Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-4rdpn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-03T08:24:39.191Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Staff of Life: Living Standards in China, *

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 February 2009

Extract

“Living standards have improved, but levels are low and not even.” These words are contained in an appraisal by two senior members of the State Statistical Bureau of the People's Republic of China, which seems to be the first detailed account in years, written for the benefit of foreigners who are interested in the well-being of the people of China. Other, briefer statements have been available lately, but none of such authenticity. In this respect, December 1978 can be taken as the point of departure: since then, not only have major political and economic changes occurred, but the non-Chinese world has been allowed to participate in these changes and to take account of their successes and failures. Even the language in which official reports are made astonishes. Admittedly, reforms had preceded the third plenary session of the 11th Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party held in December 1978. The plenum was the occasion when China's policies underwent a dramatic shift from Hua Guofeng's doctrinal concept to a more “pragmatic” approach, with problems being tackled as they arose. Strategy and tactics were revised, following a re-evaluation of major political events, organizational change at the highest political level, a reassessment of Mao's role in the history of the People's Republic and the revision of economic targets. A stable future seemed to be guaranteed by the election of Hu Yaobang to the Politbureau and – a little later – the appointment of Zhao Ziyang as premier in overall charge of modernization, as Deng Xiaoping interpreted this concept. Within a few months Hua Guofeng's modernization projects suffered some drastic amendments and his 10-year Plan in particular was abandoned. In its place, the plenum considered the “eight-character charter” of readjustment, reform, consolidation and improvement. In the countryside, which still provides work and a home for the largest number of men and women, agriculture was given the highest priority - but this time in earnest and not, as during the previous two decades, merely as a slogan.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The China Quarterly 1983

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1. Chengrui, Li and Zhanji, Zhang, “Remarkable improvement in living standards,” Beijing Review, 26 04 1982Google Scholar.

2. Xinhua News Agency, 29 April 1982.

3. Eckstein, Alexander, The National Income of Communist China (New York: Free Press of Glencoe, 1961), p. 11Google Scholar.

4. Honggi (RedFlag), 1 April 1982.

5. Zhongguo nongye nianjian (Agricultural Yearbook), 1980 (Beijing, 1980)Google Scholar.

6. Jingji yanjiu (Economic Research), 1955; also: Lin, Cyril, “The reinstatement of economics in China today,” The China Quarterly, No. 85 (03 1981), pp. 148CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

7. Muqiao, Xue, “China's socialist economy” (Beijing, 1981), p. 168Google Scholar.

8. Muqiao, Xue, “How can we affect planned management of the national economy?” Renmin ribao, 15 06 1979Google Scholar.

9. Howe, Christopher, China's Economy (London: Paul Elek, 1978)Google Scholar; also, Wage Patterns and Wage Policy in Modern China (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1973)Google Scholar. Hoffmann, Charles, The Chinese Worker (Albany: State University of New York Press, 1974)Google Scholar. Shirk, Susan L., “Recent Chinese labour policies and the transformation of industrial organization in China,” CQ, 12 1981Google Scholar. Prybyla, Jan S., “Key issues in the Chinese economy,” Asian Survey, 09 1981Google Scholar. Wortzel, Larry M., “Incentive mechanisms and remuneration in China,” Asian Survey, 09 1981Google Scholar. Korzec, Michel and White, Martin King, “The Chinese wage system,” CQ, 06 1981Google Scholar. Vermeer, Eduard B., “Social welfare provisions and the limits of inequality in contemporary China,” Asian Survey, 09 1979Google Scholar. Riskin, Carl, Workers' Incentives in Chinese Industry: A Reassessment of the Economy, Washington, 1975Google Scholar. Ting-chung, Chen, “An analysis of wage adjustment, Studies on Chinese Communism,” 12 1971Google Scholar.

10. Wang, Tong-eng, Economic Policies and Price Stability in China (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1980)Google Scholar. Tsakok, Isabelle, Inflation Control in the People's Republic of China (unpublished thesis), Harvard, 1976Google Scholar. Liu, Ta-chung and Yeh, Kung-chia, The Economy of the Chinese Mainland (Santa Monica: Rand Corporation, 19631964)Google Scholar.Chinn, Dennis L., “Basic commodity distribution in the People's Republic of China,” CQ, 12 1980Google Scholar. Tsakok, Isabelle, “Inflation control in the People's Republic of China,” World Development, 1979Google Scholar. Prybyla, Jan S., “A note on incomes and prices in China,” Asian Survey, 03 1975Google Scholar. Chen, Nai-Ruenn, “ The theory of price formation in Communist China,” CQ, July–September 1966Google Scholar.

11. Smil, Vaclav, “Communist China's food,” Issues and Studies, 04 1980Google Scholar; also, “China's food,” Food Policy, May 1981. FAO, Food Balance Sheets, Rome 1980Google Scholar; also: Monthly Bulletin of Statistics, November 1979. Klatt, W., “China: food balance (projection) 1977/78,” in “Economic survey of the PRC,” The Far East and Australasia 1978–79, London, 1979Google Scholar; also, Table 7, “Food balance 1980–81,” in the Appendix at the end of this paper.

12. Beijing Review, 7 June 1982; food intake 1981: 2,666 calories, 79 g protein, 41 g fat.

13. Xinhua News Agency, 31 October 1979.

14. Klatt, W., “Agrarian issues in Asia,” The Far East and Australasia (London, 1982)Google Scholar. Parish, William L. and White, Martin King, Village and Family in Contemporary China (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1978)Google Scholar.

15. Xinhua News Agency, 21 May 1982.

16. Issues and Studies, August 1979.

17. Xinhua News Agency, 28 April 1979.

18. Xinhua News Agency, 30 April 1981.

19. Xinhua News Agency, 29 April 1982.

20. Shaanxi ribao, Xian, , 6 07 1981Google Scholar.

21. Vermeer, Eduard B., “Income differentials in rural China,” CQ, 03 1982Google Scholar. Parish, William L., “Egalitarianisra in Chinese society,” Problems of Communism, January–February 1981Google Scholar. Lampton, David M., “New ‘revolution’ in China's social policy,” Problems of Communism, September–December 1979Google Scholar. Nolan, Peter, “Inequality of income between town and countryside in the People's Republic of China in the mid–1950s,” World Development, 1979Google Scholar. Khan, Azizur Rahman, “The distribution of income in rural China,” in Poverty and Landlessness in Rural Asia, ILO, Geneva, 1977Google Scholar. Lardy, Nicholas R., “Economic planning and income distribution in China,” Current Scene, 11 1976Google Scholar. Blecher, Marc, “Income distribution in small rural Chinese communities,” CQ, 12 1976Google Scholar. White, Martin King, “Inequality and stratification in China,” CQ, 12 1975Google Scholar. Roll, Charles Robert, The Distribution of Rural Income in China (unpublished thesis), Harvard, 1974Google Scholar.

22. Domes, Jurgen, Sozialismus in Chinas Doerfem (Hanover, 1977), p. 134Google Scholar.

23. Griffin, Keith and Saith, Ashwani, The Pattern of Income Inequality in Rural China (mimeogr.), Oxford, 05 1980Google Scholar.

24. Lim, E. R., Income Distribution, Poverty and Human Resource Development: The Chinese Experience (mimeogr.), Washington, 02 1980Google Scholar.

25. Beijing (City) Radio, 21 May 1981.

26. Jianbai, Yang and Xuezeng, Li, “The relations between agriculture, light industry and heavy industry in China,” Social Sciences, Beijing, 06 1980Google Scholar.

27. Renmin ribao, 24 December 1978.

28. Xinhua News Agency, 24 October 1979.

29. Xinhua News Agency, 25 January 1982.

30. Chen, Nai-Ruenn, Chinese Economic Statistics (Edinburgh: University Press, 1967)Google Scholar. Perkins, Dwight H., Price Formation in Communist China (unpublished thesis), Harvard, 1963Google Scholar; also, Market Control and Planning in Communist China (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1966)Google Scholar. Wiens, Thomas B., “Agricultural statistics,” in Eckstein, A., Quantitative Measures of China's Economic Output (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan, 1980)Google Scholar.

31. Jinfu, Zhang, “Upholding planned economy in agriculture,” Beijing Review, 22 03 1982Google Scholar.

32. Jianbai, Yang and Xuezeng, Li, “The relations between agriculture,” p. 207Google Scholar, also, Jingji yanjiu, pp. 20,21, December 1978.

33. Xinhua News Agency, 12 March 1982.

34. Xinhua News Agency, 12 December 1981.

35. Jingjiyanjiu, 20 June 1982, also, Saith, Ashwani, “Economic incentives for the one-child family in rural China,” CQ, 09 1981Google Scholar.