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Wiley InterScience

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Explaining the Poverty Difference between Inland and Coastal China: A Regression-based Decomposition Approach
Guanghua Wan 1* and Yin Zhang
  1 UNU-WIDER, Finland
Correspondence to  Wan: UNU-WIDER, Katajanokanlaituri 6 B, Fin-00160, Helsiniki, Finland. Tel: 358-9-61599-218; Fax: 358-9-61599-333; E-mail: wan@wider.unu.edu.
Copyright Journal compilation © 2008 Blackwell Publishing Ltd

ABSTRACT

Abstract1. Introduction2. A Poverty Decomposition Framework3. Data Generation4. Poverty Decomposition: Empirical ApplicationNotes

This study proposes a decomposition framework for quantifying contributions of the determinants of poverty to spatial differences or temporal changes in poverty. This framework is then applied to address the issue why poverty incidence is higher in inland than in coastal China. The empirical application requires household or individual income observations which, generally speaking, are not available. Thus, a data-generation method developed by Shorrocks and Wan is introduced to construct such observations from grouped income data. It is found that inland China is poorer than coastal China, mainly due to lower efficiency in resource utilization rather than less endowment of resources. Also, trade became poverty-reducing in coastal China in the late 1990s but remained poverty-inducing in inland China. Policy implications are briefly discussed.


DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/j.1467-9361.2008.00451.x About DOI

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