Regional Heterogeneity of Migrant Rent Affordability Stress in Urban China: A Comparison between Skilled and Unskilled Migrants at Prefecture Level and Above

Rental housing unaffordability has been widely used to assess the housing poverty problem among immigrants in the developed and developing countries. China is experiencing an unprecedented urbanization process, with two-thirds of its 250 million migrants now being sheltered in private rental housing...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Tingzhu Li, Ran Liu, Wei Qi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-10-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/11/21/5920
id doaj-1b53db45dc41488bb7be8b3d574b0a88
record_format Article
spelling doaj-1b53db45dc41488bb7be8b3d574b0a882020-11-24T21:18:38ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502019-10-011121592010.3390/su11215920su11215920Regional Heterogeneity of Migrant Rent Affordability Stress in Urban China: A Comparison between Skilled and Unskilled Migrants at Prefecture Level and AboveTingzhu Li0Ran Liu1Wei Qi2College of Resource Environment and Tourism, Capital Normal University, No.105 West 3rd Ring Road North, Beijing 100048, ChinaCollege of Resource Environment and Tourism, Capital Normal University, No.105 West 3rd Ring Road North, Beijing 100048, ChinaInstitute of Geographical Sciences and Natural Resources, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100101, ChinaRental housing unaffordability has been widely used to assess the housing poverty problem among immigrants in the developed and developing countries. China is experiencing an unprecedented urbanization process, with two-thirds of its 250 million migrants now being sheltered in private rental housing in the host cities. In this paper, we aimed to examine the rental housing unaffordability problems faced by migrant workers in urban China and provide policy recommendations for a more accessible and affordable migrant housing provision system. We used the household data on China’s Migrant Dynamics Monitoring Survey (MDMS), released in 2016, across China’s 329 prefecture-level cities and above to look into the sociality and spatiality of migrant rent expenses and rent-income ratio at the prefecture-level cities and above. The statistical tests were conducted to examine the socio- and spatial-variance of these rent stress indexes, and it was found that educational level is a significant and quite powerful indicator in predicting who will or will not assume the heavier rental housing pressure. We then continued to reveal the different spatiality of high-rent-stress migrants across the high- and low-skilled categories. An agglomeration of the high-skilled high-rent-stress migrants was witnessed in the coastal growth engines of urban clusters, while a more spillover-like pattern among the low-skilled high-rent-stress migrants was reported in our study. An ordinary least square and spatial regression analysis was conducted to explain their respective mechanisms.https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/11/21/5920internal migrationmainland chinaregional heterogeneityrent affordable stressskilled migrantsunskilled migrantsprefectural cities
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tingzhu Li
Ran Liu
Wei Qi
spellingShingle Tingzhu Li
Ran Liu
Wei Qi
Regional Heterogeneity of Migrant Rent Affordability Stress in Urban China: A Comparison between Skilled and Unskilled Migrants at Prefecture Level and Above
Sustainability
internal migration
mainland china
regional heterogeneity
rent affordable stress
skilled migrants
unskilled migrants
prefectural cities
author_facet Tingzhu Li
Ran Liu
Wei Qi
author_sort Tingzhu Li
title Regional Heterogeneity of Migrant Rent Affordability Stress in Urban China: A Comparison between Skilled and Unskilled Migrants at Prefecture Level and Above
title_short Regional Heterogeneity of Migrant Rent Affordability Stress in Urban China: A Comparison between Skilled and Unskilled Migrants at Prefecture Level and Above
title_full Regional Heterogeneity of Migrant Rent Affordability Stress in Urban China: A Comparison between Skilled and Unskilled Migrants at Prefecture Level and Above
title_fullStr Regional Heterogeneity of Migrant Rent Affordability Stress in Urban China: A Comparison between Skilled and Unskilled Migrants at Prefecture Level and Above
title_full_unstemmed Regional Heterogeneity of Migrant Rent Affordability Stress in Urban China: A Comparison between Skilled and Unskilled Migrants at Prefecture Level and Above
title_sort regional heterogeneity of migrant rent affordability stress in urban china: a comparison between skilled and unskilled migrants at prefecture level and above
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2019-10-01
description Rental housing unaffordability has been widely used to assess the housing poverty problem among immigrants in the developed and developing countries. China is experiencing an unprecedented urbanization process, with two-thirds of its 250 million migrants now being sheltered in private rental housing in the host cities. In this paper, we aimed to examine the rental housing unaffordability problems faced by migrant workers in urban China and provide policy recommendations for a more accessible and affordable migrant housing provision system. We used the household data on China’s Migrant Dynamics Monitoring Survey (MDMS), released in 2016, across China’s 329 prefecture-level cities and above to look into the sociality and spatiality of migrant rent expenses and rent-income ratio at the prefecture-level cities and above. The statistical tests were conducted to examine the socio- and spatial-variance of these rent stress indexes, and it was found that educational level is a significant and quite powerful indicator in predicting who will or will not assume the heavier rental housing pressure. We then continued to reveal the different spatiality of high-rent-stress migrants across the high- and low-skilled categories. An agglomeration of the high-skilled high-rent-stress migrants was witnessed in the coastal growth engines of urban clusters, while a more spillover-like pattern among the low-skilled high-rent-stress migrants was reported in our study. An ordinary least square and spatial regression analysis was conducted to explain their respective mechanisms.
topic internal migration
mainland china
regional heterogeneity
rent affordable stress
skilled migrants
unskilled migrants
prefectural cities
url https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/11/21/5920
work_keys_str_mv AT tingzhuli regionalheterogeneityofmigrantrentaffordabilitystressinurbanchinaacomparisonbetweenskilledandunskilledmigrantsatprefecturelevelandabove
AT ranliu regionalheterogeneityofmigrantrentaffordabilitystressinurbanchinaacomparisonbetweenskilledandunskilledmigrantsatprefecturelevelandabove
AT weiqi regionalheterogeneityofmigrantrentaffordabilitystressinurbanchinaacomparisonbetweenskilledandunskilledmigrantsatprefecturelevelandabove
_version_ 1726008124261793792