Volume 32 - Article 44 | Pages 1209–1238
Temporal-spatial patterns of one-person households in China, 1982-2005
Date received: | 01 Aug 2014 |
Date published: | 03 Jun 2015 |
Word count: | 7354 |
Keywords: | China, economic development, internal migration, living alone, one-person households, spatial pattern, trends |
DOI: | 10.4054/DemRes.2015.32.44 |
Weblink: | You will find all publications in this Special Collection “Living Alone: One-person households in Asia” at http://www.demographic-research.org/special/15/ |
Abstract
Background: The number of one-person households (OPH) in China has risen over the past few decades, but there are few examinations of the patterns and trends in this rapidly growing family type. The changing composition and regional heterogeneity of Chinese OPH have important implications for family and individual well-being, and for the country’s resource allocation.
Objective: We examine the temporal-spatial patterns of OPH in China between 1982 and 2005, and address three research questions: 1) To what extent have the prevalence and composition of OPH changed? 2) How have the geographical distributions of OPH in China changed? 3) What are the local demographic and socioeconomic contexts related to the changes in OPH?
Methods: We analyse data from the 1% sample of the 1982 and 1990 censuses, and a sample of the inter-censual 1% Population Sample Survey in 2005. Descriptive analysis at the provincial level presents the trends of the changing distribution and composition of OPH. Fixed-effect models at the prefecture-level examine how three sets of factors (i.e., demographic trends, socioeconomic development and internal migration) are related to the changing prevalence of OPH over time.
Results: OPH have become increasingly heterogeneous. They are, particularly for the non-widowed who live alone, increasingly clustered in developed areas. Results show that industrialisation and internal migration largely explain the changing spatial variation of OPH. Lengthened life expectancy and a decline in fertility help to explain the increase in widowed OPH, while industrialisation and migration are associated with the rise of non-widowed OPH.
Author's Affiliation
Adam Ka-Lok Cheung - Hong Kong Baptist University, China
Wei-Jun Jean Yeung - National University of Singapore, Singapore
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