasants complain and
demonstrate because the conversions have not been done in a transparent
way, and there have been accusations of corruption of local officials.
The government has published statistics on violent protests involving
more than 100 people, and that number grew steadily up to 84,000 in
2005, before dropping a reported 20% in 2006. Up until 2006, the way in
which agricultural land was being converted to urban land probably
contributed unnecessarily to increasing inequality. It has been noted
that compared to other developing countries, virtually all peasants in
China have land. If that asset could be used either as collateral for borrowing, or could be sold to provide some capital before migrants moved to the city, then it would have been helping those who were in the poorer part of the income distribution. The administrative, rather than market-based, conversion of land essentially reduced the value of the main asset held by the poor.
Fiscal system and rural social services
Market reform has dramatically increased the return to education,
as it indicates that there are good opportunities for skilled people
and as it creates a powerful incentive for families to increase the
education of their children. However, there needs to be strong public
support for education and reasonably fair access to the education
system. Otherwise, inequality can become self-perpetuating: if only
high-income people can educate their children, then that group remains a
privileged, high-income group permanently. China is at some risk of
falling into this trap, because it has developed a highly decentralized
fiscal system in which local governments rely primarily on local tax collection to provide basic services such as primary education and primary health care. China in fact has one of the most decentralized fiscal systems in the world.
China is much more decentralized than OECD countries and middle-income countries, particularly on the spending side. More than half of all expenditure takes place at the sub-provincial level.
In part, the sheer size of the country explains this degree of
decentralization, but the structure of government and some unusual expenditure assignments also give rise to this pattern of spending. Functions such as social security, justice, and even the production of national statistics are largely decentralized in China, whereas they are central functions in most other countries.
Fiscal disparities among subnational governments are larger in
China than in most OECD countries. These disparities have emerged
alongside a growing disparity in economic strength among the provinces. From 1990 to 2003, the ratio of per capita GDP
of the richest to poorest province grew from 7.3 to 13. In China, the
richest province has more than 8 times the per capita public spending
than the poorest province. In the US, the poorest state has about 65 percent of the revenues of the average state, and in Germany, any state falling below 95 percent of the average level gets subsidized through the "Finanzausgleich" (and any receiving more than 110 percent gets taxed). In Brazil, the richest state has 2.3 times the revenues per capita of the poorest state.
Inequalities in spending are even larger at the sub-provincial
level. The richest county, the level that is most important for service
delivery, has about 48 times the level of per capita spending of the
poorest county.
These disparities in aggregate spending levels also show up in
functional categories such as health and education where variation among
counties and among provinces is large.
These differences in public spending translate into differences
in social outcomes. Up through 1990, there were only modest differences
across provinces in infant survival rate, but by 2000 there had emerged a very sharp difference, closely related to the province's per capita GDP. So too with the high-school enrollment
rate: there used to be small differences across provinces. By 2003,
high-school enrollment was nearing 100% in the wealthier provinces while
still less than 40% in poor provinces.
There is some redistribution within China's fiscal system,
but not enough. Poor areas have very little tax collection and hence
cannot fund decent basic education and health care. Some of their
population will relocate over time. But for reasons of both national efficiency and equity,
it would make sense for the state to ensure that everyone has good
basic education and health care, so that when people move they come with
a solid foundation of human capital.
China's highly decentralized fiscal system results in local government in many locations not having adequate resources to fund basic social services. As a consequence, households are left to fend for themselves to a remarkable extent. The average hospital visit in China is paid 60% out-of-pocket by the patient, compared to 25% in Mexico, 10% in Turkey, and lower amounts in most developed countries.
Poor households either forego treatment or face devastating financial
consequences. In the 2003 National Health Survey, 30% of poor households
identified a large health care expenditure as the reason that they were in poverty.
The situation in education is similar. In a survey of 3037 villages in 2004, average primary school fees were 260 yuan
and average middle-school fees, 442 yuan. A family living right at the
dollar-a-day poverty line would have about 900 yuan total resources for a
child for a year; sending a child to middle-school would take half of
that. Not surprisingly, then, enrollment rates are relatively low in
poor areas and for poor families.