Description

Book Synopsis

This groundbreaking book powerfully humanizes the little-known urban workers who have been left behind in China’s single-minded drive to modernize. Dorothy Solinger traces the origins of their plight to the mid-1990s, when the Chinese government found that state-owned factories were failing in large numbers in the face of market reforms just as the country was about to enter the World Trade Organization. Under these circumstances, leaders urged firms to lay off tens of millions of previously lifetime-employed, welfare-secure, under-educated, middle-aged employees. As these dislocated people were left without any source of livelihood, the regime settled on a tiny welfare effort, the Minimum Livelihood Guarantee (dibao), to provide some support and, most important from the viewpoint of the leadership, to keep them quiet so that enterprise reform could proceed peacefully. Solinger explores the induced urban poverty that resulted and relates the painful struggle for survival of these discarded laborers. She also details the history and workings of the dibao and its missteps, as well as changes in policy over time. Drawing on dozens of interviews, this book brings to life the urban workers who have been relegated to obsolescence, isolation, and invisibility by China’s quest for modernity.



Trade Review

Although the Chinese Communist Party has received much credit for “lifting millions out of poverty,” Solinger delves into how the party’s economic reforms have also left millions behind. Scholars have fixated on the lot of poor peasants, but she focuses on the urban poor created by the shuttering and privatizing of state-owned enterprise in the late 1990s. Solinger argues that dibao, China’s social assistance program for the urban poor, is shaped by political motivations. It is designed to pacify its recipients rather than to lift them up…. The book obviously benefits from Solinger’s decades of experience studying this issue, evidenced in copious firsthand interview notes and government statistics[.]

* Foreign Affairs *

Poverty and Pacification is a modern classic of welfare studies in post-socialist China and a devastating portrait of this aspect of state-society relations. The book should stimulate interdisciplinary research on poverty in wealthy and poor cities, as well as on policy formulations to reduce urban-rural and regional inequalities. The rhetoric of growth and prosperity aside, it is urgent to reorganize work, health care, housing, and education to improve the Chinese working people’s livelihoods and the lives of their children.

* The China Journal *

Following her widely acclaimed studies on the citizenship of peasant migrants and industrial workers, Dorothy Solinger—a world authority on China’s politics and social policies—provides another incredibly detailed and forceful account of the plight of the working class and welfare retrenchment. This extraordinary book is a testimony to China’s painful social engineering to modernity.

-- Fulong Wu, University College London

In this interesting book, Dorothy Solinger crystallizes her long-standing research on China’s urban poor, exposing the government’s miserable treatment of a huge number of former workers who had once been loyal stalwarts of Maoist socialism. Drawing from a vast amount of field notes and documentation, she analyzes the manipulative mechanisms by which different levels of the government have been able to relegate this sector of the populace to marginal oblivion.

-- Anita Chan, editor of The China Journal

Dorothy Solinger is one of the most eminent social scientists who specializes in modern China. This admirable study of China’s inadequate welfare system for the urban poor, based on in-depth documentary research and insightful interviews, reveals the callous underside of the Chinese leadership’s social policies. It is one of Solinger’s best books.

-- Jonathan Unger, emeritus, Australian National University

Solinger’s study of China’s forgotten and invisible urban residents—often living in desperate conditions at odds with the dominant narrative of China’s miracle of economic growth and development—is the culmination of two decades of research. It is a work of meticulous detail, drawing on multiple methods and sources of information presented alongside a commanding knowledge of the literature that explains the emergence of China’s social assistance in the economic and political context of the last thirty years. What marks this as a standout study of China’s management of the urban poor and the development of the social assistance system is Solinger’s empathy for those in poverty, who receive only what help the state deems adequate. They are not forgotten or ignored; rather, they are central to the analysis, and it is all the stronger for it.

-- Daniel R. Hammond, University of Edinburgh

Based on her decades of pathbreaking and passionate research, Solinger offers a masterful analysis of the urban indigents in China. Their stories are told with gravity and insights into the evolving policy regimes and political economy.

-- Ching Kwan Lee, Professor of Sociology, UCLA

Poverty and Pacification: The Chinese State Abandons the Old Working Class provides an incredibly thorough treatment of China's Minimum Livelihood Guarantee scheme, from the program's origins, to its administration, to its evolution. Most importantly, however, this book humanizes the experience of Dibao recipients by providing a space where the voices of China's urban poor are heard. Poverty and Pacification is essential reading not only for those who want to understand urban poverty in China but also for anyone interested in Chinese politics and society.

-- Jennifer Pan, Standford University

Dorothy Solinger has produced a remarkable sequel to her classic account of China’s rural migrant workers (Contesting Citizenship in Urban China, 1999). In Poverty and Pacification, Solinger shifts her attention to the tens of millions of veteran urban workers who have lost their jobs as China’s factories have been privatized, restructured, and closed. Based on more than two decades of research in nine Chinese cities, she provides a disturbing portrayal of how industrial restructuring has dismantled the lives of men and women who had once been promised lifetime employment. While her earlier book documented the severe difficulties encountered by rural migrants, it also reflected their hopes of upward mobility; her new book, in contrast, treats the downward trajectory of once proud workers who have been cast aside.

-- Joel Andreas, Johns Hopkins University; author of Rise of the Red Engineers and Disenfranchised

This excellent book is necessary reading for scholars of urban inequality, social mobility and stratification, and public policy – not only those working onChina but anyone concerned with rising urban inequality across transitional contexts.

* China Quarterly *

Table of Contents

List of Tables and Figure

Preface

SECTION I: BACKGROUND

1 Three Shifts in State Mission

2 Urban Poverty and Its Paltry Palliatives

3 The Dibao and the Dibaohu

SECTION II: EXPERIENCES OF LAYOFF AND DIBAO

4 Xiagang: From Master to Mendicant

5 Dibao: Management and Missteps

6 Dibao: Survival and Perspectives

SECTION III: COMPARISONS AND VARIATIONS

7 “Social Assistance?”: A Comparative Perspective

8 Dibao: Differential Disbursement

SECTION IV: HARSH CHANGES

9 Policy Manipulations

10 Denouement: Drastic Cut in the Dibao Rolls—

Did Pensions Replace the Dibao?

Conclusion

Glossary

Works Cited

Index

Poverty and Pacification: The Chinese State

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    A Paperback / softback by Dorothy J. Solinger

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      View other formats and editions of Poverty and Pacification: The Chinese State by Dorothy J. Solinger

      Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
      Publication Date: 15/08/2023
      ISBN13: 9781538188132, 978-1538188132
      ISBN10: 1538188139

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      This groundbreaking book powerfully humanizes the little-known urban workers who have been left behind in China’s single-minded drive to modernize. Dorothy Solinger traces the origins of their plight to the mid-1990s, when the Chinese government found that state-owned factories were failing in large numbers in the face of market reforms just as the country was about to enter the World Trade Organization. Under these circumstances, leaders urged firms to lay off tens of millions of previously lifetime-employed, welfare-secure, under-educated, middle-aged employees. As these dislocated people were left without any source of livelihood, the regime settled on a tiny welfare effort, the Minimum Livelihood Guarantee (dibao), to provide some support and, most important from the viewpoint of the leadership, to keep them quiet so that enterprise reform could proceed peacefully. Solinger explores the induced urban poverty that resulted and relates the painful struggle for survival of these discarded laborers. She also details the history and workings of the dibao and its missteps, as well as changes in policy over time. Drawing on dozens of interviews, this book brings to life the urban workers who have been relegated to obsolescence, isolation, and invisibility by China’s quest for modernity.



      Trade Review

      Although the Chinese Communist Party has received much credit for “lifting millions out of poverty,” Solinger delves into how the party’s economic reforms have also left millions behind. Scholars have fixated on the lot of poor peasants, but she focuses on the urban poor created by the shuttering and privatizing of state-owned enterprise in the late 1990s. Solinger argues that dibao, China’s social assistance program for the urban poor, is shaped by political motivations. It is designed to pacify its recipients rather than to lift them up…. The book obviously benefits from Solinger’s decades of experience studying this issue, evidenced in copious firsthand interview notes and government statistics[.]

      * Foreign Affairs *

      Poverty and Pacification is a modern classic of welfare studies in post-socialist China and a devastating portrait of this aspect of state-society relations. The book should stimulate interdisciplinary research on poverty in wealthy and poor cities, as well as on policy formulations to reduce urban-rural and regional inequalities. The rhetoric of growth and prosperity aside, it is urgent to reorganize work, health care, housing, and education to improve the Chinese working people’s livelihoods and the lives of their children.

      * The China Journal *

      Following her widely acclaimed studies on the citizenship of peasant migrants and industrial workers, Dorothy Solinger—a world authority on China’s politics and social policies—provides another incredibly detailed and forceful account of the plight of the working class and welfare retrenchment. This extraordinary book is a testimony to China’s painful social engineering to modernity.

      -- Fulong Wu, University College London

      In this interesting book, Dorothy Solinger crystallizes her long-standing research on China’s urban poor, exposing the government’s miserable treatment of a huge number of former workers who had once been loyal stalwarts of Maoist socialism. Drawing from a vast amount of field notes and documentation, she analyzes the manipulative mechanisms by which different levels of the government have been able to relegate this sector of the populace to marginal oblivion.

      -- Anita Chan, editor of The China Journal

      Dorothy Solinger is one of the most eminent social scientists who specializes in modern China. This admirable study of China’s inadequate welfare system for the urban poor, based on in-depth documentary research and insightful interviews, reveals the callous underside of the Chinese leadership’s social policies. It is one of Solinger’s best books.

      -- Jonathan Unger, emeritus, Australian National University

      Solinger’s study of China’s forgotten and invisible urban residents—often living in desperate conditions at odds with the dominant narrative of China’s miracle of economic growth and development—is the culmination of two decades of research. It is a work of meticulous detail, drawing on multiple methods and sources of information presented alongside a commanding knowledge of the literature that explains the emergence of China’s social assistance in the economic and political context of the last thirty years. What marks this as a standout study of China’s management of the urban poor and the development of the social assistance system is Solinger’s empathy for those in poverty, who receive only what help the state deems adequate. They are not forgotten or ignored; rather, they are central to the analysis, and it is all the stronger for it.

      -- Daniel R. Hammond, University of Edinburgh

      Based on her decades of pathbreaking and passionate research, Solinger offers a masterful analysis of the urban indigents in China. Their stories are told with gravity and insights into the evolving policy regimes and political economy.

      -- Ching Kwan Lee, Professor of Sociology, UCLA

      Poverty and Pacification: The Chinese State Abandons the Old Working Class provides an incredibly thorough treatment of China's Minimum Livelihood Guarantee scheme, from the program's origins, to its administration, to its evolution. Most importantly, however, this book humanizes the experience of Dibao recipients by providing a space where the voices of China's urban poor are heard. Poverty and Pacification is essential reading not only for those who want to understand urban poverty in China but also for anyone interested in Chinese politics and society.

      -- Jennifer Pan, Standford University

      Dorothy Solinger has produced a remarkable sequel to her classic account of China’s rural migrant workers (Contesting Citizenship in Urban China, 1999). In Poverty and Pacification, Solinger shifts her attention to the tens of millions of veteran urban workers who have lost their jobs as China’s factories have been privatized, restructured, and closed. Based on more than two decades of research in nine Chinese cities, she provides a disturbing portrayal of how industrial restructuring has dismantled the lives of men and women who had once been promised lifetime employment. While her earlier book documented the severe difficulties encountered by rural migrants, it also reflected their hopes of upward mobility; her new book, in contrast, treats the downward trajectory of once proud workers who have been cast aside.

      -- Joel Andreas, Johns Hopkins University; author of Rise of the Red Engineers and Disenfranchised

      This excellent book is necessary reading for scholars of urban inequality, social mobility and stratification, and public policy – not only those working onChina but anyone concerned with rising urban inequality across transitional contexts.

      * China Quarterly *

      Table of Contents

      List of Tables and Figure

      Preface

      SECTION I: BACKGROUND

      1 Three Shifts in State Mission

      2 Urban Poverty and Its Paltry Palliatives

      3 The Dibao and the Dibaohu

      SECTION II: EXPERIENCES OF LAYOFF AND DIBAO

      4 Xiagang: From Master to Mendicant

      5 Dibao: Management and Missteps

      6 Dibao: Survival and Perspectives

      SECTION III: COMPARISONS AND VARIATIONS

      7 “Social Assistance?”: A Comparative Perspective

      8 Dibao: Differential Disbursement

      SECTION IV: HARSH CHANGES

      9 Policy Manipulations

      10 Denouement: Drastic Cut in the Dibao Rolls—

      Did Pensions Replace the Dibao?

      Conclusion

      Glossary

      Works Cited

      Index

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