Industrialisation, Employment and Income Distribution

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A01=Laurence Chau
A01=Ronald Hsia
Author_Laurence Chau
Author_Ronald Hsia
Average Income
Category=KC
Category=KCF
Concentration Ratio
demographic labour trends
Economic Analysis
employment growth
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Female Household Heads
fiscal redistribution
Fishing Households
Gini Ratio
Greater Income Equality
HK Dollar
Hong Kong
Hong Kong's economic development
Hong Kong's industrialisation
Household Size
Imputed Rent
Income Class
Income Dispersion
Income Distribution
Income Distribution Curves
income inequality
income inequality measurement Hong Kong
Incremental Income
Inter-industry Difference
ISIC Classification
Labor Economics
labour economics
Land Households
Large Families
Lowest Income Classes
National Account Aggregates
occupational structure analysis
Post-secondary Education
Principal Earner
Resettlement Estates
Secondary Earners
Single Earner Household
socio-economic mobility
Unemployment
wage inequality

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367086497
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 12 Dec 2018
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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First published in 1978. In spite of the wide recognition of Hong Kong’s successful growth record, little is known about the impact that rapid industrialisation has had on income distribution. The transformation of an entrepôt economy into an industrial one has been accompanied by a transition from a labour surplus to a labour shortage economy, which has had a profound influence on the distribution of income by size.

The effect has been channelled through a number of variables such as the composition of employment by industry, occupational structure, labour force participation rate and wage structure. All these changes have, moreover, owed much to the existence of a market mechanism which has been virtually free from government intervention.

Beginning with a comprehensive evaluation of the effects of the various characteristics of employment and the labour force on household income distribution, this study assesses the impact of Hong Kong’s industrialisation and employment growth on its income distribution. Through an analysis of the changes in industrial and occupational structures, employment status, household size, labour participation rate, inflow of labour and wage and employment structures, it considers not only how income distribution alters with economic development, but also the mechanism that has brought about these changes.

The redistribution effect of government activities is examined and the incidence of particular taxes to different income groups is apportioned to give a clear overall picture. Finally, the benefits obtained from government expenditures on housing, education and health are measured and are allocated to different income groups, illustrating how this has appreciably reduced income inequality in Hong Kong.

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