Skip to main content

2000 | Buch

China’s Economic Growth

The Impact on Regions, Migration and the Environment

herausgegeben von: Terry Cannon

Verlag: Palgrave Macmillan UK

insite
SUCHEN

Über dieses Buch

Economic reforms in China began in 1979 and initiated some of the most fundamental changes ever to occur in any country. While allowing some of the most astonishing economic growth the world has seen, they have also induced some of the most profound social and environmental shifts.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

Frontmatter

Introduction — The Economic Reforms, Demographic Processes and Environmental Problems

1. Introduction — The Economic Reforms, Demographic Processes and Environmental Problems
Abstract
China presents its own people and the rest of the world with a quite bewildering complexity, not only because of its size and variation, but also owing to the rapid pace of change. This book is an attempt at making some sense of a few key aspects of these complexities, through the research of a group of people (most of them geographers in Britain) working on various components of the demographic, regional and environmental systems.
Terry Cannon

Demographic Processes and the Economic Reforms

Frontmatter
2. Pressures of Development on China’s Cities and Regions
Abstract
This chapter reviews the rapid pace of development in recent years, and examines some of the tensions this is causing in China’s cities and regions. In cities, these include the environmental impacts of rapid urbanisation, social polarisation and disintegration, the absorption of China’s huge rural labour surplus, and the impact of ‘Westernization’ on urban society. At the regional level, rapid urbanisation enhances regional disparities and tensions between the generally more wealthy coastal region and the poorer interior. The implications of such issues for governance and stability are considered and alternative urban and regional futures for the country are raised.
Ian G. Cook
3. Patterns of Migration under the Reforms
Abstract
In the 1950s the Chinese government evolved what was perhaps the strictest set of controls over population movement ever exercised within a modern state. A legal transfer of residence within China, especially if it involved a move from a rural to an urban area, could involve greater bureaucratic difficulty than migration across national boundaries elsewhere in the world. In the 1960s and 1970s, migration in China occurred mainly as a result of policy decisions and government direction rather than individual responses to the workings of the market.
Mahmoud Messkoub, Delia Davin
4. The Floating Population in China’s Cities: A New Ethnic Underclass?
Abstract
Chinese society has undergone a major transformation during the last two decades, as the old ideas about creating a socialist utopia have been cast aside in favour of what some observers have described as rampant capitalism (Schell 1994; Theroux 1993). The economy has been heated up to boiling point by the introduction of market-oriented reforms. Part of this process, as described in Chapter 3, has been the relaxation of the more draconian elements of migration control (see also Selden 1988; Cheng 1991), leading to an unprecedented increase in population mobility. The most dramatically visible component has been the movement of millions of peasants away from their homes in the countryside (Pannell 1995).
Christopher J. Smith
5. Family Planning and Fertility Among Temporary Migrants
Abstract
This chapter describes the development of marriage and family planning legislation in response to the great increase in population mobility. I show that descriptions of migrants’ supposed ‘deviant’ behaviour in relation to marriage or births (such as marriage below the legal ages, or births out of plan) tend to be exaggerated and are in fact characteristic of the wider population. I explore the impact of fertility on migration and specifically the number of children migrants may be expected to have, according to the results of a small survey of temporary registered migrants I conducted in Beijing in June 1994 (referred to as the 1994 Beijing migrant survey). The chapter begins with a description of the survey population and the role of micro-demographic techniques. A history of the household registration system that controls mobility is outlined before the in-depth discussion of marriage and fertility.
Caroline Hoy

Economic Growth and Environmental Problems

Frontmatter
6. Wuhan: Policies for the Management and Improvement of a Polluted City
Abstract
Although China has a long record of dealing with ecological problems, it is currently facing forms of environmental degradation for which it is neither fully equipped nor prepared, thrust upon it by the rapidity of its industrial growth. The air in most cities is polluted by particulates and sulphur dioxide; waste water from industries and cities is dumped untreated into rivers and lakes; solid waste is piled on city boundaries; drinking water is polluted, with shortages exacerbated by industrial overuse of ground water.
John G. Taylor, Xie Qingshu
7. Recent Developments and Prospects for the Sanxia (Three Gorges) Dam
Abstract
The wisdom of building large scale-dams as a solution to power generation and flood control problems is increasingly being questioned.1 While the debates are highly polarised and many still see great benefits to be derived from large-scale dams, the drawbacks have become well known, so that projects are no longer automatically approved by governments and international funding agencies. However, the idea of building a dam in the Sanxia (Three Gorges) along the Chang (Yangtze) River in western Hubei province dates back to at least the 1920s and is deeply rooted in the psyche of those wishing to develop China rapidly (Map 7.1). Therefore, it should come as no surprise that the Chinese National People’s Congress passed the Sanxia Key Water Control Project in April 1992. However, the fact that close to a third of the delegates to this rubber-stamp congress abstained or voted against this project represented considerable opposition to what was normally an automatic affair.2 Moreover, since that date a considerable number of Chinese have written questioning the scientific and social value of this mega-project.
Richard Louis Edmonds
8. World Bank Policies, Energy Conservation and Emissions Reduction
Abstract
In the early 1990s, international arrangements for the environment were broadened to include a new dimension: the protection of the global environment, in particular the reduction of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions to the atmosphere due mostly to the burning of fossil fuels. Among many initiatives, improving energy efficiency was proposed as a cost-effective measure to eliminate global environmental risks, particularly with regard to the use of new technologies and processes in industry (Schipper and Meyers 1992, p. 73–118). After the 1992 United Nations Conference on Environment and Development (UNCED) in Rio, many initiatives were undertaken at the national and international levels to strengthen various mechanisms for action, including the Global Environment Facility (GEF), jointly managed by the World Bank, the UNDP and the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP).2
Lin Gan
9. Urban Transport in China: Whither the Bicycle?
Abstract
The bicycle is to China what the car is to America. For many visitors, that is part of the country’s attraction; as compared with other Asian countries, Chinese cities appear to offer (almost literally) a breath of fresh air:
Tianjin, a city of 8.5 million, devotes a meagre 4.8 per cent of its land area to streets and roads. It is experiencing explosive growth with industrial output, housing supply and the bus fleet all increasing by 70 per cent between 1980 and 1988. Most megacities experiencing such conditions would exhibit massive traffic congestion, major transport related air pollution problems, high traffic accident rates, and high transportation investment and operations costs … Tianjin, which relies on non-motorised vehicles for four out of ten person-trips, instead has high mobility, few traffic congestion problems, very low traffic accident rates, very low public and personal cash expenditures with only modest time expenditures for transport. (Thornhill 1991, quoted by Replogle 1992, p. 20)
Andrew Spencer
10. Is Ecological Agriculture Sustainable in China?
Abstract
The initial impetus away from the collective and towards more privatised forms of agriculture in the countryside in the late 1970s came from below, from discontented elements in Anhui and Sichuan, two of China’s poorest provinces. After some initial prevarication, the reforms were taken up and pushed through by the central government with such aggression and alacrity that by 1982 almost all collective property, including land, had been distributed on a household-by-household basis, and responsibility for agricultural production transferred from the brigade (dadui) and work team (xiaodui) to the family (jiating). The new era of family farming had begun.
Richard Sanders

Erosion Problems and Policies

Frontmatter
11. Assessing and Managing the Soil Erosion Problem in Southern China
Abstract
Soil erosion constitutes a major environmental issue in China. Traditionally focused on the semi-arid environments of the north, degradation has now emerged as a significant topic in the humid south in recent decades. Inventories of land affected by erosion show a dramatic increase in the extent of degradation, which has led to speculation about future food security (Smil 1993).
David Higgitt
12. Soil Erosion and Conservation on Subtropical Arable in Yunnan Province, South-west China
Abstract
China has one of the world’s most severe soil erosion problems, extensively reviewed by Wen (1993) and Edmonds (1994) (see also this volume, Chapters 11 and 13). The population is putting severe pressures on the soil resource, which supports 22 per cent of the global population on 7 per cent of the world’s cropland (Brown 1984). The productive soil resource is severely restrained by climate. Much of western China, particularly Xinjiang, Gansu, Ningxia and Inner Mongolia provinces, is too arid, while the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau of the west is also too cold for extensive crop production (Zhao 1986). Hence, most crops are grown in the humid east. Only about 13.5 per cent (130 million hectares) of total land area is cultivated (Wen 1993). Whilst government policy prohibits cultivation of slopes steeper than 28 per cent (Barrows et al. 1982), this limit is often breached to extend crop production. Land resource pressures exerted by 1200 million people are superimposed on diverse environments, which are often geologically and geomorphologically unstable. Therefore, physical factors, such as slope steepness and stability, tectonic activity, rainfall erosivity and soil erodibility interact with anthropogenic activities, producing the complicated erosion problem. Thus, erosion is produced by a complex interplay of environmental and anthropogenic factors.
Mike Fullen, David J. Mitchell, Andrew P. Barton, Trevor J. Hocking, Liu Liguang, Wu Bo Zhi, Zheng Yi, Xia Zheng Yuan
13. Erosion in Deep Gorges: The Leaping Tiger Gorge on the Upper Yangtze
Abstract
The Hutiaoxia (Leaping Tiger) Gorge is located in Henduan Mountain region of Yunnan province in the south-west (Map 13.1). This part of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau in southwest China includes east Tibet, west Sichuan and north-west Yunnan, and is bounded on the west by Burma. It is transitional between this plateau and the lower Yunnan-Guizhou Plateaux (Zhang 1992), as well as the eastern end of the Himalayas (Ives & Messerli, 1990). A number of large rivers cross the region, including the Salween, the Mekong, and the Jinsha (the upper Yangtze). The last runs across the region from the north-west before turning abruptly to the north-east to enter the gorge proper in its middle reaches.
David Watts, Zhou Yue
Backmatter
Metadaten
Titel
China’s Economic Growth
herausgegeben von
Terry Cannon
Copyright-Jahr
2000
Verlag
Palgrave Macmillan UK
Electronic ISBN
978-0-333-97739-2
Print ISBN
978-0-333-71660-1
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1057/9780333977392