Discussion paper

DP15247 The Costs of Political Manipulation of Factor Markets in China

Despite China’s economic achievements, factor market reforms have been slow. We analyze local political manipulation of land markets, along with capital market favoritism of certain cities, using a structural general equilibrium model. We estimate city-by-city local leaders’ preferences over GDP enhancement versus residents’ welfare. Equalizing capital prices across cities would increase worker welfare and returns to capital by 2.6% and 11%, respectively. Further, forcing local leader to focus just on enhancing welfare of residents would increase welfare by another 5.3%. Reforms would significantly reduce the population of favored cities like Tianjin and Beijing, while raising that of cities like Shenzhen.

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Citation

Henderson, J, Q Zhang, S Zheng and D Su (2020), ‘DP15247 The Costs of Political Manipulation of Factor Markets in China‘, CEPR Discussion Paper No. 15247. CEPR Press, Paris & London. https://cepr.org/publications/dp15247