Tingzhu Li   中级

山西武乡人,博士,硕士生导师,扬州大学“青年百人”,中国共产党党员。2024年6月毕业于华东师范大学地理科学学院,获人文地理学博士学位。研究方向为经济地理与区域创新发展,以第一作者身份在Structual Change and Economic Dynamics、Sustainable Development、Applied Geography、Journal of International Trade & Economic Development、《地理学报》《地理研究》《地理科学》等国内外经济学和地理学权威期刊上发表...Detials

Migration and inequality in rental housing: Affordability stress in the Chinese cities

Release time:2025-11-04  Hits:

  • Impact Factor:5.4
  • DOI number:10.1016/j.apgeog.2019.102138
  • Journal:Applied Geography
  • Key Words:rental stress; regional inequality; spatial heterogeneity; spatial regression model; local buzz; China's internal migration
  • Abstract:Housing affordability is a widely accepted notion used to assess the housing poverty problem in the Global North and South. China is experiencing an unprecedented urban revolution, with two-thirds of its 250 million migrants now being sheltered in the private rental housing sector of the receiving cities. The discriminatory hukou and an exclusive public housing system with appalling living conditions for migrant housing have been a huge challenge in contemporary China. In this paper, we aim to examine the state of housing affordability inequality in the current rental market for all of China and provide policy recommendations for a more accessible and equitable migrant housing provision system. On the basis of China's Migrant Dynamics Monitoring Survey (MDMS) conducted in 2011 and 2016, this paper analyzes the dynamic spatial inequalities of the rent affordability stress (rent-to-income ratio) among migrants from 2011 to 2016 across China's prefecture-level cities and above. We use CV, Gini and Theil indices to investigate the interregional, interprovincial and inter-prefectural inequalities of migrant rent stress, and then adopt spatial autocorrelation to examine the regional variance for these urban units. Our study reveals the convergence of rent stress inequality at different geographical scales and an increasingly apparent north-south divide in housing affordability inequality in the rental market accessible to the migrant workers of China. The agglomeration of the high rent-stress migrants in the "local buzz" in China is found, too, which is closely associated with policy and economic factors, as well as being embedded in the hierarchical structure of the Chinese urban administrative system and the contrasting urbanization paths of the north and south, and of the rustbelt and sunbelt.
  • Note:扬州大学人文社会科学二级权威期刊
  • Co-author:Li Tingzhu
  • First Author:Liu Ran
  • Indexed by:Research Atricle
  • Correspondence Author:Richard Greene
  • Document Code:102138
  • Discipline:Natural Science
  • First-Level Discipline:Geography
  • Document Type:Research Atricle
  • Volume:115
  • ISSN No.:0143-6228
  • Translation or Not:no
  • Date of Publication:2020-01-02
  • Included Journals:SSCI