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  • Yunnan will NOT abolish 'hukou' system

    An earlier post on Danwei suggested that Yunnan Province was about to abolish the 'hukou' system, which is a relic old Chinese economy based on work units and local registrations that made casual migration almost impossible.

    While the Chinese economy since the 1990s has been driven by the work of migrant laborers, the government probably fears that relaxing the hukou system completely -- or too quickly -- might result in cities swamped by poor migrant peasants.

    And while the hukou system can prevent people from getting ahead because they cannot gain access to municipal services without a local hukou, or are simply booted out of cities unceremoniously, it also the administrative tool that China uses to allocate schooling, economy housing and other social benefits: it is not easy to reform the system.

    So reports that Yunnan was abolishing the hukou system seem like a big deal.

    However, it seems a little early to get excited, according to a post on Chinese Law and Politics Blog:

    Is Yunnan "Eliminating" the Hukou System?

    Short answer – no.

    To find out why the announced reforms may mean very little, read the whole post, linked above.

    This article is from Danwei.org

  • Yunnan to dismantle 'hukou' system

    GoKunming reports:

    The Yunnan government has announced that beginning on January 1 of next year, Yunnan province will eliminate the current hukou registration system that essentially binds rural Yunnanese to their officially registered place of residence - often their place of birth or where their parents are registered. This reform of the system currently in use will enable millions to legally move and integrate into cities for the first time.

    Currently, Kunming and other cities including Yuxi, Qujing and Dali have a substantial and uncounted population of technically illegal residents with rural hukou (户口), or residential registration, that have relocated to the cities from the Yunnan countryside. Most members of this demographic typically move to these cities to work or search for a job and are ineligible for social benefits provided by the cities where they live to registered residents.

    You can read more about it at GoKunming.

    This is significant news. The hukou system is one of the biggest problems migrant workers face in getting urban jobs, urban money, and urban schooling for their children. If the experiment is successful in Yunnan, other provinces will probably follow.

    This article is from Danwei.org

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