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The downside of marketization: A multilevel analysis of housing tenure and types in reform-era urban China
Institution:1. Trinity Business School, Trinity College Dublin, Dublin 2, Ireland;2. Institute of Business Research, University of Economics Ho Chi Minh City, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam;3. University of Sydney Business School, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia;4. Tianjin University of Finance and Economics, Tianjin, China
Abstract:Based on data from the 2005 National Population Sample Survey and compiled covariates of 205 prefectures, this research adopted principal-component and multilevel-logistic analyses to study homeownership in urban China. Although the housing reform has severed the link between work units and residence, working in state sectors (government, state-owned enterprises and collective firms) remained significant in determining a household’s entitlement to reform-era housing with heavy subsidies or better qualities. While the prefecture-level index of marketization reduced local homeownership of self-built housing, affordable housing and privatized housing, its effect is moderated by cross-level interactions with income, education and working in state sectors across different types of housing. Meanwhile, the index of political and market connections promoted all types of homeownership except for self-built housing. By situating the downside of marketization within a context of urban transformation, this research not only challenges the teleological premise of the neoliberal market transition theory but calls for research on institutional dynamics and social consequences of urban transformation in China.
Keywords:Housing tenure  Market transformation  Persistence of power  Urban China
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