4.3 Article

The role of demographics and migration for the future of economic growth in China

Journal

EUROPEAN ECONOMIC REVIEW
Volume 144, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.euroecorev.2022.104076

Keywords

China's growth; Migration; Segmented labor markets; Financial constraints

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Funding

  1. Super Computing Center of Beijing Normal University

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This article presents a two-sector model to evaluate the prospects of China's future economic growth. The simulations suggest that the rapid aging of the population and the decrease in rural migration will significantly slow down urban labor force and economic growth. However, relaxing labor market segmentation and financial constraints can delay this process of growth deceleration.
China's real GDP has been growing by almost 10 percent a year for the last three decades. For how long should we expect this spectacularly high growth to continue? We propose a quantitative two sector model with segmented labor markets and financial frictions to evaluate the prospects for China's future growth under different policy scenarios. In our model the high growth rate observed in China since the early 1990s is fueled by the large increase in urban labor supply, because of rural-urban migration, and the emergence of private enterprises that absorb those migrant workers. Our simulations suggest that the rapid aging of its population and the decrease of rural migration should significantly decelerate urban labor force and economic growth starting around 2020. Through a counterfactual with a fixed age distribution, we find that population aging is responsible for the deceleration of economic growth between 2020 and 2040. We show that substantial relaxation of labor market segmentation and financial constraints faced by private enterprises could improve efficiency substantially and delay this process of growth deceleration by one decade.

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