Agricultural trade and farm employment in China during 1994-2009: job creation or substitution?

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Agricultural trade and farm employment in China during 1994-2009 : job creation or substitution? / Zhu, Jing; Zhang, Shu; Yu, Wusheng.

I: China Agricultural Economic Review, Bind 5, Nr. 2, 2013, s. 180-196.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Zhu, J, Zhang, S & Yu, W 2013, 'Agricultural trade and farm employment in China during 1994-2009: job creation or substitution?', China Agricultural Economic Review, bind 5, nr. 2, s. 180-196. https://doi.org/10.1108/17561371311331089

APA

Zhu, J., Zhang, S., & Yu, W. (2013). Agricultural trade and farm employment in China during 1994-2009: job creation or substitution? China Agricultural Economic Review, 5(2), 180-196. https://doi.org/10.1108/17561371311331089

Vancouver

Zhu J, Zhang S, Yu W. Agricultural trade and farm employment in China during 1994-2009: job creation or substitution? China Agricultural Economic Review. 2013;5(2):180-196. https://doi.org/10.1108/17561371311331089

Author

Zhu, Jing ; Zhang, Shu ; Yu, Wusheng. / Agricultural trade and farm employment in China during 1994-2009 : job creation or substitution?. I: China Agricultural Economic Review. 2013 ; Bind 5, Nr. 2. s. 180-196.

Bibtex

@article{29d35b24f65f4cc2b42c8b208b15af3f,
title = "Agricultural trade and farm employment in China during 1994-2009: job creation or substitution?",
abstract = "Purpose – This paper therefore aims at systematically estimating the agricultural trade induced farm employment effects in China. Design/methodology/approach – Using detailed agricultural trade and production data during 1994-2009, the authors estimate the “labor contents” of agricultural trade flows and use these estimates to compute the farm employment effects. Findings – The authors find that China's agricultural trade has indeed generally developed along its widely believed comparative advantages and disadvantages; however, the farm employment “creation” effect due to labor-intensive exports has actually been dominated by the employment “substitution” effect due to increased land-intensive imports, thereby mostly resulting in negative net farm employment in the post-WTO accession era. Originality/value – Findings from this first systematic attempt to estimate the trade-induced farm employment effects do not lend support to the popular notion that increased agricultural trade would help increase farm employment and have important implications for evaluating current and future trade policy in China and elsewhere.",
author = "Jing Zhu and Shu Zhang and Wusheng Yu",
year = "2013",
doi = "10.1108/17561371311331089",
language = "English",
volume = "5",
pages = "180--196",
journal = "China Agricultural Economic Review",
issn = "1756-137X",
publisher = "Emerald Group Publishing",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Agricultural trade and farm employment in China during 1994-2009

T2 - job creation or substitution?

AU - Zhu, Jing

AU - Zhang, Shu

AU - Yu, Wusheng

PY - 2013

Y1 - 2013

N2 - Purpose – This paper therefore aims at systematically estimating the agricultural trade induced farm employment effects in China. Design/methodology/approach – Using detailed agricultural trade and production data during 1994-2009, the authors estimate the “labor contents” of agricultural trade flows and use these estimates to compute the farm employment effects. Findings – The authors find that China's agricultural trade has indeed generally developed along its widely believed comparative advantages and disadvantages; however, the farm employment “creation” effect due to labor-intensive exports has actually been dominated by the employment “substitution” effect due to increased land-intensive imports, thereby mostly resulting in negative net farm employment in the post-WTO accession era. Originality/value – Findings from this first systematic attempt to estimate the trade-induced farm employment effects do not lend support to the popular notion that increased agricultural trade would help increase farm employment and have important implications for evaluating current and future trade policy in China and elsewhere.

AB - Purpose – This paper therefore aims at systematically estimating the agricultural trade induced farm employment effects in China. Design/methodology/approach – Using detailed agricultural trade and production data during 1994-2009, the authors estimate the “labor contents” of agricultural trade flows and use these estimates to compute the farm employment effects. Findings – The authors find that China's agricultural trade has indeed generally developed along its widely believed comparative advantages and disadvantages; however, the farm employment “creation” effect due to labor-intensive exports has actually been dominated by the employment “substitution” effect due to increased land-intensive imports, thereby mostly resulting in negative net farm employment in the post-WTO accession era. Originality/value – Findings from this first systematic attempt to estimate the trade-induced farm employment effects do not lend support to the popular notion that increased agricultural trade would help increase farm employment and have important implications for evaluating current and future trade policy in China and elsewhere.

U2 - 10.1108/17561371311331089

DO - 10.1108/17561371311331089

M3 - Journal article

VL - 5

SP - 180

EP - 196

JO - China Agricultural Economic Review

JF - China Agricultural Economic Review

SN - 1756-137X

IS - 2

ER -

ID: 45677949