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Hukou

Hukou (Chinese: 户口; lit. 'household individual') is a system of household registration used in mainland China. The system itself is more properly called "huji" (Chinese: 户籍; lit. 'household origin'), and has origins in ancient China; hukou is the registration of an individual in the system (kou literally means "mouth", which originates from the practise of regarding family members as "mouths to feed", similar to the phrase "per head" in English). A household registration record officially identifies a person as a permanent resident of an area and includes identifying information such as name, parents, spouse and date of birth. A hukou can also refer to a family register in many contexts since the household register (simplified Chinese: 户口簿; traditional Chinese: 戶口簿; pinyin: hùkǒu bù) is issued per family, and usually includes the births, deaths, marriages, divorces, and moves, of all members in the family.

Hukou
Chinese name
Simplified Chinese户口
Traditional Chinese戶口
Alternative Chinese name
Simplified Chinese户籍
Traditional Chinese戶籍
Tibetan name
Tibetanཐེམ་ཐོ
Transcriptions
Wyliethem-tho
Uyghur name
Uyghurنوپۇس

The system descends in part from ancient Chinese household registration systems. The hukou system also influenced similar systems within the public administration structures of neighboring East Asian countries, such as Japan (koseki) and Korea (hoju), as well as the Southeast Asian country Vietnam (hộ khẩu).[1][2][3] In South Korea, the hoju system was abolished in January 2008.[4] While unrelated in origin, propiska in the Soviet Union and resident registration in Russia had a similar purpose and served as a model for modern China's hukou system.[5][6]

Due to its connection to social programs provided by the government, which assigns benefits based on agricultural and non-agricultural residency status (often referred to as rural and urban), the hukou system is sometimes likened to a form of caste system.[7][8][9] It has been the source of much inequality over the decades since the establishment of the People's Republic of China in 1949, as urban residents received benefits that ranged from retirement pension to education to health care, while rural citizens were often left to fend for themselves.[10][11] In recent years,[when?] the central government has begun to reform the system in response to protests and a changing economic system, while some Western experts question whether these changes have been of substance.[12][13]

Nomenclature: huji vs. hukou edit

The formal name for the system is huji. Within the huji system, a hukou is the registered residency status of a particular individual in this system. However, the term hukou is used colloquially to refer to the entire system, and it has been adopted by English-language audiences to refer to both the huji system and an individual's hukou.

Household registration in mainland China edit

 
An individual household's register or hukou booklet. The local police station held a copy of these records in its central register
 
The inside pages of hukou booklet in China.

The hukou system has origins in China that date back to ancient times, but the system in its current form came into being with the 1958 People's Republic of China Hukou Registration Regulation.[10]

Until very recently,[when?] each citizen was classified in an agricultural or non-agricultural hukou (commonly referred to as rural or urban) and further categorized by location of origin.[10] This two-fold organization structure was linked to social policy, and those residents who held non-agricultural (i.e., urban) hukou status received benefits not available to their rural counterparts, and vice versa.[14]

Internal migration was also tightly controlled by the central government, and only in the past few decades have these restrictions been loosened. While this system has played a major role in China's fast economic growth, hukou has also promoted and aggravated social stratification and contributed significantly to the deprivation of many of China's rural workers.[10]

In recent years,[when?] steps have been taken to alleviate the inequalities promulgated by the hukou system, with the most recent major reforms announced in March and July 2014, which included a provision that eliminated the division between agricultural and non-agricultural hukou status.[14]

Rationale and function edit

In its original legislation, the hukou system was justified as created to

“...maintain social order, protect the rights and interests of citizens and to be of service to the establishment of socialism".[10]

The central government asserted that because rural areas had greater capacity to absorb and use excess labor, the majority of the population should be concentrated in these regions.[10] Furthermore, free movement of people was considered dangerous, as it would lead to overpopulation of cities and could threaten agricultural production.[10] Under the hukou system, the rural population was structured to serve as support for urban industrialization, both in agricultural production[10] and workers for state owned businesses.[15]

In reality, the hukou system served other motives as well. After establishing the People's Republic of China in 1949, the Chinese Communist Party enacted policies based on the notions of stability and rapid modernization, and the hukou system was no exception.[11] Urban areas have historically been where authoritarian regimes are most vulnerable: to combat this, the central government gave preferential treatment to city residents, hoping to prevent uprisings against the state, particularly in the early years when it was especially susceptible to rebellion.[11] The structure of the hukou system also bolstered the power of the central government over its urban citizens: by making city residents dependent upon the government for all aspects of daily life, the central government could force obedience from problematic individuals.[10]

The central government's efforts to contain migration has been a major factor in the rapid development of the Chinese economy. Their tight check on migration into urban areas has helped prevent the emergence of a number of problems faced by many other developing countries.[16] For example, the appearance of slums outside of urban areas due to a massive influx of individuals searching for work has not been an issue, nor have poor health conditions due to high population density.[16] And regardless of its other imperfections, the hukou system's ability to maintain stability has contributed to China's economic rise.[11]

Human rights activists state that the hukou system has also been used to systematically deny Uyghurs and Tibetans from moving out of Xinjiang or Tibet by disallowing them from renting or buying housing in more eastern parts of China, and that any who do manage to leave are commonly forced to return through the system.[17][18]

History edit

The legacy of the Chinese hukou system may be traced back to the pre-dynastic era, as early as the 21st century BC.[10] In its early forms, the household registration system was used primarily for the purposes of taxation and conscription, as well as regulating migration.[10] Two early models of the hukou system were the xiangsui and baojia systems. The xiangsui system, established under the Western Zhou Dynasty (circa 11th-8th centuries BC) was used as a method of organizing and categorizing urban and rural land.[10] The function of the baojia system, propagated by Lord Shang Yang of the 4th century BC, was to create a system of accountability within groups of citizens: if one person within the group violated the strict rules in place, everyone in the group suffered.[10] This structure was later utilized and expanded upon during the Qin Dynasty (221-207 BCE)[19] for the purposes of taxation, population control, and conscription.[10]

According to the Examination of Hukou in Wenxian Tongkao published in 1317, there was a minister for population management during the Zhou Dynasty named Simin (Chinese: 司民), who was responsible for recording births, deaths, emigrations and immigrations. The Rites of Zhou notes that three copies of documents were kept in different places. The administrative divisions in Zhou Dynasty were a function of the distance to the state capital. The top division nearest the capital was named Dubi (Chinese: 都鄙), top division in more distant areas were named Xiang (Chinese: ) and Sui (Chinese: ). Families were organized under the Baojia system.[20][21]

Guan Zhong, Prime Minister of the Qi state 7th century BCE, imposed different taxation and conscription policies on different areas.[22] In addition, Guan Zhong also banned immigration, emigration, and separation of families without permission.[23] In the Book of Lord Shang, Shang Yang also described his policy restricting immigrations and emigrations.[24]

Xiao He, the first Chancellor of the Han Dynasty, added the chapter of Hu (Chinese: 户律, "Households Code") as one of the nine basic law codes of Han (Chinese: 九章律), and established the hukou system as the basis of tax revenue and conscription.

 
Precursors to the hukou system were used during the Qing dynasty to monitor individuals and raise funds for war

The first formal codification of the hukou system arose at the end of the Qing Dynasty (1644-1912)[25] with the 1911 Huji Law.[10] Although movement was nominally free under this statute, registration of individuals with the government was required, and it was used by the government to pursue communist forces and as a basis for taxation for the funding of wars.[10] The law also expanded upon the baojia system, and was intended to establish a sense of stability.[10]

In the period following the fall of the Qing Dynasty, China was ruled by various actors, each of which employed some system of household or personal identification.[11] During the Japanese occupation, the Japanese employed a system used to identify those under their rule and to fund their war effort.[11] Similarly, the Kuomintang utilized the system to monitor the activities of their opponents, the Chinese Communist Party, and the Chinese Communist Party in turn used a system called lianbao, which bundled families into groups of five to aid tracking and impede counterrevolutionaries.[11]

1949-1978: Maoist era edit

At the time of its founding in 1949, the People's Republic of China was a highly agricultural nation. About 89% of its citizens lived in rural areas – about 484 million resided in the countryside, versus about 58 million in the city.[26] However, as efforts to industrialize increased and Soviet help (156 projects), more and more rural residents flocked to the cities in search of better economic opportunities: between 1957 and 1960, there was a 90.9% increase in the urban labor force.[26]

A major objective of the hukou system implemented by the central government was thus to control the stream of resources moving away from the agricultural sector.[10] According to academic Kam Wing Chan, the hukou system effectively "forbid the peasantry to exit agriculture."[27] The instability and high rates of movement that characterized the years following the establishment of the nation impeded the central government's plan for society and the economy.[10] Although the hukou system in its current form was not officially brought into being until 1958, the years preceding its establishment were characterized by growing efforts by the Chinese Communist Party to assert control over its populace.[10] In 1950, the Minister of Public Security, Luo Ruiqing, published a statement detailing his vision for the implementation of the hukou system in the new era.[10] By 1954, rural and urban citizens had been registered with the state, and rigorous regulations on the conversion of hukou status had already been implemented.[10] These required that applicants have paperwork that documented employment, acceptance to a university, or immediate family relations in the city to be eligible.[10] In March of the same year, the Ministry of the Interior and the Ministry of Labor issued the Joint Directive to Control Blind Influx of Peasants into Cities, which proclaimed that henceforth, all employment of rural workers in city firms would be controlled entirely by local labor bureaus.[11]

On 9 January 1958, the People's Republic of China Hukou Registration Regulation was signed into law.[10] This divided the populace into nongmin (rural citizen), with an agricultural hukou, and shimin (urban citizen), with a non-agricultural hukou, and grouped all citizens by locality.[10] The key difference, however, lay in the distinction between agricultural and non-agricultural hukou status.[10] Because the central government prioritized industrialization, state welfare programs, which were tied to hukou status, heavily favored urban residents; holders of agricultural hukous were unable to access these benefits and were saddled with inferior welfare policies.[10] Furthermore, transfer of hukou status was highly restricted, with official quotas at 0.15-0.2% per year and actual conversion rates at about 1.5%.[14] In the following years, government oversight over the movement of people was expanded. In 1964, greater limits were imposed on migration to big cities, particularly major ones like Beijing and Shanghai, and in 1977 these regulations were furthered.[10] Throughout this era, the hukou system was used as an instrument of the command economy, helping the central government implement its plan for industrializing the nation.[10]

1978-Present: Post-Mao edit

From the establishment of the People's Republic of China until Chairman Mao's death in 1976, the central government tightened its control over migration, and by 1978, intranational movement was controlled entirely by the government.[10] Because living "outside the system" was virtually impossible, nearly all movement of people was state-sponsored.[10]

However, with Deng Xiaoping's rise to power in 1978 came the initiation of reforms that steadily began to alleviate some of the disparity between agricultural and non-agricultural hukou holders.[11] Restrictions have been loosened on movement from rural areas to smaller cities, although migration to large cities such as Beijing and Tianjin is still heavily regulated.[14] Greater autonomy has also been ceded to local governments in deciding quotas and eligibility criteria for converting hukou status.[14] Legislation has been enacted that allow migrant workers to obtain temporary residency permits, although these permits do not allow them access to the same benefits as possessed by urban residents.[10] However, with living outside the system now much more practical than it used to be, a number of migrant workers do not acquire the temporary residency permits – primarily because they do not have the resources or concrete employment offers to do so – and, as such, live in danger of being forced to return to the countryside.[10]

In 2014, the central government announced reform that among other things eliminated the division between agricultural and non-agricultural hukou status.[14]

The 2014-2020 National New-Type Urbanization Plan sought to attribute an urban hukou to 100 million people by 2020.[28]: 280  It relaxed restrictions on small cities (fewer than 500,000 people) and medium cities (more than 1 million people).[28]: 280  It maintained strong hukou restrictions on cities of more than 5 million inhabitants.[28]: 280 

Effect on rural population edit

 
While the government invests heavily in education in the cities, little to no investment in rural education occurs

Under the hukou system implemented by the central government in 1958, while holders of the non-agricultural hukou status were given ration cards for everyday necessities, including food and textiles, rural residents were forced to produce everything themselves.[10] Whereas the state provided housing in the city, individuals had to construct their own homes.[10] The state invested in education, arranged employment, and provided retirement benefits for city residents, and provided none of these services for their rural citizens.[10] These disparities have left the rural populace highly disadvantaged, and tragedies such as the famine of the Great Leap Forward primarily ravaged rural Chinese citizens.[11]

Surviving the famine edit

During the Great Chinese Famine from 1958 to 1962, having an urban versus a rural hukou could mean the difference between life and death.[29] During this period, nearly all of the approximately 600 million rural hukou residents were collectivized into village communal farms, where their agricultural output -– after state taxes – would be their only source of food. With institutionalized exaggeration of output figures by local Communist leaders and massive declines in production, state taxes during those years confiscated nearly all food in many rural communes, leading to mass starvation and the deaths of more than 65 million Chinese people.[30]

The 100 million urban hukou residents, however, were fed by fixed food rations established by the central government, which declined to an average of 1500 calories per day at times but still allowed survival for almost all during the famine. An estimated 95% or higher of all deaths occurred among rural hukou holders. With the suppression of news internally, many city residents were not aware that mass deaths were occurring in the countryside at all. This was essential to preventing organized opposition to Mao's policies.[31]

Post-1978 edit

During China's transition from state socialism to market socialism (1978-2001), migrants, most of whom were women, worked in newly created export-processing zones in city suburbs under sub-standard working conditions.[32][33] There were restrictions upon the mobility of migrant workers that forced them to live precarious lives in company dormitories or shanty towns where they were exposed to abusive treatment.[34]

The impact of the hukou system upon migrant labourers became onerous in the 1980s after hundreds of millions were ejected from state corporations and cooperatives.[32] Since the 1980s, an estimated 200 million Chinese live outside their officially registered areas and under far less eligibility for education and government services, living therefore in a condition similar in many ways to that of illegal immigrants[15] or to black people living in "white" regions under Apartheid. The millions of peasants who have left their land remain trapped at the margins of the urban society. They are often blamed for rising crime and unemployment and, under pressure from their citizens, the city governments have imposed discriminatory rules.[35] For example, the children of farm workers (Chinese: 农民工; pinyin: nóngmín gōng) are not allowed to enroll in the city schools, and even now must live with their grandparents or other relatives to attend school in their hometowns. They are commonly referred to as the "stay-at-home" or "left-behind" children. There are around 130 million such left-behind children, living without their parents, as reported by Chinese researchers.[36]

As rural workers provide their workforce in the urban areas, which also profit from the respective taxes, while their families use public services in the rural areas (e.g. schools for their children, health care for the elderly), the system leads to a wealth transfer to the wealthier urban regions from the poorer regions on the public sector level. Intra-family payments from the working-age members to their relatives in the rural areas counteract that to some extent.

Migrant workers in cities edit

 
Many rural migrants find work as laborers in cities

With the loosening of restrictions on migration in the 1980s came a large influx of rural residents seeking better opportunities in the cities.[37] However, these migrant workers have had to confront a number of challenges in their pursuit of financial security. Urban residents received priority over migrants when it came to employment opportunities, and when migrant workers did find jobs, they tended to be positions with little potential for growth.[38] While urban workers were supported by employment benefits and laws that favored them over their employers in case of disputes, rural hukou holders were not privy to such substantial protections.[37] And because city officials' performance was evaluated based on the prosperity of local residents and the local economy, they had little incentive to improve the migrant workers' quality of life.[37]

In 2008, the central government passed the Labor Contract Law, which guaranteed equal access to jobs, established a minimum wage, and required employers to provide contracts to full-time employees that included employment benefits.[37] However, a 2010 study revealed that rural workers earned 40% less than urban workers, and only 16% receive employment benefits.[37] Migrant workers' labor rights are also frequently violated – they work excessively long hours in poor conditions, and face physical and psychological harassment.[39]

Migrant workers are also disproportionately affected by wage arrears, which occur when employers either fail to pay employees on time or in full.[39] Although such incidences are technically illegal and punishable by seven years' jail time, wage arrears still occur, and labor contracts and pensions may be disregarded.[39] In a study conducted at the end of the 1990s, 46% of migrant workers were missing three or more months of pay, and some workers had not been paid in a decade.[39] Fortunately, over the past couple of decades, the prevalence of wage arrears have decreased, and in a study conducted from 2006 to 2009, it was found that 8% of migrant workers had experienced wage arrears.[39]

Children of migrant workers edit

Following Mao's death in 1976 came economic reforms that caused a surge in demand in the labor market.[40] Rural residents rushed to fill this void, but without the support of hukou status-based government social programs, many of them were forced to leave their families behind.[40] Economic growth throughout the years has maintained a high demand for labor in the cities that continues to be filled by migrant workers, and, in 2000, the Fifth National Population Census revealed that 22.9 million children between the ages of 0-14 were living without either one or both of their parents.[40] In 2010, that number had gone up to 61 million, equal to 37.7% of rural children and 21.88% of all Chinese children.[41] These children are usually cared for by their remaining parent and/or their grandparents, and although there is a 96% school enrolment rate among left-behind children, they are susceptible to a number of developmental challenges.[40] Left-behind children are more likely to resist authority and experience problems interacting with their peers;[40] they are more likely to exhibit unhealthy behaviors such as foregoing breakfast and smoking, and have an increased likelihood of developing mental health issues, including loneliness and depression.[41] And although left-behind children may have greater academic opportunities due to their parents' expanded financial capacity, they are also often under greater pressure to perform academically and thus are more vulnerable to school-related stress.[40]

 
Children who migrate with their parents face difficulties not experienced by their local counterparts

Children of rural workers who do migrate with their parents also face challenges. Without a local, non-agricultural hukou, migrant children have limited access to public social infrastructure. For example, urban students' educational opportunities are far superior to that of their migrant student counterparts.[42] The central government reformed the education system in 1986 and then again in 1993, yielding greater autonomy to local governments in the regulation of their education system.[42] Limited space and the desire to protect local interests in turn induced local governments to avoid enrolling migrant children in their public schools.[42] Furthermore, because the central government subsidized public schools based on enrolment rates of children with local hukous, migrant children were required to pay higher fees if they wanted to attend.[42] Consequentially, many migrant families elect instead to send their children to private schools that specifically cater to migrants.[42] However, to lower enrolment and attendance fees, these institutions must cut spending in other areas, resulting in a lower quality of education.[42] School facilities are often in poor condition, and many teachers are unqualified.[42]

In subsequent years, the central government has enacted a number of reforms, with limited impact. In 2001, it asserted that public schools should be the primary form of education for the nation's children, but did not specify how it would financially support schools in enrolling more migrant children, resulting in little change.[42] Similarly, in 2003, the government called for lower fees for migrant children, but again failed to detail how it would help schools pay for this.[42] And in 2006, the government created the New Compulsory Education Act which asserted equal rights to education and ceded responsibility for enrolling migrant children to provincial governments.[42] However, this too failed to improve the lot of migrant children. Students with non-local hukou had to pay inflated admission fees of 3,000 – 5,000 yuan – out of an average annual household income of 10,000 yuan – and are required to take The National College Entrance Examination (Gaokao) at their hukou locality, where it is often harder to get into college.[42] Since 2012, some regions began to relax the requirements and allow some children of migrants to take College Entrance Exam in the regions. By 2016, Guangdong's policies are the most relaxed. A child of migrants can take Entrance Exam in Guangdong if he or she has attended 3 years of high school in the province, and if the parent(s) have legal jobs and have paid for 3 years of social insurance in the province.[43]

The difficulties faced by migrant children cause many to drop out, and this is particularly common in the middle school years: in 2010, only 30% of migrant children were enrolled in secondary education.[42] Migrant children also disproportionately deal with mental health issues – 36% versus 22% among their local hukou counterparts – and 70% experience academic anxiety.[42] They frequently face stigmatization and discrimination based on differences in how they dress and speak, and have difficulty interacting with other students.[42]

Impact on rural elderly edit

Not only has the mass exodus of rural residents from the countryside in search of work impacted the children of migrant workers, it has also affected the elderly left behind. With the institution of the one-child policy in the 1970s,[44] the average age in China has undergone an upward shift: 82% of migrant workers were between the ages of 15–44 in 2000.[45] This has called into question the traditional custom of filial piety, and while retired urban workers are supported by government retirement programs, rural workers must rely on themselves and their families.[45] It appears that the effects of migration on left behind elderly is ambiguous: while parents of migrant children are often better off financially and are happy with their economic situation, they also tend to report lower life satisfaction than do elderly without migrant children.[45] Like the children of migrant workers, parents are known to experience psychological issues such as depression and loneliness,[45] and those who take care of their grandchildren may feel burdened by this responsibility.[40]

Reform edit

Over the past few decades since the economic reform in 1978, the state of the People's Republic of China has taken steps toward reforming the hukou system by implementing a variety of reform policies. 1979-1991 can be identified as the first reform period.[46] Specifically, in October 1984, the state issued "A Document on the Issue of Peasants Settling Down in Cities", which required local governments to integrate rural migrants as part of their urban population and to enable rural migrants to register in their migrant cities.[46] In 1985, the state also implemented a policy called "Interim Provisions on the Management of Transient Population in Cities", which allowed rural migrants to stay in their migrant cities even if they had neither changed their hukou status nor returned to their original rural residency.[46] In the same year, the state also published a document called "The Regulations on Resident Identity Card", which enabled rural migrants to work in cities even if they did not carry an identity card of urban status.[46] However, what followed these policies was not only a 30 million rural-to-urban migration, but also a phenomenon in which many false urban identity cards were sold to rural migrants for gaining urban benefits.[46] It hence stimulated the state to implement another policy, "A Notice on Strictly Controlling Excessive Growth of 'Urbanization,’” in 1989 for regulating rural-to-urban migration.[46] Under this policy, rural migrants were monitored again.

1992-2013 can be identified as the second hukou reform period.[46] There were various kinds of reform implemented by the state. Beginning in the late 1980s, one was to offer a "lan yin", or "blue stamp", hukou to those who possessed professional skills and/or ability to make some sort of investments (at least 100 million Renminbi yuan) in specific cities (usually the big cities such as Shanghai), allowing them to live in cities and enjoy urban welfare entitlements.[46][47] This "blue stamp hukou" was then conducted by many other big cities (including Nanjing, Tianjin, Guangzhou, and Shenzhen) in 1999.[46] The second kind was not applied to big cities but to certain selected towns and small cities. In 1997, the state implemented a policy that granted urban hukou to the rural migrants who had a stable job in their newly resided towns and small cities.[47] Meanwhile, according to two 1997 government documents, the "Pilot Scheme for Reform of the Hukou System in Small Towns" and "Instructions on Improving the Management of Rural Hukou System", rural migrant workers could register as permanent residents with equal access to urban privileges in certain small towns.[46] These policies were then made official in 2012 with the state document "Notice on Actively Yet Prudently Pushing Forward the Reform of Hukou System Management."[46] Moreover, in 1999, the state also allowed more groups of people to gain urban hukou, including children whose parent(s) had urban hukou, and the elderly whose child(ren) had been granted urban hukou.[47] The third kind was applied to the special economic zones and districts that were established particularly for economic growth (such as Shenzhen). Specifically, in 1992, the state allowed all people living in the special economic zones and districts to carry two hukous: Their original hukou and another hukou related to their job in the special zones and districts.[46] This policy hence made it easier for rural migrants to gain access to different urban opportunities in the special zones and districts.[46] However, in 2003, the state published the "Administrative Permit Laws", which sent rural migrants back to their original residency in rural areas.[46] Under this policy, rural migrants' life chances were once again determined by their hukou status.

The third reform period began in 2014, when the state published and implemented the National New-Type Urbanization Plan (2014-2020) in March to tackle various problems derived from China's fast urbanization process.[16] For instance, the plan aims to shorten the 17.3% gap between urban residents who live in cities but do not carry urban hukou and urban residents with urban hukou in 2012 by 2% by 2020.[16] Meanwhile, the plan also intends to offer welfare entitlements to people who have rural hukou (from rural migrants to urban residents who carry rural hukou), including education, welfare housing, and health care to at least 90% (about 100 million) of migrants by 2020.[16][48][49] In fact, with this plan, the state has been putting effort into achieving their goals. For instance, the state has granted many left-behind children the right to attend urban schools so that they can reunite with their rural migrant parents; it has also offered many rural migrants job training.[46] Moreover, in July of the same year, the government also published "Opinions on Further Promoting the Reform of the Hukou System" to abolish the hukou restrictions in towns and small cities, to gradually remove the restrictions middle-sized cities, to relax the restrictions in big cities—but to maintain the restrictions in the very large cities.[49] As a result, according to an announcement of the Ministry of Public Security, by 2016, the state has already issued urban hukou to about 28.9 million rural migrants.[48] Furthermore, in 2016, the local government of Beijing announced that they would abolish the official distinction between urban hukou and non-urban hukou within Beijing, meaning that all residents living in Beijing would be identified as Beijing residents regardless of their original hukou status.[50] Having said that, in November 2017, the government of Beijing implemented a 40-day "clean-up" campaign which was claimed as a way of getting rid of the unsafe structures and shantytowns in the city (where at least 8.2 million rural migrants lived). However some saw the campaign as intended to send millions of rural migrants back to their original rural areas.[51]

It has been brought into question whether the reforms mentioned above apply to the majority of rural-to-urban migrants. Specifically, many reform policies, especially those during the first and second periods, appear to require rural migrants to possess some sort of capital, either human capital (such as professional skills and titles) or property-related capital (such as the ability to become an urban homeowner) or both. Some scholars hence also call some reform policies as ways of "selling" hukou.[47] Meanwhile, many migrants have claimed that their lack of social networks (part of what is called “guan xi”)—which in some sense is also accumulated with wealth—also has made it harder for them to find a stable job, let alone a lucrative job.[48] Hence, if wealth is a precondition to change from rural hukou to urban hukou, many rural migrants indeed are unable to gain that access, as many are "unskilled" (because many skills, such as farming, are not categorized as professional skills) and poor. However, in some large cities, even if a rural migrant does carry certain professional skills, it is not a guarantee that one will be granted with urban hukou. This situation is particularly revealed from many highly educated migrants. Despite their education background, many would not be granted with urban hukou unless they become a homeowner.[52] However, given the high price of real estate in many large cities (such as Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou), many are unable to do so even if some cities do offer housing subsidies to migrants.[48] Given their lack of urban hukou, many not only face the difficulty of purchasing an apartment—let alone purchasing a house—but also the disadvantage of being a renter. Because of the lack of rent control in many large cities, even if one rents a room—or rarely, an apartment—one can face the possibility of being asked to leave.[52] Many of those educated migrant youths hence are also called "yi zu", literally "a group of ants", as many do not have their own room and have to live in a tiny room with many others.[53]

It hence is worth asking the question whether or not the hukou system has been sufficiently improved to a more people-centered system. In fact, many large cities are still strict about granting rural migrants with urban hukou and about using the hukou system to determine whether or not one should be granted with welfare entitlements. Even if the "National New-type Urbanization Plan (2014-2020)” and the "Opinions on Further Promoting the Reform of the Hukou System" implemented in the third reform period intend to create a more people-centered system, they claim that larger cities should have different hukou registration systems from the smaller cities and towns; and that the hukou regulation will continue to be stricter in larger cities.[16] However, the very large cities (such as Beijing) are usually the ones that attract rural migrants the most, given their extensive job opportunities. In this case, although the state has actively implemented many reform policies, the hukou rural/urban division still functions and represents a division system of life chances. Some scholars hence have argued that the hukou reforms indeed have not fundamentally changed the hukou system but have only decentralized the powers of hukou to local governments; and it still remains active and continues to contribute to China's rural and urban disparity.[54] Meanwhile, others have also argued that by concentrating on cities, the hukou reforms have failed to target the poorer regions, where social welfare such as education and medical care are often not offered to the residents.[55] Still, others seem excited, remarking that some cities have been offering a condition that encourages more migrant parents to bring their children along.[56] In short, the majority of rural migrants thus are still largely overlooked due to their lack to urban hukou, which is often seen as starting point for gaining access to life well-being.[57]

Hukou conversion today edit

The Floating Population Dynamic Monitoring Surveys, which have been conducted every year since 2010 by the National Health and Family Planning Commission, have reported that a significant number of migrant workers are in fact not interested in converting their hukou status.[58] While hukou policy reform has been gradual over the years, barriers to conversion have been lowered.[58] However, many rural residents are hesitant to give up their agricultural hukou status.[58] As rural hukou holders, they have property rights not afforded to their urban counterparts, which allow them to use land both for agricultural production and for personal use.[59] And with the steady expansion of cities, property values of land near cities have significantly increased.[58] Owners of these tracts of land may elect to give up agriculture in favor of renting out their homes to migrant workers.[58] Furthermore, with the continued process of urbanization, land owners near cities can expect the central government to buy their land for a handsome sum sometime in the future.[58] These benefits combined with the overall improvement in rural social welfare relative to that in cities have caused many rural residents to hesitate in converting their hukou status.[58]

Special administrative regions of China edit

Hukou is not employed in the special administrative regions of China (Hong Kong and Macau) though identification cards are mandatory for residents there.[60] Instead, both SARs grant right of abode to certain persons who are allowed to reside permanently in the regions.

When a person with household registration in mainland China is settling in Hong Kong or Macau by means of a One-way Permit, they must relinquish their household registration, therefore losing citizen rights in mainland China. However, they can settle in the SARs for seven years to be eligible for permanent resident status (which is associated with citizen rights) in the SARs. Therefore, in the period before they get permanent resident status, though still a Chinese citizen, they cannot exercise citizen rights anywhere (like voting in elections, getting a passport) and are considered second-class citizens.

Cross-strait relations edit

The People's Republic of China (Mainland China) and the Republic of China (Taiwan) each claim the territories under the other's control as part of their respective state. Thus, legally, each treats the people on the other side's territory as their citizens. However, citizenship rights are only available to the people under their own control respectively — this is defined by law as holding household registration in Taiwan Area (in the Republic of China) or in Mainland Area (in the People's Republic of China).

The Government of the Republic of China considers ethnic overseas Chinese as its nationals,[citation needed] and issues Taiwan passports to them. However, this does not grant them the right of abode or any other citizen rights in Taiwan; those rights require household registration in Taiwan. Persons without household registration are subject to immigration control in Taiwan, but after they settle in Taiwan they can establish a household registration there to become a full citizen.

See also edit

References edit

Citations edit

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  3. ^ Kroeber, Arthur R. (2016). China's Economy: What Everyone Needs to Know?. Oxford University Press. pp. 73–75. ISBN 978-0190239039.
  4. ^ Koh, Eunkang (2008). "Gender issues and Confucian scriptures: Is Confucianism incompatible with gender equality in South Korea?". Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London. 71 (2): 345–362. doi:10.1017/s0041977x08000578. JSTOR 40378774.
  5. ^ Liu, Li; Kuang, Lei (2012). Denson, Tom (ed.). "Discrimination against Rural-to-Urban Migrants: The Role of the Hukou System in China". PLOS ONE. PLOS (published 5 November 2012). 7 (11): e46932. Bibcode:2012PLoSO...746932K. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0046932. PMC 3489849. PMID 23144794.
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  60. ^ "China Law Deskbook: A Legal Guide for Foreign-invested Enterprises, Volume 1", by James M. Zimmerman, p. 406, publisher = American Bar Association, year = 2010

Sources edit

  • Wang, Fei-Ling (2014). "The Hukou (Household Registration) System". in Oxford Bibliography in Chinese Studies. Ed. Tim Wright. New York, NY: Oxford University Press.
  • Wang, Fei-Ling (2010). "Renovating the Great Floodgate: The Reform of China's Hukou System", in Martin King Whyte ed., One Country, Two Societies: Rural-Urban Inequality in Contemporary China, Harvard University Press, pp. 335–364.
  • Wang, Fei-Ling (2005), Organization through Division and Exclusion: China's Hukou System, Stanford CA: Stanford University Press.
  • Wong DF, Chang, YL, He XS (2007). "Rural migrant workers in urban China: living a marginalised life". International Journal of Social Welfare. 16: 32–40. doi:10.1111/j.1468-2397.2007.00475.x.

Further reading edit

  • Chan, Kam Wing (March 2009). (PDF). Eurasian Geography and Economics. 50 (2): 197–221. doi:10.2747/1539-7216.50.2.197. S2CID 53549312. Archived from the original (PDF) on 16 July 2015.
  • Joseph, Nancy. "Despite China's Modernization, The Hukou System Remains." University of Washington. February 2010.
  • Armstrong, Doree. "UW geographer devises a way for China to resolve its ‘immigration’ dilemma." University of Washington. 14 August 2013.

hukou, other, uses, disambiguation, this, article, about, system, people, republic, china, republic, china, household, registration, taiwan, chinese, 户口, household, individual, system, household, registration, used, mainland, china, system, itself, more, prope. For other uses see Hukou disambiguation This article is about the system in the People s Republic of China PRC For the Republic of China ROC see Household registration in Taiwan Hukou Chinese 户口 lit household individual is a system of household registration used in mainland China The system itself is more properly called huji Chinese 户籍 lit household origin and has origins in ancient China hukou is the registration of an individual in the system kou literally means mouth which originates from the practise of regarding family members as mouths to feed similar to the phrase per head in English A household registration record officially identifies a person as a permanent resident of an area and includes identifying information such as name parents spouse and date of birth A hukou can also refer to a family register in many contexts since the household register simplified Chinese 户口簿 traditional Chinese 戶口簿 pinyin hukǒu bu is issued per family and usually includes the births deaths marriages divorces and moves of all members in the family HukouChinese nameSimplified Chinese户口Traditional Chinese戶口TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinhukǒuIPA xu kʰo ʊ WuRomanizationji keuhYue CantoneseJyutpingwu6hau2Southern MinHokkien POJhō khauAlternative Chinese nameSimplified Chinese户籍Traditional Chinese戶籍TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinhujiIPA xu tɕi WuRomanizationji jehYue CantoneseJyutpingwu6zik6Southern MinHokkien POJhō che kTibetan nameTibetanཐ མ ཐ TranscriptionsWyliethem thoUyghur nameUyghurنوپۇس The system descends in part from ancient Chinese household registration systems The hukou system also influenced similar systems within the public administration structures of neighboring East Asian countries such as Japan koseki and Korea hoju as well as the Southeast Asian country Vietnam hộ khẩu 1 2 3 In South Korea the hoju system was abolished in January 2008 4 While unrelated in origin propiska in the Soviet Union and resident registration in Russia had a similar purpose and served as a model for modern China s hukou system 5 6 Due to its connection to social programs provided by the government which assigns benefits based on agricultural and non agricultural residency status often referred to as rural and urban the hukou system is sometimes likened to a form of caste system 7 8 9 It has been the source of much inequality over the decades since the establishment of the People s Republic of China in 1949 as urban residents received benefits that ranged from retirement pension to education to health care while rural citizens were often left to fend for themselves 10 11 In recent years when the central government has begun to reform the system in response to protests and a changing economic system while some Western experts question whether these changes have been of substance 12 13 Contents 1 Nomenclature huji vs hukou 2 Household registration in mainland China 2 1 Rationale and function 3 History 3 1 1949 1978 Maoist era 3 2 1978 Present Post Mao 4 Effect on rural population 4 1 Surviving the famine 4 2 Post 1978 4 3 Migrant workers in cities 4 4 Children of migrant workers 4 5 Impact on rural elderly 4 6 Reform 4 7 Hukou conversion today 5 Special administrative regions of China 6 Cross strait relations 7 See also 8 References 8 1 Citations 8 2 Sources 9 Further readingNomenclature huji vs hukou editThe formal name for the system is huji Within the huji system a hukou is the registered residency status of a particular individual in this system However the term hukou is used colloquially to refer to the entire system and it has been adopted by English language audiences to refer to both the huji system and an individual s hukou Household registration in mainland China edit nbsp An individual household s register or hukou booklet The local police station held a copy of these records in its central register nbsp The inside pages of hukou booklet in China The hukou system has origins in China that date back to ancient times but the system in its current form came into being with the 1958 People s Republic of China Hukou Registration Regulation 10 Until very recently when each citizen was classified in an agricultural or non agricultural hukou commonly referred to as rural or urban and further categorized by location of origin 10 This two fold organization structure was linked to social policy and those residents who held non agricultural i e urban hukou status received benefits not available to their rural counterparts and vice versa 14 Internal migration was also tightly controlled by the central government and only in the past few decades have these restrictions been loosened While this system has played a major role in China s fast economic growth hukou has also promoted and aggravated social stratification and contributed significantly to the deprivation of many of China s rural workers 10 In recent years when steps have been taken to alleviate the inequalities promulgated by the hukou system with the most recent major reforms announced in March and July 2014 which included a provision that eliminated the division between agricultural and non agricultural hukou status 14 Rationale and function editIn its original legislation the hukou system was justified as created to maintain social order protect the rights and interests of citizens and to be of service to the establishment of socialism 10 The central government asserted that because rural areas had greater capacity to absorb and use excess labor the majority of the population should be concentrated in these regions 10 Furthermore free movement of people was considered dangerous as it would lead to overpopulation of cities and could threaten agricultural production 10 Under the hukou system the rural population was structured to serve as support for urban industrialization both in agricultural production 10 and workers for state owned businesses 15 In reality the hukou system served other motives as well After establishing the People s Republic of China in 1949 the Chinese Communist Party enacted policies based on the notions of stability and rapid modernization and the hukou system was no exception 11 Urban areas have historically been where authoritarian regimes are most vulnerable to combat this the central government gave preferential treatment to city residents hoping to prevent uprisings against the state particularly in the early years when it was especially susceptible to rebellion 11 The structure of the hukou system also bolstered the power of the central government over its urban citizens by making city residents dependent upon the government for all aspects of daily life the central government could force obedience from problematic individuals 10 The central government s efforts to contain migration has been a major factor in the rapid development of the Chinese economy Their tight check on migration into urban areas has helped prevent the emergence of a number of problems faced by many other developing countries 16 For example the appearance of slums outside of urban areas due to a massive influx of individuals searching for work has not been an issue nor have poor health conditions due to high population density 16 And regardless of its other imperfections the hukou system s ability to maintain stability has contributed to China s economic rise 11 Human rights activists state that the hukou system has also been used to systematically deny Uyghurs and Tibetans from moving out of Xinjiang or Tibet by disallowing them from renting or buying housing in more eastern parts of China and that any who do manage to leave are commonly forced to return through the system 17 18 History editThe legacy of the Chinese hukou system may be traced back to the pre dynastic era as early as the 21st century BC 10 In its early forms the household registration system was used primarily for the purposes of taxation and conscription as well as regulating migration 10 Two early models of the hukou system were the xiangsui and baojia systems The xiangsui system established under the Western Zhou Dynasty circa 11th 8th centuries BC was used as a method of organizing and categorizing urban and rural land 10 The function of the baojia system propagated by Lord Shang Yang of the 4th century BC was to create a system of accountability within groups of citizens if one person within the group violated the strict rules in place everyone in the group suffered 10 This structure was later utilized and expanded upon during the Qin Dynasty 221 207 BCE 19 for the purposes of taxation population control and conscription 10 According to the Examination of Hukou in Wenxian Tongkao published in 1317 there was a minister for population management during the Zhou Dynasty named Simin Chinese 司民 who was responsible for recording births deaths emigrations and immigrations The Rites of Zhou notes that three copies of documents were kept in different places The administrative divisions in Zhou Dynasty were a function of the distance to the state capital The top division nearest the capital was named Dubi Chinese 都鄙 top division in more distant areas were named Xiang Chinese 鄉 and Sui Chinese 遂 Families were organized under the Baojia system 20 21 Guan Zhong Prime Minister of the Qi state 7th century BCE imposed different taxation and conscription policies on different areas 22 In addition Guan Zhong also banned immigration emigration and separation of families without permission 23 In the Book of Lord Shang Shang Yang also described his policy restricting immigrations and emigrations 24 Xiao He the first Chancellor of the Han Dynasty added the chapter of Hu Chinese 户律 Households Code as one of the nine basic law codes of Han Chinese 九章律 and established the hukou system as the basis of tax revenue and conscription nbsp Precursors to the hukou system were used during the Qing dynasty to monitor individuals and raise funds for warThe first formal codification of the hukou system arose at the end of the Qing Dynasty 1644 1912 25 with the 1911 Huji Law 10 Although movement was nominally free under this statute registration of individuals with the government was required and it was used by the government to pursue communist forces and as a basis for taxation for the funding of wars 10 The law also expanded upon the baojia system and was intended to establish a sense of stability 10 In the period following the fall of the Qing Dynasty China was ruled by various actors each of which employed some system of household or personal identification 11 During the Japanese occupation the Japanese employed a system used to identify those under their rule and to fund their war effort 11 Similarly the Kuomintang utilized the system to monitor the activities of their opponents the Chinese Communist Party and the Chinese Communist Party in turn used a system called lianbao which bundled families into groups of five to aid tracking and impede counterrevolutionaries 11 1949 1978 Maoist era edit At the time of its founding in 1949 the People s Republic of China was a highly agricultural nation About 89 of its citizens lived in rural areas about 484 million resided in the countryside versus about 58 million in the city 26 However as efforts to industrialize increased and Soviet help 156 projects more and more rural residents flocked to the cities in search of better economic opportunities between 1957 and 1960 there was a 90 9 increase in the urban labor force 26 A major objective of the hukou system implemented by the central government was thus to control the stream of resources moving away from the agricultural sector 10 According to academic Kam Wing Chan the hukou system effectively forbid the peasantry to exit agriculture 27 The instability and high rates of movement that characterized the years following the establishment of the nation impeded the central government s plan for society and the economy 10 Although the hukou system in its current form was not officially brought into being until 1958 the years preceding its establishment were characterized by growing efforts by the Chinese Communist Party to assert control over its populace 10 In 1950 the Minister of Public Security Luo Ruiqing published a statement detailing his vision for the implementation of the hukou system in the new era 10 By 1954 rural and urban citizens had been registered with the state and rigorous regulations on the conversion of hukou status had already been implemented 10 These required that applicants have paperwork that documented employment acceptance to a university or immediate family relations in the city to be eligible 10 In March of the same year the Ministry of the Interior and the Ministry of Labor issued the Joint Directive to Control Blind Influx of Peasants into Cities which proclaimed that henceforth all employment of rural workers in city firms would be controlled entirely by local labor bureaus 11 On 9 January 1958 the People s Republic of China Hukou Registration Regulation was signed into law 10 This divided the populace into nongmin rural citizen with an agricultural hukou and shimin urban citizen with a non agricultural hukou and grouped all citizens by locality 10 The key difference however lay in the distinction between agricultural and non agricultural hukou status 10 Because the central government prioritized industrialization state welfare programs which were tied to hukou status heavily favored urban residents holders of agricultural hukous were unable to access these benefits and were saddled with inferior welfare policies 10 Furthermore transfer of hukou status was highly restricted with official quotas at 0 15 0 2 per year and actual conversion rates at about 1 5 14 In the following years government oversight over the movement of people was expanded In 1964 greater limits were imposed on migration to big cities particularly major ones like Beijing and Shanghai and in 1977 these regulations were furthered 10 Throughout this era the hukou system was used as an instrument of the command economy helping the central government implement its plan for industrializing the nation 10 1978 Present Post Mao edit From the establishment of the People s Republic of China until Chairman Mao s death in 1976 the central government tightened its control over migration and by 1978 intranational movement was controlled entirely by the government 10 Because living outside the system was virtually impossible nearly all movement of people was state sponsored 10 However with Deng Xiaoping s rise to power in 1978 came the initiation of reforms that steadily began to alleviate some of the disparity between agricultural and non agricultural hukou holders 11 Restrictions have been loosened on movement from rural areas to smaller cities although migration to large cities such as Beijing and Tianjin is still heavily regulated 14 Greater autonomy has also been ceded to local governments in deciding quotas and eligibility criteria for converting hukou status 14 Legislation has been enacted that allow migrant workers to obtain temporary residency permits although these permits do not allow them access to the same benefits as possessed by urban residents 10 However with living outside the system now much more practical than it used to be a number of migrant workers do not acquire the temporary residency permits primarily because they do not have the resources or concrete employment offers to do so and as such live in danger of being forced to return to the countryside 10 In 2014 the central government announced reform that among other things eliminated the division between agricultural and non agricultural hukou status 14 The 2014 2020 National New Type Urbanization Plan sought to attribute an urban hukou to 100 million people by 2020 28 280 It relaxed restrictions on small cities fewer than 500 000 people and medium cities more than 1 million people 28 280 It maintained strong hukou restrictions on cities of more than 5 million inhabitants 28 280 Effect on rural population editSee also Migration in China nbsp While the government invests heavily in education in the cities little to no investment in rural education occursUnder the hukou system implemented by the central government in 1958 while holders of the non agricultural hukou status were given ration cards for everyday necessities including food and textiles rural residents were forced to produce everything themselves 10 Whereas the state provided housing in the city individuals had to construct their own homes 10 The state invested in education arranged employment and provided retirement benefits for city residents and provided none of these services for their rural citizens 10 These disparities have left the rural populace highly disadvantaged and tragedies such as the famine of the Great Leap Forward primarily ravaged rural Chinese citizens 11 Surviving the famine edit During the Great Chinese Famine from 1958 to 1962 having an urban versus a rural hukou could mean the difference between life and death 29 During this period nearly all of the approximately 600 million rural hukou residents were collectivized into village communal farms where their agricultural output after state taxes would be their only source of food With institutionalized exaggeration of output figures by local Communist leaders and massive declines in production state taxes during those years confiscated nearly all food in many rural communes leading to mass starvation and the deaths of more than 65 million Chinese people 30 The 100 million urban hukou residents however were fed by fixed food rations established by the central government which declined to an average of 1500 calories per day at times but still allowed survival for almost all during the famine An estimated 95 or higher of all deaths occurred among rural hukou holders With the suppression of news internally many city residents were not aware that mass deaths were occurring in the countryside at all This was essential to preventing organized opposition to Mao s policies 31 Post 1978 edit During China s transition from state socialism to market socialism 1978 2001 migrants most of whom were women worked in newly created export processing zones in city suburbs under sub standard working conditions 32 33 There were restrictions upon the mobility of migrant workers that forced them to live precarious lives in company dormitories or shanty towns where they were exposed to abusive treatment 34 The impact of the hukou system upon migrant labourers became onerous in the 1980s after hundreds of millions were ejected from state corporations and cooperatives 32 Since the 1980s an estimated 200 million Chinese live outside their officially registered areas and under far less eligibility for education and government services living therefore in a condition similar in many ways to that of illegal immigrants 15 or to black people living in white regions under Apartheid The millions of peasants who have left their land remain trapped at the margins of the urban society They are often blamed for rising crime and unemployment and under pressure from their citizens the city governments have imposed discriminatory rules 35 For example the children of farm workers Chinese 农民工 pinyin nongmin gōng are not allowed to enroll in the city schools and even now must live with their grandparents or other relatives to attend school in their hometowns They are commonly referred to as the stay at home or left behind children There are around 130 million such left behind children living without their parents as reported by Chinese researchers 36 As rural workers provide their workforce in the urban areas which also profit from the respective taxes while their families use public services in the rural areas e g schools for their children health care for the elderly the system leads to a wealth transfer to the wealthier urban regions from the poorer regions on the public sector level Intra family payments from the working age members to their relatives in the rural areas counteract that to some extent Migrant workers in cities edit nbsp Many rural migrants find work as laborers in citiesMain article Mingong With the loosening of restrictions on migration in the 1980s came a large influx of rural residents seeking better opportunities in the cities 37 However these migrant workers have had to confront a number of challenges in their pursuit of financial security Urban residents received priority over migrants when it came to employment opportunities and when migrant workers did find jobs they tended to be positions with little potential for growth 38 While urban workers were supported by employment benefits and laws that favored them over their employers in case of disputes rural hukou holders were not privy to such substantial protections 37 And because city officials performance was evaluated based on the prosperity of local residents and the local economy they had little incentive to improve the migrant workers quality of life 37 In 2008 the central government passed the Labor Contract Law which guaranteed equal access to jobs established a minimum wage and required employers to provide contracts to full time employees that included employment benefits 37 However a 2010 study revealed that rural workers earned 40 less than urban workers and only 16 receive employment benefits 37 Migrant workers labor rights are also frequently violated they work excessively long hours in poor conditions and face physical and psychological harassment 39 Migrant workers are also disproportionately affected by wage arrears which occur when employers either fail to pay employees on time or in full 39 Although such incidences are technically illegal and punishable by seven years jail time wage arrears still occur and labor contracts and pensions may be disregarded 39 In a study conducted at the end of the 1990s 46 of migrant workers were missing three or more months of pay and some workers had not been paid in a decade 39 Fortunately over the past couple of decades the prevalence of wage arrears have decreased and in a study conducted from 2006 to 2009 it was found that 8 of migrant workers had experienced wage arrears 39 Children of migrant workers edit Following Mao s death in 1976 came economic reforms that caused a surge in demand in the labor market 40 Rural residents rushed to fill this void but without the support of hukou status based government social programs many of them were forced to leave their families behind 40 Economic growth throughout the years has maintained a high demand for labor in the cities that continues to be filled by migrant workers and in 2000 the Fifth National Population Census revealed that 22 9 million children between the ages of 0 14 were living without either one or both of their parents 40 In 2010 that number had gone up to 61 million equal to 37 7 of rural children and 21 88 of all Chinese children 41 These children are usually cared for by their remaining parent and or their grandparents and although there is a 96 school enrolment rate among left behind children they are susceptible to a number of developmental challenges 40 Left behind children are more likely to resist authority and experience problems interacting with their peers 40 they are more likely to exhibit unhealthy behaviors such as foregoing breakfast and smoking and have an increased likelihood of developing mental health issues including loneliness and depression 41 And although left behind children may have greater academic opportunities due to their parents expanded financial capacity they are also often under greater pressure to perform academically and thus are more vulnerable to school related stress 40 nbsp Children who migrate with their parents face difficulties not experienced by their local counterpartsChildren of rural workers who do migrate with their parents also face challenges Without a local non agricultural hukou migrant children have limited access to public social infrastructure For example urban students educational opportunities are far superior to that of their migrant student counterparts 42 The central government reformed the education system in 1986 and then again in 1993 yielding greater autonomy to local governments in the regulation of their education system 42 Limited space and the desire to protect local interests in turn induced local governments to avoid enrolling migrant children in their public schools 42 Furthermore because the central government subsidized public schools based on enrolment rates of children with local hukous migrant children were required to pay higher fees if they wanted to attend 42 Consequentially many migrant families elect instead to send their children to private schools that specifically cater to migrants 42 However to lower enrolment and attendance fees these institutions must cut spending in other areas resulting in a lower quality of education 42 School facilities are often in poor condition and many teachers are unqualified 42 In subsequent years the central government has enacted a number of reforms with limited impact In 2001 it asserted that public schools should be the primary form of education for the nation s children but did not specify how it would financially support schools in enrolling more migrant children resulting in little change 42 Similarly in 2003 the government called for lower fees for migrant children but again failed to detail how it would help schools pay for this 42 And in 2006 the government created the New Compulsory Education Act which asserted equal rights to education and ceded responsibility for enrolling migrant children to provincial governments 42 However this too failed to improve the lot of migrant children Students with non local hukou had to pay inflated admission fees of 3 000 5 000 yuan out of an average annual household income of 10 000 yuan and are required to take The National College Entrance Examination Gaokao at their hukou locality where it is often harder to get into college 42 Since 2012 some regions began to relax the requirements and allow some children of migrants to take College Entrance Exam in the regions By 2016 Guangdong s policies are the most relaxed A child of migrants can take Entrance Exam in Guangdong if he or she has attended 3 years of high school in the province and if the parent s have legal jobs and have paid for 3 years of social insurance in the province 43 The difficulties faced by migrant children cause many to drop out and this is particularly common in the middle school years in 2010 only 30 of migrant children were enrolled in secondary education 42 Migrant children also disproportionately deal with mental health issues 36 versus 22 among their local hukou counterparts and 70 experience academic anxiety 42 They frequently face stigmatization and discrimination based on differences in how they dress and speak and have difficulty interacting with other students 42 Impact on rural elderly edit Not only has the mass exodus of rural residents from the countryside in search of work impacted the children of migrant workers it has also affected the elderly left behind With the institution of the one child policy in the 1970s 44 the average age in China has undergone an upward shift 82 of migrant workers were between the ages of 15 44 in 2000 45 This has called into question the traditional custom of filial piety and while retired urban workers are supported by government retirement programs rural workers must rely on themselves and their families 45 It appears that the effects of migration on left behind elderly is ambiguous while parents of migrant children are often better off financially and are happy with their economic situation they also tend to report lower life satisfaction than do elderly without migrant children 45 Like the children of migrant workers parents are known to experience psychological issues such as depression and loneliness 45 and those who take care of their grandchildren may feel burdened by this responsibility 40 Reform edit Over the past few decades since the economic reform in 1978 the state of the People s Republic of China has taken steps toward reforming the hukou system by implementing a variety of reform policies 1979 1991 can be identified as the first reform period 46 Specifically in October 1984 the state issued A Document on the Issue of Peasants Settling Down in Cities which required local governments to integrate rural migrants as part of their urban population and to enable rural migrants to register in their migrant cities 46 In 1985 the state also implemented a policy called Interim Provisions on the Management of Transient Population in Cities which allowed rural migrants to stay in their migrant cities even if they had neither changed their hukou status nor returned to their original rural residency 46 In the same year the state also published a document called The Regulations on Resident Identity Card which enabled rural migrants to work in cities even if they did not carry an identity card of urban status 46 However what followed these policies was not only a 30 million rural to urban migration but also a phenomenon in which many false urban identity cards were sold to rural migrants for gaining urban benefits 46 It hence stimulated the state to implement another policy A Notice on Strictly Controlling Excessive Growth of Urbanization in 1989 for regulating rural to urban migration 46 Under this policy rural migrants were monitored again 1992 2013 can be identified as the second hukou reform period 46 There were various kinds of reform implemented by the state Beginning in the late 1980s one was to offer a lan yin or blue stamp hukou to those who possessed professional skills and or ability to make some sort of investments at least 100 million Renminbi yuan in specific cities usually the big cities such as Shanghai allowing them to live in cities and enjoy urban welfare entitlements 46 47 This blue stamp hukou was then conducted by many other big cities including Nanjing Tianjin Guangzhou and Shenzhen in 1999 46 The second kind was not applied to big cities but to certain selected towns and small cities In 1997 the state implemented a policy that granted urban hukou to the rural migrants who had a stable job in their newly resided towns and small cities 47 Meanwhile according to two 1997 government documents the Pilot Scheme for Reform of the Hukou System in Small Towns and Instructions on Improving the Management of Rural Hukou System rural migrant workers could register as permanent residents with equal access to urban privileges in certain small towns 46 These policies were then made official in 2012 with the state document Notice on Actively Yet Prudently Pushing Forward the Reform of Hukou System Management 46 Moreover in 1999 the state also allowed more groups of people to gain urban hukou including children whose parent s had urban hukou and the elderly whose child ren had been granted urban hukou 47 The third kind was applied to the special economic zones and districts that were established particularly for economic growth such as Shenzhen Specifically in 1992 the state allowed all people living in the special economic zones and districts to carry two hukous Their original hukou and another hukou related to their job in the special zones and districts 46 This policy hence made it easier for rural migrants to gain access to different urban opportunities in the special zones and districts 46 However in 2003 the state published the Administrative Permit Laws which sent rural migrants back to their original residency in rural areas 46 Under this policy rural migrants life chances were once again determined by their hukou status The third reform period began in 2014 when the state published and implemented the National New Type Urbanization Plan 2014 2020 in March to tackle various problems derived from China s fast urbanization process 16 For instance the plan aims to shorten the 17 3 gap between urban residents who live in cities but do not carry urban hukou and urban residents with urban hukou in 2012 by 2 by 2020 16 Meanwhile the plan also intends to offer welfare entitlements to people who have rural hukou from rural migrants to urban residents who carry rural hukou including education welfare housing and health care to at least 90 about 100 million of migrants by 2020 16 48 49 In fact with this plan the state has been putting effort into achieving their goals For instance the state has granted many left behind children the right to attend urban schools so that they can reunite with their rural migrant parents it has also offered many rural migrants job training 46 Moreover in July of the same year the government also published Opinions on Further Promoting the Reform of the Hukou System to abolish the hukou restrictions in towns and small cities to gradually remove the restrictions middle sized cities to relax the restrictions in big cities but to maintain the restrictions in the very large cities 49 As a result according to an announcement of the Ministry of Public Security by 2016 the state has already issued urban hukou to about 28 9 million rural migrants 48 Furthermore in 2016 the local government of Beijing announced that they would abolish the official distinction between urban hukou and non urban hukou within Beijing meaning that all residents living in Beijing would be identified as Beijing residents regardless of their original hukou status 50 Having said that in November 2017 the government of Beijing implemented a 40 day clean up campaign which was claimed as a way of getting rid of the unsafe structures and shantytowns in the city where at least 8 2 million rural migrants lived However some saw the campaign as intended to send millions of rural migrants back to their original rural areas 51 It has been brought into question whether the reforms mentioned above apply to the majority of rural to urban migrants Specifically many reform policies especially those during the first and second periods appear to require rural migrants to possess some sort of capital either human capital such as professional skills and titles or property related capital such as the ability to become an urban homeowner or both Some scholars hence also call some reform policies as ways of selling hukou 47 Meanwhile many migrants have claimed that their lack of social networks part of what is called guan xi which in some sense is also accumulated with wealth also has made it harder for them to find a stable job let alone a lucrative job 48 Hence if wealth is a precondition to change from rural hukou to urban hukou many rural migrants indeed are unable to gain that access as many are unskilled because many skills such as farming are not categorized as professional skills and poor However in some large cities even if a rural migrant does carry certain professional skills it is not a guarantee that one will be granted with urban hukou This situation is particularly revealed from many highly educated migrants Despite their education background many would not be granted with urban hukou unless they become a homeowner 52 However given the high price of real estate in many large cities such as Beijing Shanghai Guangzhou many are unable to do so even if some cities do offer housing subsidies to migrants 48 Given their lack of urban hukou many not only face the difficulty of purchasing an apartment let alone purchasing a house but also the disadvantage of being a renter Because of the lack of rent control in many large cities even if one rents a room or rarely an apartment one can face the possibility of being asked to leave 52 Many of those educated migrant youths hence are also called yi zu literally a group of ants as many do not have their own room and have to live in a tiny room with many others 53 It hence is worth asking the question whether or not the hukou system has been sufficiently improved to a more people centered system In fact many large cities are still strict about granting rural migrants with urban hukou and about using the hukou system to determine whether or not one should be granted with welfare entitlements Even if the National New type Urbanization Plan 2014 2020 and the Opinions on Further Promoting the Reform of the Hukou System implemented in the third reform period intend to create a more people centered system they claim that larger cities should have different hukou registration systems from the smaller cities and towns and that the hukou regulation will continue to be stricter in larger cities 16 However the very large cities such as Beijing are usually the ones that attract rural migrants the most given their extensive job opportunities In this case although the state has actively implemented many reform policies the hukou rural urban division still functions and represents a division system of life chances Some scholars hence have argued that the hukou reforms indeed have not fundamentally changed the hukou system but have only decentralized the powers of hukou to local governments and it still remains active and continues to contribute to China s rural and urban disparity 54 Meanwhile others have also argued that by concentrating on cities the hukou reforms have failed to target the poorer regions where social welfare such as education and medical care are often not offered to the residents 55 Still others seem excited remarking that some cities have been offering a condition that encourages more migrant parents to bring their children along 56 In short the majority of rural migrants thus are still largely overlooked due to their lack to urban hukou which is often seen as starting point for gaining access to life well being 57 Hukou conversion today edit The Floating Population Dynamic Monitoring Surveys which have been conducted every year since 2010 by the National Health and Family Planning Commission have reported that a significant number of migrant workers are in fact not interested in converting their hukou status 58 While hukou policy reform has been gradual over the years barriers to conversion have been lowered 58 However many rural residents are hesitant to give up their agricultural hukou status 58 As rural hukou holders they have property rights not afforded to their urban counterparts which allow them to use land both for agricultural production and for personal use 59 And with the steady expansion of cities property values of land near cities have significantly increased 58 Owners of these tracts of land may elect to give up agriculture in favor of renting out their homes to migrant workers 58 Furthermore with the continued process of urbanization land owners near cities can expect the central government to buy their land for a handsome sum sometime in the future 58 These benefits combined with the overall improvement in rural social welfare relative to that in cities have caused many rural residents to hesitate in converting their hukou status 58 Special administrative regions of China editSee also Special administrative regions of China Hukou is not employed in the special administrative regions of China Hong Kong and Macau though identification cards are mandatory for residents there 60 Instead both SARs grant right of abode to certain persons who are allowed to reside permanently in the regions When a person with household registration in mainland China is settling in Hong Kong or Macau by means of a One way Permit they must relinquish their household registration therefore losing citizen rights in mainland China However they can settle in the SARs for seven years to be eligible for permanent resident status which is associated with citizen rights in the SARs Therefore in the period before they get permanent resident status though still a Chinese citizen they cannot exercise citizen rights anywhere like voting in elections getting a passport and are considered second class citizens Cross strait relations editSee also Cross Strait relations and Household registration in Taiwan The People s Republic of China Mainland China and the Republic of China Taiwan each claim the territories under the other s control as part of their respective state Thus legally each treats the people on the other side s territory as their citizens However citizenship rights are only available to the people under their own control respectively this is defined by law as holding household registration in Taiwan Area in the Republic of China or in Mainland Area in the People s Republic of China The Government of the Republic of China considers ethnic overseas Chinese as its nationals citation needed and issues Taiwan passports to them However this does not grant them the right of abode or any other citizen rights in Taiwan those rights require household registration in Taiwan Persons without household registration are subject to immigration control in Taiwan but after they settle in Taiwan they can establish a household registration there to become a full citizen See also edit nbsp China portalPublic records in China Hoju Koseki Internal passport Propiska in the Soviet Union Resident registration in RussiaReferences editCitations edit Liu Laura Blythe 2016 Teacher Educator International Professional Development as Ren Springer p 37 ISBN 978 3662516485 Miller Tom 2012 China s Urban Billion The Story behind the Biggest Migration in Human History Bloomsbury Academic ISBN 978 1780321417 Kroeber Arthur R 2016 China s Economy What Everyone Needs to Know Oxford University Press pp 73 75 ISBN 978 0190239039 Koh Eunkang 2008 Gender issues and Confucian scriptures Is Confucianism incompatible with gender equality in South Korea Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies University of London 71 2 345 362 doi 10 1017 s0041977x08000578 JSTOR 40378774 Liu Li Kuang Lei 2012 Denson Tom ed Discrimination against Rural to Urban Migrants The Role of the Hukou System in China PLOS ONE PLOS published 5 November 2012 7 11 e46932 Bibcode 2012PLoSO 746932K doi 10 1371 journal pone 0046932 PMC 3489849 PMID 23144794 Guo Zhonghua Guo Sujian 2015 Theorizing Chinese Citizenship Lexington Books published 15 October 2015 p 104 ISBN 978 1498516693 Chinese Society Change Conflict and Resistance by Elizabeth J Perry Mark Selden page 90 China s New Confucianism Politics and Everyday Life in a Changing Society p 86 by Daniel A Bell Trust and Distrust Sociocultural Perspectives p 63 by Ivana Markova Alex Gillespie a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj Young Jason 3 June 2013 2 China s hukou system markets migrants and institutional change Basingstoke ISBN 9781137277305 OCLC 847140377 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link a b c d e f g h i j L Wallace Jeremy 2014 Cities and stability urbanization redistribution amp regime survival in China New York ISBN 9780199378982 OCLC 871534491 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Lu Rachel 31 July 2014 China Is Ending Its Apartheid Here s Why No One Is Happy About It Foreign Policy Retrieved 14 August 2018 Sheehan Spencer 22 February 2017 China s Hukou Reforms and the Urbanization Challenge The Diplomat Retrieved 14 August 2018 a b c d e f Chan K W 2015 Five Decades of the Chinese Hukou System In Handbook of Chinese Migration Identity and Wellbeing pp 23 47 Northampton MA Edward Elgar Publishing Inc a b Luard Tim China rethinks peasant apartheid BBC News 10 November 2005 a b c d e f Wang Xin Rui Hui Eddie Chi Man Choguill Charles Jia Sheng Hua 2015 The new urbanization policy in China Which way forward Habitat Internatioinal 47 279 284 doi 10 1016 j habitatint 2015 02 001 hdl 10397 27398 V Nathan 4 August 2020 Inside a Uyghur s quarantine room Video shows shackles filthy conditions and propaganda The Globe and Mail The Globe and Mail Wear your Mask Under your Hood An Eyewitness Account of Arbitrary Detention in Xinjiang during the 2020 Coronavirus Pandemic by James A Millward Medium 19 August 2020 Qin dynasty China 221 207 BC Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 16 November 2017 Jason Young China s Hukou System Markets Migrants and Institutional Change Palgrave Macmillan p 30 Fan Zhang China s Urbanization and the World Economy Edward Elgar Publishing p 29 Guanzi 国门内外 都鄙井田 山泽川隰 Guanzi 禁迁徙 止流民 圉分异 Guanzi 禁迁徙 止流民 圉分异 chapter 2 使民无得擅徙 Qing dynasty Chinese history Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 16 November 2017 a b Duan C Gao S amp Zhu Y n d The Phenomenon of Internal Migration in China In Chinese Migration and Families at Risk pp 14 36 Cambridge Scholars Publishing Kine Phelim 21 December 2023 Enter the dragon Here comes 2024 Politico Retrieved 21 December 2023 a b c Froissart Chloe 2024 Adapting the Hukou to Modernise the Country While Maintaining Social Polarisation and Stratification In Doyon Jerome Froissart Chloe eds The Chinese Communist Party a 100 Year Trajectory Canberra ANU Press ISBN 9781760466244 Becker Jasper Hungry Ghosts Mao s Secret Famine New York Holt 1998 220 232 Becker Jasper Hungry Ghosts Mao s Secret Famine New York Holt 1998 270 Becker Jasper Hungry Ghosts Mao s Secret Famine New York Holt 1998 220 a b Chinese apartheid Migrant labourers numbering in hundreds of millions who have been ejected from state concerns and co operatives since the 1980s as China instituted market capitalism have to have six passes before they are allowed to work in provinces other than their own In many cities private schools for migrant labourers are routinely closed down to discourage migration From politics to health policies why they re in trouble The Star 6 February 2007 Whitehouse David Chinese workers and peasants in three phases of accumulation Archived 26 February 2008 at the Wayback Machine Paper delivered at the Colloquium on Economy Society and Nature sponsored by the Centre for Civil Society at the University of KwaZulu Natal 2 March 2006 Retrieved 1 August 2007 Chan Anita China s Workers Under Assault The Exploitation of Labor in a Globalizing Economy M E Sharpe 2001 p 9 Macleod Calum China reviews apartheid for 900m peasants The Independent 10 June 2001 从1000万到1 3亿 农村留守儿童到底有多少 http www cnki com cn Article CJFD2005 QLTS200502000 htm a b c d e Maurer Fazio M Connelly R amp Tran N T 2015 Negative native place stereotypes and discriminatory wage penalties in China s migrant labour markets In Handbook of Chinese Migration Identity and Wellbeing pp 71 104 No MA Edward Elgar Publishing Inc Li C 2013 Institutional and non institutional paths Migrants and non migrants different processes of socioeconomic status attainment in China In China s Internal and International Migration pp 29 39 New York New York Routledge a b c d e Cheng Z Nielsen I amp Smyth R n d Determinants of Wage Arrears and Implications for the Socioeconomic Wellbeing of China s Migrant Workers Evidence from Guangdong Province In Handbook of Chinese Migration Identity and Wellbeing pp 105 125 Edward Elgar Publishing Limited a b c d e f g Chen M amp Sun X n d Parenting and Grandparenting of Left Behind Children in Rural China In Chinese Migration and Families at Risk pp 37 51 Cambridge Scholars Publishing a b Gao S amp Xue J n d Future Orientation and School Bonding among Left Behind Children in Mainland China In Chinese Migration and Families at Risk pp 78 104 Cambridge Scholars Publishing a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Sun X amp Chen M n d Inequality in Educational Opportunities of Migrant Children in China In Chinese Migration and Families at Risk pp 52 77 Cambridge Scholars Publishing Hornby Lucy Mao Sabrina 30 December 2012 Chinese cities to relax school entry for rural migrants Beijing China Jin Dan 7 June 2016 Nearly 10 000 migrant students sit for gaokao in Guangdong one child policy Definition amp Facts Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 24 October 2017 a b c d Zhuo Y amp Liang Z n d Migration and Wellbeing of the Elderly in Rural China In Handbook of Chinese Migration Identity and Wellbeing pp 126 147 Edward Elgar Publishing Limited a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Cui Rong Cohen Jeffrey H 1 September 2015 Reform and the HuKou System in China Migration Letters 12 3 327 335 doi 10 33182 ml v12i3 283 a b c d Fan C Cindy 2008 Migration Hukou and the City In Yusuf Shahid Saich Tony eds China Urbanizes Consequences Strategies and Policies Washington The World Bank a b c d Sheehan Spencer 22 February 2017 China s Hukou Reforms and the Urbanization Challenge The Diplomat Retrieved 22 April 2018 a b Chan Kam Wing 2014 Achieving Comprehensive Hukou Reform in China Paulson Policy Memorandum 白 墨 20 September 2016 观察 户籍改革里程碑 北京取消农业户口 BBC Retrieved 26 April 2018 Pabon John 4 December 2017 Beijing s Heavy Handed Solution to Urbanization The Diplomat Retrieved 22 April 2018 a b Suda Kimoko 2016 A Room of One s Own Highly Educated Migrants Strategies for Creating a Home in Guangzhou Population Space and Place 22 2 146 157 doi 10 1002 psp 1898 蚁族 在现实中找出路 凤凰财经 Retrieved 26 April 2018 Chan Kam Wing Buckingham Will 2008 Is China Abolishing the Hukou System The China Quarterly Li Bingqin 19 May 2017 China Going Nowhere on Hukou Reform Asia Times Retrieved 25 April 2018 Fish Eric How Hukou Reform is Changing the Makeup of Chinese Factory Towns Asia Society Retrieved 25 April 2018 Chan Kam Wing 2013 China Internal Migration In Ness Immanuel ed The Encyclopedia of Global Human Migration Hoboken Wiley Blackwell a b c d e f g Chan Chuanbo Fan C Cindy October 2016 China s Hukou Puzzle Why Don t Rural Migrants Want Urban Hukou China Review 16 9 39 Tyner Adam Ren Yuan 2016 The Hukou System Rural Institutions and Migrant Integration in China Journal of East Asian Studies 16 3 331 348 doi 10 1017 jea 2016 18 China Law Deskbook A Legal Guide for Foreign invested Enterprises Volume 1 by James M Zimmerman p 406 publisher American Bar Association year 2010 Sources edit Wang Fei Ling 2014 The Hukou Household Registration System in Oxford Bibliography in Chinese Studies Ed Tim Wright New York NY Oxford University Press Wang Fei Ling 2010 Renovating the Great Floodgate The Reform of China s Hukou System in Martin King Whyte ed One Country Two Societies Rural Urban Inequality in Contemporary China Harvard University Press pp 335 364 Wang Fei Ling 2005 Organization through Division and Exclusion China s Hukou System Stanford CA Stanford University Press Wong DF Chang YL He XS 2007 Rural migrant workers in urban China living a marginalised life International Journal of Social Welfare 16 32 40 doi 10 1111 j 1468 2397 2007 00475 x Further reading editChan Kam Wing March 2009 The Chinese Hukou System at 50 PDF Eurasian Geography and Economics 50 2 197 221 doi 10 2747 1539 7216 50 2 197 S2CID 53549312 Archived from the original PDF on 16 July 2015 Joseph Nancy Despite China s Modernization The Hukou System Remains University of Washington February 2010 Armstrong Doree UW geographer devises a way for China to resolve its immigration dilemma University of Washington 14 August 2013 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hukou amp oldid 1203821595, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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