Migration in China
Laurie Taylor and a panel of experts look at the social cost of China's vast economic expansion. Some 200 million migrant workers are moving great distances in order to find work.
MIGRATION IN CHINA
China now possesses the fourth largest economy in the world and it is set to become the world’s second biggest within 10 years. The boom cities along the country’s Eastern Coast are drawing huge numbers of people from the countryside in a migration of unprecedented scale. Now it is estimated that 200 million people, a quarter of the country’s workforce is counted as China’s ‘floating population’. Because of the peculiarities of China’s household registration system these migrants do not have access to schools, hospitals or other aspects of state care and the protests are growing every year. They are second class citizens with the potential to create massive disharmony within the Chinese state. Can the situation be sustained? Can the Chinese economy continue its miraculous growth without the granting of democratic or other human rights to its population? Laurie is joined by Caroline Hoy who has conducted fieldwork on internal migration in China; Fulong Wu, Professor of East Asian Planning and Director of the Urban China Research Centre at Cardiff University; Will Hutton, who recently published his book entitled The Writing on the Wall: China in the 21st Century and Professor Nigel Harris, author of The New Untouchables: Immigration and the New World Worker.
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- Wed 11 Apr 2007 16:00Â鶹ԼÅÄ Radio 4 FM
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