Exploring job accessibility in the transformation context: an institutionalist approach and its application in Beijing

There is a strong need to explore the determinants of worker’s commuting time as the declines in job accessibility associated with the dramatic growth of commuting time have become a serious negative effect on the quality of urban life in megacities of China. Most well-developed theories exploring change in commuting time are based on neo-classical economic theory. This paper argues however that in the case of China institutional factors of the housing provision system and labour mobility management have been more important. The paper conceptualizes an institutionalist approach incorporating housing and controls over labour mobility and applies it to analyse these influences on workers’ commuting time in Beijing. The analysis shows that the interaction of housing provision, the market system and the Hukou system together have significant impact upon individual commuting time allowing for worker’s annual household income, occupation and transport mode. The findings suggest that the market-oriented housing reforms have changed the local jobs–housing balance that prevailed in pre-reform era and have thus induced growth of commuting time; the remaining the unfair treatment of residents according to their Hukou status may influence the floating worker’s ability to connect housing and workplace opportunities that could reduce commuting time. With respect to future studies, the institutionalist approach seems to be an efficient means of exploring particular factors that emerge in the transformation of an economy.

[1]  D. Hensher Handbook of Transport Geography and Spatial Systems , 2004 .

[2]  W. Alonso Location And Land Use , 1964 .

[3]  Marie-Hélène Vandersmissen,et al.  Analyzing Changes in Urban Form and Commuting Time* , 2003 .

[4]  J. Hassard,et al.  Downsizing the danwei: Chinese state-enterprise reform and the surplus labour question , 2006 .

[5]  Jiawen Yang,et al.  Assessing the transportation consequences of land use transformation in urban China , 2007 .

[6]  H. Sato Housing inequality and housing poverty in urban China in the late 1990s , 2006 .

[7]  Patsy Healey,et al.  Managing cities : the new urban context , 1997 .

[8]  Ash Amin,et al.  Globalization, Institutions, and Regional Development in Europe , 1995 .

[9]  Thomas F. Golob,et al.  A Simultaneous Model of Household Activity Participation and Trip Chain Generation , 1999 .

[10]  D. Levinson,et al.  The Rational Locator: Why Travel Times Have Remained Stable , 1994 .

[11]  A. Murie,et al.  Commercial Housing Development in Urban China , 1999, Urban studies.

[12]  Yu Shiming Evaluation of China's Urban Housing Reform , 1997 .

[13]  Y. Wei DECENTRALIZATION, MARKETIZATION, AND GLOBALIZATION: THE TRIPLE PROCESSES UNDERLYING REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT IN CHINA , 2001 .

[14]  Zhong-ren Peng,et al.  The Jobs-Housing Balance and Urban Commuting , 1997 .

[15]  P. Healey Collaborative Planning: Shaping Places in Fragmented Societies , 1997 .

[16]  Willem Salet,et al.  Three approaches to strategic spatial planning , 2000 .

[17]  Alan Murie,et al.  The Process of Commercialisation of Urban Housing in China , 1996 .

[18]  G. Pratt,et al.  Gender, Work and Space , 1995 .

[19]  M. Jun,et al.  THE COMMUTING PARADOX: EVIDENCE FROM THE TOP TWENTY , 1991 .

[20]  Dominic Stead,et al.  Land Use and Travel Behaviour: Expected Effects from the Perspective of Utility Theory and Activity-Based Theories , 2005 .

[21]  W. Clark,et al.  Housing Tenure Choice in Transitional Urban China: A Multilevel Analysis , 2002 .

[22]  R. Feiock,et al.  Institutional Constraints and Policy Choice: An Exploration of Local Governance , 2001 .

[23]  Xin Meng,et al.  Labour market reform in China , 2000 .

[24]  N. Thrift,et al.  Living In The Global , 1994 .

[25]  Peter R. Stopher,et al.  Understanding Travel Behaviour in an Era of Change , 1996 .

[26]  Laurence J. C. Ma,et al.  Economic reforms, urban spatial restructuring, and planning in China , 2004 .

[27]  Xiushi Yang,et al.  Household Registration, Economic Reform and Migration , 1993, The International migration review.

[28]  Donggen Wang,et al.  Housing Preferences in a Transitional Housing System: The Case of Beijing, China , 2004 .

[29]  O. Williamson The New Institutional Economics: Taking Stock, Looking Ahead , 2000 .

[30]  R. Hudson Production, places and environment : changing perspectives in economic geography , 2000 .

[31]  Shahid Yusuf,et al.  Under New Ownership: Privatizing China’s State-Owned Enterprises , 2005 .

[32]  Bruce W. Hamilton,et al.  Wasteful Commuting Again , 1989, Journal of Political Economy.

[33]  D. North Institutions, Institutional Change and Economic Performance: Economic performance , 1990 .

[34]  Sara L McLafferty,et al.  Gender, race, and the determinants of commuting: New york in 1990 , 1997 .

[35]  R. Stough,et al.  Institutions, Land Use and Transportation , 2004 .

[36]  C. Fan,et al.  Migration and Labor-Market Returns in Urban China: Results from a Recent Survey in Guangzhou , 2001 .

[37]  K. Small,et al.  "Wasteful" Commuting: A Resolution , 1992, Journal of Political Economy.

[38]  W. G. Hansen How Accessibility Shapes Land Use , 1959 .

[39]  G. Chow China’s economic transformation , 2002, China’s 40 Years of Reform and Development: 1978–2018.

[40]  Si‐ming Li,et al.  Life Course and Housing Tenure Change in Urban China: A Study of Guangzhou , 2006 .

[41]  B. Dale An Institutionalist Approach to Local Restructuring , 2002 .

[42]  T. Garling Theoretical Foundations of Travel Choice Modeling , 1998 .

[43]  J. Cole,et al.  The Socialist City: Spatial Structure and Urban Policy , 1981 .

[44]  P. Gordon,et al.  Congestion, Changing Metropolitan Structure, and City Size in the United States , 1989 .

[45]  Santiago M. Pinto Residential Choice, Mobility, and the Labor Market , 2002 .

[46]  Gavin Cameron,et al.  The Housing Market and Regional Commuting and Migration Choices , 1998 .

[47]  P. Gordon,et al.  The influence of metropolitan spatial structure on commuting time , 1989 .

[48]  R. Dubin,et al.  Commuting Patterns and Firm Decentralization , 1991 .

[49]  Lina Song,et al.  Towards a Labour Market in China , 2005 .

[50]  P. Gordon,et al.  The Costs of Urban Sprawl: Some New Evidence , 1985 .

[51]  X. Zhang,et al.  Urban land reform in China , 1997 .

[52]  E. I. Pas TIME IN TRAVEL CHOICE MODELING: FROM RELATIVE OBSCURITY TO CENTER STAGE. , 1998 .

[53]  Si‐ming Li,et al.  Housing Consumption in Urban China: A Comparative Study of Beijing and Guangzhou , 2000 .

[54]  E. Mills Studies in the Structure of the Urban Economy , 1972 .

[55]  Anthony Gar-On Yeh,et al.  Urban Spatial Structure in a Transitional Economy: The Case of Guangzhou, China , 1999 .

[56]  G Giuliano,et al.  Research Policy and Review 27. New Directions for Understanding Transportation and Land Use , 1989 .

[57]  Daniel M. Hausman,et al.  The Inexact and Separate Science of Economics , 1993 .

[58]  Rolph E. Anderson,et al.  Multivariate Data Analysis with Readings , 1979 .

[59]  Yanglin Wang,et al.  Chinese Housing Reform in State-owned Enterprises and Its Impacts on Different Social Groups , 2005 .

[60]  E. R. Alexander,et al.  Institutional Transformation and Planning: From Institutionalization Theory to Institutional Design , 2005 .

[61]  R. Muth,et al.  Cities and Housing. , 1970 .

[62]  S. Punpuing Correlates of Commuting Patterns: A Case-study of Bangkok, Thailand , 1993 .

[63]  Si‐ming Li,et al.  Market Segmentation and Consumer Characteristics of Commodity Housing in Guangzhou: An Analysis of Household Survey Data , 1998 .

[64]  Laurence J. C. Ma,et al.  Native Place, Migration and the Emergence of Peasant Enclaves in Beijing , 1998, The China Quarterly.

[65]  Nick Willams Achieving sustainable urban form , 2001 .

[66]  Adrian Smith,et al.  Theorising transition : the political economy of post-communist transformations , 1998 .

[67]  Si‐ming Li,et al.  The Road to Homeownership Under Market Transition , 2007 .

[68]  Jieming Zhu Urban Physical Development in Transition to Market , 2000 .

[69]  C. Findlay CHINESE ECONOMIES RESEARCH CENTRE , 1997 .

[70]  G. Giuliano NEW DIRECTIONS FOR UNDERSTANDING TRANSPORTATION AND LAND USE , 1988 .

[71]  Fulong Wu Changes in the Structure of Public Housing Provision in Urban China , 1996 .

[72]  A. Giddens The consequences of modernity , 1990 .

[73]  G. Giuliano,et al.  Is the Journey to Work Explained by Urban Structure? , 1993 .

[74]  Donggen Wang,et al.  The jobs-housing relationship and commuting in Beijing, China: the legacy of Danwei , 2009 .

[75]  A. Pratt Coordinating Employment, Transport and Housing in Cities: An Institutional Perspective , 1996 .

[76]  A. Haila The Market as the New Emperor , 2007 .

[77]  D. Dowall Establishing Urban Land Markets in the People's Republic of China , 1993 .

[78]  Youqin Huang,et al.  The road to homeownership: a longitudinal analysis of tenure transition in urban China (1949-94) , 2004 .

[79]  Andrew G. Walder,et al.  Factory and Manager in an Era of Reform , 1989, The China Quarterly.

[80]  Z Andrew Farkas,et al.  REVERSE COMMUTING: PROSPECTS FOR JOB ACCESSIBILITY AND ENERGY CONSERVATION , 1992 .