Land for welfare in China
•Some landlosing villagers are provided with social welfare benefits in China.•Such provision is rooted in the urban–rural gap inherited from Mao's communist past.•Land functions as a social insurance and an income-generating property in China.•Such provision is the result of the strategic inte...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Land use policy 2016-09, Vol.55, p.1-12 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Online-Zugang: | Volltext |
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Zusammenfassung: | •Some landlosing villagers are provided with social welfare benefits in China.•Such provision is rooted in the urban–rural gap inherited from Mao's communist past.•Land functions as a social insurance and an income-generating property in China.•Such provision is the result of the strategic interaction among state players.•Local states choose to provide pensions, a less costly form of welfare benefits.
Drawing on firsthand observations, Party and government documents, and survey data, this study examines the causes and processes of the land for welfare policy in China. The implementation of the land for welfare program cannot be understood in isolation from the profound urban–rural gap in the land property rights regime and social welfare provision in China. The dual land tenure system allows local officials to generate revenue by expropriating rural land, which, to rural households, functions as a social insurance as well as an income-generating property. In the process of land requisition, land-losing villagers are provided with social welfare benefits to compensate for their loss of their land's insurance function. Such provision, however, is not developed out of the local governments’ benign intention, but their strategic reaction to the central government's development program that combines rural social welfare provision with a land rewarding system, which provides an opportunity for local officials to gain more land, a valuable asset for local governments. The provision of social welfare benefits is selective: affected rural households are provided with welfare benefits that are less costly to the local government, typically in the form of a pension insurance. |
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ISSN: | 0264-8377 1873-5754 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.landusepol.2016.03.014 |