Weak ties, strong ties, and job mobility in urban China: 1978-2008

Abstract The economic transformation in urban China provides a unique opportunity to assess how institutional arrangements shape network-based job searches. Despite several studies on this issue, disagreement exists over how network-based job searches evolve in the Chinese emerging labor market. We argue one way to solve this controversy is to examine the patterns of change in the use of weak ties and strong ties separately. Using pooled data from three cross-sectional surveys in urban China, the results show a steady increase in the use of weak ties and an increasing and persistent use of strong ties in finding jobs between 1978 and 2008. The results also show no systematic difference between the use of weak ties for finding jobs in the market sector versus the state sector. However, they show faster growth in the use of strong ties for finding jobs in the state sector, compared to the market sector.

[1]  Yanjie Bian Social Connections in China: Institutional Holes and Job Mobility Processes: Guanxi Mechanisms in China's Emergent Labor Markets , 2002 .

[2]  Yu Xie,et al.  Income inequality in today’s China , 2014, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

[3]  Yanjie Bian,et al.  The Chinese General Social Survey (2003-8) , 2012 .

[4]  Nan Lin,et al.  Capitalism in China: A Centrally Managed Capitalism (CMC) and Its Future , 2011, Management and Organization Review.

[5]  Mark S. Granovetter Getting a Job: A Study of Contacts and Careers , 1974 .

[6]  Dan Ao,et al.  Networks of Opportunity: Gender, Race, and Job Leads , 2009 .

[7]  G. Green,et al.  Racial and ethnic differences in job-search strategies in Atlanta, Boston, and Los Angeles , 1999 .

[8]  Neil Fligstein,et al.  The Economic Sociology of the Transitions from Socialism , 1996, American Journal of Sociology.

[9]  Sonia M. L. Wong,et al.  The Power Structure in China’s Listed Companies: The Company Law and its Enforcement , 2005 .

[10]  Yao Lu,et al.  Social capital and economic integration of migrants in urban China , 2013, Soc. Networks.

[11]  X. Zang,et al.  Network Resources and Job Search in Urban China , 2003 .

[12]  Wei Zhao Social Networks, Job Search, and Job Earnings in a Transitional Economy: An Institutional Embeddedness Argument , 2013 .

[13]  J. Stiglitz,et al.  The Great Transformation: The Political and Economic Origins of Our Time , 2001 .

[14]  George A. Akerlof The Market for “Lemons”: Quality Uncertainty and the Market Mechanism , 1970 .

[15]  Nan Lin,et al.  Getting Ahead in Urban China , 1991, American Journal of Sociology.

[16]  Luo Jarder Guanxi and Circles: Social Networks in China , 2012 .

[17]  S. McDonald,et al.  When Does Social Capital Matter? Non-Searching For Jobs Across the Life Course , 2006 .

[18]  D. Wank,et al.  Commodifying Communism: Business, Trust, and Politics in a Chinese City , 1999 .

[19]  Jean C. Oi The Role of the Local State in China's Transitional Economy , 1995, The China Quarterly.

[20]  Sonia M. L. Wong,et al.  Developmental State and Corporate Governance in China , 2007, Management and Organization Review.

[21]  Ted Mouw Social Capital and Finding a Job: Do Contacts Matter? , 2003, American Sociological Review.

[22]  A. Guseva,et al.  Uncertainty, Risk, and Trust: Russian and American Credit Card Markets Compared , 2001, American Sociological Review.

[23]  Wenhong Chen,et al.  Mobilization of Personal Social Networks and Institutional Resources of Private Entrepreneurs in China , 2007 .

[24]  K. Cook Networks, Norms, and Trust: The Social Psychology of Social Capital∗ 2004 Cooley Mead Award Address , 2005 .

[25]  Lynn Smith-Lovin,et al.  Women and Weak Ties: Differences by Sex in the Size of Voluntary Organizations , 1982, American Journal of Sociology.

[26]  P. V. Marsden,et al.  Social Networks, Job Changes, and Recruitment , 2001 .

[27]  B. Wegener,et al.  Job Mobility and Social Ties: Social Resources, Prior Job, and Status Attainment , 1991 .

[28]  Yanjie Bian,et al.  Guanxi and the Allocation of Urban Jobs in China , 1994, The China Quarterly.

[29]  Robert R. Faulkner,et al.  Social Capital, Double Embeddedness, and Mechanisms of Stability and Change , 2009 .

[30]  T. Gold,et al.  After Comradeship: Personal Relations in China Since the Cultural Revolution , 1985, The China Quarterly.

[31]  K. Hwang Face and Favor: The Chinese Power Game , 1987, American Journal of Sociology.

[32]  P. V. Marsden,et al.  Measuring Tie Strength , 1984 .

[33]  D. Guthrie,et al.  The Declining Significance of Guanxi in China's Economic Transition , 1998, The China Quarterly.

[34]  Sonja Opper,et al.  Political Capital in a Market Economy , 2010 .

[35]  Doug Guthrie Social Connections in China: Information Asymmetries and the Problem of Perception: The Significance of Structural Position in Assessing the Importance of Guanxi in China , 2002 .

[36]  Deborah Davis,et al.  Occupation, Class and Social Networks in Urban China , 2005 .

[37]  Andrew G. Walder,et al.  Markets and Inequality in Transitional Economies: Toward Testable Theories , 1996, American Journal of Sociology.

[38]  Lei Zhang,et al.  Information and favoritism: The network effect on wage income in China , 2015, Soc. Networks.

[39]  Donald J. Treiman,et al.  Politics and Life Chances in a State Socialist Regime: Dual Career Paths into the Urban Chinese Elite, 1949 to 1996 , 2000, American Sociological Review.

[40]  N. Weinberg,et al.  Sifting and sorting : Personal contacts and hiring in a retail bank , 1997 .

[41]  Andrew G. Walder,et al.  Career Mobility and the Communist Political Order , 1995 .

[42]  Ronald R. Robel Xiaotong Fei, From the Soil: The Foundations of Chinese Society , 1997 .

[43]  Theodore P. Gerber,et al.  Getting Personal: Networks and Stratification in the Russian Labor Market, 1985–20011 , 2010, American Journal of Sociology.

[44]  Terry Sicular,et al.  Rising Inequality in China , 2013 .

[45]  Steve McDonald,et al.  Patterns of Informal Job Matching across the Life Course: Entry‐Level, Reentry‐Level, and Elite Non‐Searching* , 2005 .

[46]  Andrew G. Walder,et al.  Ownership, Organization, and Income Inequality: Market Transition in Rural Vietnam , 2008 .

[47]  Andrew G. Walder,et al.  Local Governments as Industrial Firms: An Organizational Analysis of China's Transitional Economy , 1995, American Journal of Sociology.

[48]  X. Zang,et al.  Labor Market Segmentation and Income Inequality in Urban China , 2002 .

[49]  Neil Fligstein,et al.  A New Agenda for Research on the Trajectory of Chinese Capitalism , 2011, Management and Organization Review.

[50]  Ted Mouw,et al.  Estimating the Causal Effect of Social Capital: A Review of Recent Research , 2006 .

[51]  Xiang Zhou,et al.  Increasing Returns to Education, Changing Labor Force Structure, and the Rise of Earnings Inequality in Urban China, 1996–2010 , 2014 .

[52]  Y. Bian Bringing strong ties back in: Indirect ties, network bridges, and job searches in China , 1997 .

[53]  David Stark Recombinant Property in East European Capitalism , 1996, American Journal of Sociology.

[54]  呉 敬璉 Understanding and interpreting Chinese economic reform , 2005 .

[55]  Richard A. Benton,et al.  Dual Embeddedness: Informal Job Matching and Labor Market Institutions in the United States and Germany , 2012 .

[56]  N. Lin Social Capital: A Theory of Social Structure and Action , 2001 .

[57]  Andrew G. Walder,et al.  From Control to Ownership: China's Managerial Revolution , 2011, Management and Organization Review.

[58]  Mark S. Granovetter The Strength of Weak Ties , 1973, American Journal of Sociology.

[59]  Victor Nee,et al.  Social Inequalities in Reforming State Socialism: Between Redistribution and Markets in China , 1991 .

[60]  Yanjie Bian,et al.  Chinese social stratification and social mobility , 2002 .

[61]  Sonja Opper,et al.  Capitalism from Below , 2012 .

[62]  N. Lin,et al.  Social Resources and Strength of Ties: Structural Factors in Occupational Status Attainment , 1981, Social Capital, Social Support and Stratification.

[63]  Victor Nee,et al.  Path dependent societal transformation: Stratification in hybrid mixed economies , 1999 .

[64]  Charles Hoch A pragmatic inquiry , 1988 .

[65]  William L. Parish,et al.  Politics and Markets: Dual Transformations , 1996, American Journal of Sociology.

[66]  Ali Haider,et al.  Partner naming and forgetting: Recall of network members , 2007, Soc. Networks.

[67]  Beate Völker,et al.  Getting Ahead in the GDR , 1999 .

[68]  Xueguang Zhou,et al.  Economic Transformation and Income Inequality in Urban China: Evidence from Panel Data , 2000, American Journal of Sociology.

[69]  J. Pearce,et al.  Guanxi: Connections As Substitutes for Formal Institutional Support , 1996 .

[70]  Kuang-chi Chang,et al.  A Path to Understanding Guanxi in China's Transitional Economy: Variations on Network Behavior* , 2011 .

[71]  Doug Guthrie,et al.  Social Connections in China: An Introduction to the Study of Guanxi , 2002 .

[72]  V. Yakubovich Weak Ties, Information, and Influence: How Workers Find Jobs in a Local Russian Labor Market , 2005 .

[73]  Valery Yakubovich,et al.  The Changing Significance of Ties , 2000 .

[74]  Roberto M. Fernandez,et al.  Social Capital at Work: Networks and Employment at a Phone Center , 2000, American Journal of Sociology.

[75]  Akos Rona-Tas,et al.  The First Shall Be Last? Entrepreneurship and Communist Cadres in the Transition from Socialism , 1994, American Journal of Sociology.

[76]  Amy Hanser,et al.  Social Connections in China: Youth Job Searches in Urban China: The Use of Social Connections in a Changing Labor Market , 2002 .

[77]  Yi-min Lin Social Connections in China: Beyond Dyadic Social Exchange: Guanxi and Third-Party Effects , 2002 .

[78]  Chris Bramall Chinese Economic Development , 2008 .

[79]  Nan Lin,et al.  Social Capital and Its Institutional Contingency : A Study of the United States, China and Taiwan , 2013 .

[80]  Andrew G. Walder,et al.  Communist Neo-Traditionalism: Work and Authority in Chinese Industry , 1988 .

[81]  S. Smith,et al.  “Don’t put my name on it”: Social Capital Activation and Job‐Finding Assistance among the Black Urban Poor1 , 2005, American Journal of Sociology.

[82]  Wei Zhao,et al.  Institutional transformation and returns to education in urban China: An empirical assessment , 2002 .

[83]  Elena Obukhova,et al.  Motivation vs. Relevance: Using Strong Ties to Find a Job in Urban China , 2011, Social science research.

[84]  J. Graham,et al.  How Many Imputations are Really Needed? Some Practical Clarifications of Multiple Imputation Theory , 2007, Prevention Science.

[85]  Xiaogang Wu,et al.  Income Inequality in Urban China, 1978-2005 , 2012 .

[86]  Yanjie Bian,et al.  Guanxi Capital and Social Eating: Theoretical Models and Empirical Analyses , 2001 .

[87]  Xianbi Huang,et al.  Network resources and job mobility in China's transitional economy , 2009 .

[88]  Nan Jia,et al.  The Dynamics of Political Embeddedness in China: The Case of Publicly Listed Firms , 2014 .