Abstract
Housing is critical to people's prosperity and wellbeing. In particular, housing status is closely linked to young people's life opportunities in many domains. With skyrocketing housing prices in many cities, housing outcomes of the current young generation in China are receiving increased attention. In this study, we examine the recent pattern of housing inequality among the young generation in urban China based on a large-scale national representative survey conducted in 2015, and we explore the importance of different types of factors. From an intragenerational perspective, we investigate the relative strengths between socialist institutions and market mechanisms. We also take into account the intergenerational channel by studying the impact of family background variables. We find substantial inequality in terms of home ownership, living space, and housing wealth among young people. While market ability variables, such as income and education, significantly affect housing consumption, institutional factors, such as the household registration (hukou) system, work units, and administrative rank, still play important roles in contemporary China. Furthermore, the impact of parental socioeconomic and political status is also nontrivial. In particular, the hukou status of young people and their parents has a sizable impact on housing consumption. China’s policymakers should pay more attention to the housing needs of young people and take concrete measures to expand the equality of opportunities.
Similar content being viewed by others
Explore related subjects
Discover the latest articles, news and stories from top researchers in related subjects.Notes
Under the hukou system, each resident is assigned a hukou location and a rural or urban hukou classification, which are normally inherited at birth from one’s parents (Li et al. 2010).
In response to rising public appeal for social integration and social inclusion, since the late 2000s the Chinese government has initiated a variety of plans to alleviate the hukou problem and improve migrants’ housing conditions, though the effectiveness of those reforms remains in question (Huang et al. 2013; Huang 2013).
Under the HPF program, employees contribute a specific percentage of gross salaries to their individual HPF accounts and employers match with an equal amount. Employees enrolled in the HPF program can withdraw money from their HPF accounts to pay for housing-related expenses such as home purchases, home downpayments, mortgage payments, and home improvement. In addition, the HPF participants are eligible for discounted mortgage loans.
References
Bian, Y., & Logan, J. R. (1994). Income inequality in urban China. Albany: State University of New York Press.
Bian, Y., & Logan, J. R. (1996). Market transition and the persistence of power: The changing stratification system in urban China. American Sociological Review, 61, 739–758.
Burell, M. (2006). China's housing provident fund: Its success and limitations. Housing Finance International, 20, 38–49.
Buttimer, J. R., Gu, A. Y., & Yang, T. T. (2004). The Chinese housing provident fund. International Real Estate Review, 7, 1–30.
Campos, B. C., Yiu, C. Y., Shen, J., Liao, K., & Maing, M. J. (2016). The anticipated housing pathways to homeownership of young people in Hong Kong. European Journal of Housing Policy, 16, 223–242.
Cao, Y., & Nee, V. (2000). Comment: Controversies and evidence in the market transition debate. American Journal of Sociology, 105, 1175–1189.
Chantreuil, F., & Trannoy, A. (2013). Inequality decomposition values: The trade-off between marginality and efficiency. Journal of Economic Inequality, 11, 83–98.
Charles, K. K., & Hurst, E. (2003). The correlation of wealth across generations. Journal of Political Economy, 111, 1155–1182.
Charpentier, A., & Mussard, S. (2011). Income inequality games. Journal of Economic Inequality, 9, 529–554.
Chen, J., Guo, F., & Wu, Y. (2011). One decade of urban housing reform in China: Urban housing price dynamics and the role of migration and urbanization, 1995–2005. Habitat International, 35, 1–8.
Chen, Y., Fang, W., Li, L., Morrissey, P., & Nie, C. (2016). Social attitudes in contemporary China. New York: Routledge.
Chow, G. C., & Niu, L. (2015). Housing prices in urban China as determined by demand and supply. Pacific Economic Review, 20(1), 1–16.
Conley, D. (2001). Decomposing the black-white wealth gap: The role of parental resources, inheritance, and investment dynamics. Sociological Inquiry, 71, 39–66.
Coulter, R. (2018). Parental background and housing outcomes in young adulthood. Housing Studies, 33, 1–23.
Deng, Q., Gustafsson, B., & Li, S. (2013). Intergenerational income persistence in urban China. Review of Income and Wealth, 59, 416–436.
Deng, W., Hoekstra, J., & Elsinga, M. (2016). The changing determinants of homeownership amongst young people in urban China. European Journal of Housing Policy, 16, 201–222.
Deutsch, J., Alperin, M. N. P., & Silber, J. (2018). Using the Shapley decomposition to disentangle the impact of circumstances and efforts on health inequality. Social Indicators Research, 138, 1–21.
Fan, Y. (2016). Intergenerational income persistence and transmission mechanism: Evidence from urban China. China Economic Review, 41, 299–314.
Forrest, R., & Hirayama, Y. (2009). The uneven impact of neoliberalism on housing opportunities. International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 33, 998–1013.
Fu, Q. (2015). When fiscal recentralisation meets urban reforms: Prefectural land finance and its association with access to housing in urban China. Urban Studies, 52, 1791–1809.
Fu, Q. (2016). The persistence of power despite the changing meaning of homeownership: An age-period-cohort analysis of urban housing tenure in China, 1989–2011. Urban Studies, 53, 1225–1243.
Gerber, T. P. (2000). Educational stratification in contemporary Russia: Stability and change in the face of economic and institutional crisis. Sociology Of Education, 73, 219–246.
Gerber, T. P., & Hout, M. (1998). More than shock therapy: Market transition, employment, and income in Russia, 1991–1995. American Journal of Sociology, 104, 1–50.
Gong, H. C., Leigh, A., & Meng, X. (2012). Intergenerational income mobility in urban China. Review of Income and Wealth, 58, 481–503.
Hamnett, C. (1999). Winners and losers: Home ownership in modern Britain. London: UCL Press.
He, S., Liu, L., Yang, G., & Wang, F. (2017). Housing differentiation and housing poverty in Chinese low-income urban neighborhoods under the confluence of state-market forces. Urban Geography, 38, 729–751.
Helderman, A. C., & Mulder, C. H. (2007). Intergenerational transmission of homeownership: The roles of gifts and continuities in housing market characteristics. Urban Studies, 44, 231–247.
Hochstenbach, C. (2018). Spatializing the intergenerational transmission of inequalities: Parental wealth, residential segregation, and urban inequality. Environment and Planning A, 50, 689–708.
Hoolachan, J. E., Mckee, K., Moore, T., & Soaita, A. M. (2017). ‘Generation rent’ and the ability to ‘settle down’: Economic and geographical variation in young people’s housing transitions. Journal of Youth Studies, 20, 63–78.
Huang, X., Dijst, M., van Weesep, J., & Zou, N. (2013). Residential mobility in China: Home ownership among rural–urban migrants after reform of the hukou registration system. Journal of Housing and the Built Environment, 29, 615–636.
Huang, Y. (2008). A room of one's own: housing consumption and residential crowding in transitional urban China. Environment & Planning A, 35, 591–614.
Huang, Y. (2010). The road to homeownership: A longitudinal analysis of tenure transition in urban China (1949–94). International Journal of Urban & Regional Research, 28, 774–795.
Huang, Y. (2013). Low-income housing in Chinese cities: Policies and practices. The China Quarterly, 212, 941–964.
Huang, Y., & Clark, W. A. V. (2002). Housing tenure choice in transitional urban China: A multilevel analysis. Urban Studies, 39, 7–32.
Huang, Y., & Jiang, L. (2009). Housing inequality in transitional Beijing. International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 33, 936–956.
Huang, Y., & Tao, R. (2015). Housing migrants in Chinese cities: Current status and policy design. Environment and Planning C: Government and Policy, 33, 640–660.
Huang, Y., & Yi, C. (2010). Consumption and tenure choice of multiple homes in transitional urban China. International Journal of Housing Policy, 10, 105–131.
Huang, Y., & Yi, C. (2011). Second home ownership in transitional urban China. Housing Studies, 26, 423–447.
Huang, Z., Du, X., & Yu, X. (2015). Home ownership and residential Satisfaction: evidence from Hangzhou, China. Habitat International, 49, 74–83.
Isengard, B., Konig, R., & Szydlik, M. (2018). Money or space? Intergenerational transfers in a comparative perspective. Housing Studies, 33, 178–200.
Israeli, O. (2007). A Shapley-based decomposition of the r-square of a linear regression. Journal of Economic Inequality, 5, 199–212.
Jin, Y., Fan, M., Cheng, M., & Shi, Q. (2014). The economic gains of cadre status in rural China: investigating effects and mechanisms. China Economic Review, 31, 185–200.
Keister, L. A. (2004). Race, family structure, and wealth: The effect of childhood family on adult asset ownership. Sociological Perspectives, 47, 161–187.
Lee, H., Myers, D., Painter, G., Thunell, J., & Zissimopoulos, J. (2018). The role of parental financial assistance in the transition to homeownership by young adults. Journal of Housing Economics. Forthcoming
Lennartz, C., Arundel, R., & Ronald, R. (2016). Younger adults and homeownership in Europe through the global financial crisis. Population Space and Place, 22, 823–835.
Li, B., & Shin, H. B. (2013). Intergenerational housing support between retired old parents and their children in urban China. Urban Studies, 50, 3225–3242.
Li, B., & Walder, A. G. (2001). Career advancement as party patronage: sponsored mobility into the Chinese administrative elite, 1949–1996. American Journal of Sociology, 106, 1371–1408.
Li, B., & Zhang, Y. (2011). Housing provision for rural-urban migrant workers in Chinese cities: The roles of the state, employers and the market. Social Policy & Administration, 45, 694–713.
Li, H., Meng, L., Shi, X., & Wu, B. (2012). Does having a cadre parent pay? Evidence from the first job offers of Chinese college graduates. Journal of Development Economics, 99, 513–520.
Li, J., Gu, Y., & Zhang, C. (2015). Hukou-based stratification in urban China’s segmented economy. Chinese Sociological Review, 47, 154–176.
Li, L., Li, S.-M., & Chen, Y. (2010). Better city, better life, but for whom? The Hukou and resident card system and the consequential citizenship stratification in Shanghai. City, Culture and Society, 1, 145–154.
Li, S., & Li, L. (2006). Life course and housing tenure change in urban China: A study of Guangzhou. Housing Studies, 21, 653–670.
Li, S. M., & Yi, Z. (2007). The road to homeownership under market transition Beijing, 1980–2001. Urban Affairs Review, 42, 342–368.
Liu, Y., He, S., & Wu, F. (2012). Housing differentiation under market transition in Nanjing, China. The Professional Geographer, 64, 554–571.
Logan, J. R., Bian, Y., & Bian, F. (1990s). Housing inequality in urban China in the 1990s. International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 23, 7–25.
Logan, J. R., Fang, Y., & Zhang, Z. (2010). The winners in China's urban housing reform. Housing Studies, 25, 101–117.
Mckee, K. (2012). Young People, Homeownership and future welfare. Housing Studies, 27, 853–862.
Mckee, K., Moore, T., Soaita, A. M., & Crawford, J. (2017). ‘Generation rent’ and the fallacy of choice. International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 41, 318–333.
Meng, X., & Zhang, J. (2001). The two-tier labor market in urban China: Occupational segregation and wage differentials between urban residents and rural migrants in Shanghai. Journal of Comparative Economics, 29, 485–504.
Myers, D., Painter, G., Zissimopoulos, J., Lee, H., & Thunell, J. (2019). Simulating the change in young adult homeownership through 2035: Effects of growing diversity and rising educational attainment. Housing Policy Debate, 29, 126–142.
National Bureau of Statistics (NBS). (2016). China city statistical yearook 2016. Beijing: China Statistical Press.
Nee, V. (1989). A theory of market transition: From redistribution to markets in state socialism. American Sociological Review, 54, 663.
Nee, V. (1996). The emergence of a market society: Changing mechanisms of stratification in China. American Journal of Sociology, 101, 908–949.
Niu, G., & Zhao, G. (2018a). Identity and trust in government: A comparison of locals and migrants in urban China. Cities, 83, 54–60.
Niu, G., & Zhao, G. (2018b). Living condition among China’s rural–urban migrants: Recent dynamics and the inland–coastal differential. Housing Studies, 33, 476–493.
Or, T.-M. (2018). Pathways to homeownership among young professionals in urban China: The role of family resources. Urban Studies, 55, 2391–2407.
Piketty, T. (2014). Capital in the twenty-first century. Cambridge: Belknap Press.
Prix, I., & Pfeffer, F. T. (2017). Does Donald need uncle scroog? Extended Family’s wealth and children’s educational attainment in the United States. In J. Erola & E. Kilpi-Jakonen (Eds.), Social inequality across generations: The role of compensation and multiplication in resource accumulation. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar.
Ren, Q., & Hu, R. (2016). Housing inequality in urban China. Chinese Journal of Sociology, 2, 144–167.
Ronald, R., & Lennartz, C. (2018). Housing careers, intergenerational support and family relations. Housing Studies, 33, 147–159.
Ronatas, A. (1994). The first shall be last? Entrepreneurship and communist cadres in the transition from socialism. American Journal of Sociology, 100, 40–69.
Sato, H. (1990s). Housing inequality and housing poverty in urban China in the late 1990s. China Economic Review, 17, 37–50.
Shorrocks, A. F. (2013). Decomposition procedures for distributional analysis: A unified framework based on the Shapley value. Journal of Economic Inequality, 11, 99–126.
Sissons, P., & Houston, D. (2019). Changes in transitions from private renting to homeownership in the context of rapidly rising house prices. Housing Studies, 34, 49–65.
Song, X., & Xie, Y. (2014). Market transition theory revisited: Changing regimes of housing inequality in China, 1988–2002. Sociological Science, 1, 277–291.
Spilerman, S., & Wolff, F. (2012). Parental wealth and resource transfers: How they matter in france for home ownership and living standards. Social Science Research, 41, 207–223.
Staniszkis, J. (1991). The dynamics of the breakthrough in eastern Europe: The polish experience. Berkeley: University of California Press.
Szelenyi, I. (1987). Housing inequalities and occupational segregation in state socialist cities. International Journal of Urban & Regional Research, 11, 1–8.
Szelenyi, I., & Kostello, E. (1996). The market transition debate: Toward a synthesis? American Journal of Sociology, 101, 1082–1096.
Tan, S., Wang, S., & Cheng, C. (2015). Change of housing inequality in urban China and its decomposition: 1989–2011. Social Indicators Research, 129, 29–45.
Tao, L., Hui, E. C. M., Wong, F. K. W., & Chen, T. (2015). Housing choices of migrant workers in China: Beyond the Hukou perspective. Habitat International, 49, 474–483.
Tomaszewski, W., Smith, J. F., Parsell, C., Tranter, B., Laughlandbooy, J., & Skrbis, Z. (2017). Young, anchored and free? Examining the dynamics of early housing pathways in Australia. Journal of Youth Studies, 20, 904–926.
Torche, F. (2015). Analyses of intergenerational mobility: An interdisciplinary review. Annals of the American Academy of Political & Social Science, 657, 37–62.
Walder, A. G., & He, X. (2014). Public housing into private assets: Wealth creation in urban China. Social Science Research, 46, 85–99.
Wang, H., Guo, F., & Cheng, Z. (2014). A distributional analysis of wage discrimination against migrant workers in China's urban labour market. Urban Studies, 52, 2383–2403.
Wang, Y., & Otsuki, T. (2015). Do institutional factors influence housing decision of young generation in urban China: Based on a study on determinants of residential choice in Beijing. Habitat International, 49, 508–515.
Wang, Y. P. (2001). Urban housing reform and finance in China: A case study of Beijing. Urban Affairs Review, 36, 620–645.
Wang, Y. P., Wang, Y., & Wu, J. (2010). Housing migrant workers in rapidly urbanizing regions: A study of the Chinese model in Shenzhen. Housing Studies, 25, 83–100.
Wei, Z., Chen, T., Chiu, R. L. H., & Chan, E. H. W. (2017). Policy transferability on public housing at the city level: Singapore to Guangzhou in China. Journal of Urban Planning and Development, 143, 05017010.
Wu, L. (2013). Decentralization and Hukou reforms in China. Policy and Society, 32, 33–42.
Xie, Y., & Jin, Y. (2015). Household wealth in China. Chinese Sociological Review, 47, 203–229.
Yang, Z., & Chen, J. (2014). Housing affordability and housing policy in urban China. Berlin: Springer.
Yi, C., & Huang, Y. (2014). Housing consumption and housing inequality in Chinese cities during the first decade of the twenty-first century. Housing Studies, 29, 291–311.
Ying, Q., Luo, D., & Chen, J. (2013). The determinants of homeownership affordability among the ‘sandwich class’: Empirical findings from Guangzhou, China. Urban Studies, 50, 1870–1888.
Yuan, Z., & Chen, L. (2013). The trend and mechanism of intergenerational income mobility in China: An analysis from the perspective of human capital, social capital and wealth. The World Economy, 36, 880–898.
Zhang, C., Shen, J., & Yang, R. (2016). Housing affordability and housing vacancy in China: The role of income inequality. Journal of Housing Economics, 33, 4–14.
Zhang, Y., & Chen, J. (2014). The changing prevalence of housing overcrowding in post-reform China: The case of Shanghai, 2000–2010. Habitat International, 42, 214–223.
Zhang, Y., & Eriksson, T. (2010). Inequality of opportunity and income inequality in nine Chinese provinces, 1989–2006. China Economic Review, 21, 607–616.
Zhou, X. (2000). Reply: Beyond the debate and toward substantive institutional analysis. American Journal of Sociology, 105, 1190–1195.
Zhou, X., Tuma, N. B., & Moen, P. (1997). Institutional change and job-shift patterns in urban China, 1949 to 1994. American Sociological Review, 62, 339–365.
Acknowledgements
This work was supported by the 111 Project of China (No. B16040) and the National Natural Science Foundation of China (No. 71904160).
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Corresponding author
Additional information
Publisher's Note
Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.
Rights and permissions
About this article
Cite this article
Niu, G., Zhao, G. State, market, and family: housing inequality among the young generation in urban China. J Hous and the Built Environ 36, 89–111 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10901-020-09740-w
Received:
Accepted:
Published:
Issue Date:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10901-020-09740-w