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Weaker intentions or lower realization? Explaining gender differences in labor migration from rural China

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posted on 2024-04-15, 05:38 authored by Weiwen Lai

Prior studies have consistently documented Chinese women’s lower migration rates. This study draws on the perspective of linking migration intentions and behavior to explain whether the gender differences in Chinese people’s labor migration behavior arise from men’s and women’s differences in migration intentions or in turning migration intentions into behavior. Using data from the Longitudinal Survey on Rural Urban Migration in China, this study links one-year labor migration intentions and outcomes for men and women in rural China. Results indicate that compared with men, women have lower levels of one-year labor migration intentions and behavior and are also less likely to turn positive labor migration intentions into behavior. The study finds that gender differences in labor migration behavior are partly related to the fact that men are more responsive to their positive labor migration intentions, but also to fact that men are more likely than women to migrate against their negative migration intentions. Reflections on using migration intentions to study migration behavior in this Chinese context and beyond are provided.

History

ISSN

2002-617X

Original title

Weaker intentions or lower realization? Explaining gender differences in labor migration from rural China

Original language

  • English

Publication date

2024-04-15

access_level

  • public

access_condition

  • PUBLIC