Considerations on Child Abuse from a Medical and Psychosocial Perspective
Autori:
Hao JIN, Yaxin HE, Changheng ZHAO
Cod: ISSN: 1583-3410 (print), ISSN: 1584-5397 (electronic)
Dimensiuni: pp. 254-277
How to cite this article:Jin, H., He, Y., Zhao, C. (2018). Social Security Expenditure, Demographic Structural Changes, and Urban–Rural Income Gap in China: Evidence from the Provincial Data. Revista de Cercetare si Interventie Sociala, 62, 254-277. |
Abstract:
The continuously expanding urban–rural income gap is an indisputable fact
during the rapid economic development in China. Accordingly, narrowing the
urban–rural income gap is an important topic and considerable concern in the
academic circles and practical fi eld. To explore the causes of the urban–rural
income gap, the infl uential eff ects of social security expenditure, demographic
structural changes, and urban–rural income gap were analyzed using the fi xed eff ect
model of the cluster-robust standard errors and the provincial data of 341 samples
which covered 31 provincial areas in Mainland China from 2006 to 2016. Results
demonstrate that the growth of social security expenditure narrows the urban–rural
income gap, and such eff ect has evident regional diff erences. The growth of social
security expenditure in Western China further expands the urban–rural income gap
owing to the urban bias of fi scal expenditure. In addition, the population aging
expands the urban–rural income gap. The urbanization level has signifi cantly
negative eff ect in regulating the relationship between demographic structure and
urban–rural income gap. In regions with low urbanization level, the population
aging decreases the total social demands and increases the unemployment rate
in rural areas, thereby further expanding the urban–rural income gap. The urban
bias of social security expenditure further intensifi es the urban–rural income gap.
On the contrary, regions with high urbanization level have weak dual economic
structure that weakens the positive impact of population aging on the urban–rural
income gap. The obtained conclusions provide decision-making references for
formulating social security and population intervention policy.
Keywords:
income gap, social security expenditure, demographic structure, aging.
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