The Longitudinal Survey on Rural Urban Migration in China, CHIP2007/RUMiC2008
Introduction
Introduction
This project was initiated by a group of researchers at the Australian National University and Beijing Normal University, and was supported by the China National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) and the Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA).
CHIP survey consists of three parts: the Urban Household Survey, the Rural Household Survey and the Migrant Household Survey. The 2002 surveys were carried out by the NBS. The 2007 urban and rural surveys were conducted by the NBS, but the rural-to-urban migrant survey was conducted by a survey company.
The 2007 survey was also a part of the larger RUMiC (Rural-Urban Migrants in China) survey project. The sampling procedure and survey method for the 2007 migrant survey were described in detail in the Rural-Urban Migration in China Project Survey Documentation. See Sherry Tao Kong (2010).
CHIP 2007 was surveyed in the early 2008, and household income and expenditure was asked about information in 2007. In order to keep consistence with CHIP1988, 1995 & 2002, it is named CHIP2007. But in the RUMiC project, it is called RUMiC2008 according to the actually survey time.
Survey and sampling
Data containd 5000 households in migration sample, 8000 households in rural sample and 5000 households in urban sample. Detailed information was collected on incomes and expenditures, employment status, family structure, and social and economic characteristics at both personal and household level in data.
For the surveys of urban local households and rural-urban migrant households, a total of same nine provinces were selected. They are Shanghai, Jiangsu, Zhejiang, and Guangdong from eastern China; Anhui, Henan, and Hubei from central China; Chongqing and Sichuan from western China. The rural household survey also covered nine provinces. Differ from urban and migrant’s survey, Shanghai was excluded while Hebei province was included. The RUMiC urban and rural surveys took sub-samples from the national household survey of the NBS, whereas the rural-urban migrant survey was conducted separately - a migrant household was selected when one of its working members was drawn from his or her work place.
For detailed information on sampling design and tracking (including methodology and implementation manuals), see:
- Shi Li, Sato H., Sicular T. Rising Inequality in China: Challenges to a Harmonious Society[M]. Cam-bridge University Press, 2013.
- http://rse.anu.edu.au/rumici/;
- Gong, X., Kong, S. T., Li, S., and Meng, X. (2008) Rural-urban migrants: a driving force for growth, in Ligang Song and Wing Thye Woo (eds) China's Dilemma, Canberra: Asia Pacific Press;
- Meng, Kong, and Zhang (2010) How much do we know about the impact of the economic downturn on the employment of migrants?, ADBI Working Paper Series No. 194.
- Kong, S. T. (2010): Rural-Urban Migration in China: Survey Design and Implementation. In: Meng, Xin and Manning, Chris (Eds.) with Shi, Li and Effendi, Tadjuddin The Great Migration: Rural-Urban Migration in China and Indonesia, Edward Elgar Publ. Ltd. 2010.
- The introduction in IZA: http://idsc.iza.org/?page=27&id=58#documentation
Data List
-- 1 CHIP2007-Rural-questionaires[2016-10-20]
-- 2 CHIP2007-Migration-questionaires[2016-10-20]
-- 3 CHIP2007-Urban-Data[2016-10-20]
-- 4 CHIP2007-Rural-Data[2016-10-20]
-- 5 CHIP2007-Migration-Data[2016-10-20]
-- 6 CHIP2007-Rural-Household-Income_and_Expenditure[2016-10-20]
-- 7 CHIP2007-Rural-Village-Questionaire[2016-10-20]
-- 8 CHIP2007-Urban-Community-Questionaire[2016-10-20]
-- 9 CHIP2007-Supplement, the correspondence of name_id and village_id[2016-10-20]
-- 10 CHIP2007-Urban questionnaires[2022-07-21]
© 版权所有:收入分配研究团队 2012-2024
地址:北京市海淀区新街口外大街19号 邮编:100875
Copyright © 2012- Team For Income Distribution. All Rights Reserved
Address: No. 19 Xinjiekouwai Street Beijing 100875.