nep-cna New Economics Papers
on China
Issue of 2006‒05‒13
five papers chosen by
Zheng Fang
Fudan University

  1. Chronic and Transient Poverty: Measurement and Estimation, with Evidence from China By Jean-Yves Duclos; Abdelkrim Araar; John Giles
  2. Challenging Party Hegemony: Identity Work in China’s Emerging Virreal Places By Karsten Giese
  3. The Post MFA Performance of Developing Asia By John Whalley
  4. Production costs of pears and apples in Xinjiang (China) By Sergio Marchesini; Huliyeti Hasimu; Maurizio Canavari
  5. Farm Technology and Technical Efficiency: Evidence from Four Regions in China By Chen, Zhuo; Huffman, Wallace; Rozelle, Scott

  1. By: Jean-Yves Duclos; Abdelkrim Araar; John Giles
    Abstract: The paper contributes to the measurement of poverty and vulnerability in three ways. First, we propose a new approach to separating poverty into chronic and transient components. Second, we provide corrections for the statistical biases introduced when using a small number of periods to estimate the importance of vulnerability and transient poverty. Third, we apply these tools to the measurement of chronic and transient poverty in China using a rich panel data set that extends over approximately 17 years. We find that alternative measurement techniques yield significantly different estimates of the relative importance of chronic and transient poverty, and that precision of estimates is enhanced with simple statistical corrections.
    Keywords: Poverty dynamics, Transient poverty, Chronic poverty, Permanent poverty, China
    JEL: C15 D31 D63 I32
    Date: 2006
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:lvl:lacicr:0611&r=cna
  2. By: Karsten Giese (GIGA Institute of Asian Affairs)
    Abstract: The Chinese Communist Party has chosen to base the legitimacy of its rule on its performance as leading national power. Since national identity is based on shared imaginations of and directly tied to territory – hence place, this paper analyses both heterodox models for identification on the national and potentially competing place-based collective identities on the local level. This analysis, based on communication within a number of popular communication forums and on observation of behavior in the physical reality of today’s urban China, shows that communication within the virtual and behavior in the real world are not separated realities but form a new virreal spatial continuum consisting of imagined places both online and offline. I argue that ties to place are stronger and identities constructed on shared imaginations of place are more salient the more direct the experience of place is – be the place real, virtual or virreal. Hence in China challenges to one-party rule will probably accrue from competing localized collective identities rather than from heterodox nationalism.to explore the variety and complexity of functional antagonisms in the social subsystems.
    Keywords: China, Internet, political power, collective identity, nationalism, place, bulletin, board system, online communication, online community
    Date: 2006–01
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:gig:wpaper:14&r=cna
  3. By: John Whalley
    Abstract: This paper assesses the impact thus far that the termination of trade restrictions under the Multi Fibre Arrangement (MFA) which up to the end of 2004 applied to exports of clothing and textiles in key OECD markets has had on Asian suppliers. The speculation prior to MFA termination had been that large increases of Chinese exports would ensue, and at the expense of other Asian suppliers. Using data from US, EU Chinese and other sources, the picture that emerges is only small impacts on aggregate US and EU imports of clothing and textiles, and equally only small impacts on aggregate Chinese exports of clothing and textiles. There are, however, large changes in the country pattern of trade, and also within more narrowly defined product categories. There are large increases in shipments from China to both the US and the EU, and for the US proportionally more so in textiles than in clothing. But the US accounts for only 20% of China's exports of clothing and textiles, and exports to Japan (comparable in size to the US) hardly change, and to Hong Kong fall sharply. There are also large price falls for shipments to the US and to certain EU countries (Germany). The shares of other Asian suppliers in US markets generally hold up well, with the largest falls occurring in preferentially treated non Asian suppliers such as Mexico. In EU markets, with the exception of India, all non Chinese Asian suppliers experience falls in their market share.
    JEL: F00 F13 O24
    Date: 2006–05
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:nbr:nberwo:12178&r=cna
  4. By: Sergio Marchesini (Department of Agricultural Economics and Engineering, Alma Mater Studiorum - University of Bologna); Huliyeti Hasimu (Xinjiang Agricultural University); Maurizio Canavari (Department of Agricultural Economics and Engineering, Alma Mater Studiorum - University of Bologna)
    Abstract: China is the most important pear producing country in the world, and one of the most important as far as it concerns apples. Nevertheless, its international role is not so relevant: traded volume in relation to production is relatively small yet growing fast. Xinjiang is a large and mainly deserted region in northwest China that covers one-sixth of China's land. However, thanks to abundant water resources, good lighting conditions and altitude, this area represents an ideal setting for pomefruit production, and has in fact a very long tradition. Unfortunately, due to a disadvantaged location and a poor economy this province do not attract enough capitals, passing unnoticed despite of its valuable resources. Economic analysis are therefore necessary to assess to which extent this market turns out to be approachable. The aim of this paper is to describe in detail the situation of the fruit growing industry in Xinjiang, as far as it concerns two important pomefruit varieties: Xiang Li pear, a local and very appreciated variety, and Fuji apple. After locating the most vocated producing areas for both species and identifying the productive standards, we then proceed on counting up the production costs, using a well-established methodology adapted to the particular situation. The target of the analysis are small and mid-size farms, since they represent the vast majority of the orchards of the area. The costs aggregates are: base orchard management cost (BOMC), farm full cost (FFC) and total production cost (TPC). These aggregates group together costs related to similar productive factors. The picture of the situation outlined by this survey is that of a marginal area, where however fruit growing, compared to other agricultural activities, grants a good income. It also emerges that fruit growers in Xinjiang (and in China), are hardly coming out of a situation of general backwardness, striving to adapt to a larger business mainly through exportation to other provinces. Farms are however mainly familiar and small, and only a few big local enterprises seem to possess the right requirements to give local production the right impetus to reach successfully outside markets.
    Keywords: Xiang Li fragrant pear, Fuji apple, Production cost, China, Fruit growing
    JEL: Q11 Q13 Q17
    Date: 2005
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:bag:deiawp:5003&r=cna
  5. By: Chen, Zhuo; Huffman, Wallace; Rozelle, Scott
    Abstract: In this paper we fit stochastic frontier production functions to data for Chinese farms grouped into each of four regions—North, Northeast, East, and Southwest—over 1995-1999. These frontier production functions are shown to have statistically different structures, and the marginal product information shows overuse of chemical inputs in the East and capital services in the North. Labor also has a low marginal product. Next, we use the data and the production parameters to create technical efficiency scores for each of the farms and then standardize them. Standardized technical efficiency is shown to have the same structure across regions and to be related to the age of the farmer, land fragmentation, and the village migration rate, controlling for year dummies and village or regional fixed effects.
    Keywords: Household farm; Labor migration; Land fragmentation; Stochastic production frontier; Technical efficiency
    JEL: C2 L2 O1 P2
    Date: 2006–05–01
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:isu:genres:12605&r=cna

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