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After eight years, Macro Polo has ceased operations as the Paulson Institute will focus its independent research on supporting its programs as it continues to diversify its scope.

We appreciate the community that has grown around Macro Polo and the fruitful engagement we’ve had with our legion of smart and sharp audience. You’ve pushed us to deliver even more original work and innovative products. Our body of work speaks for itself, and we hope it will have a long shelf life – that was the intent from MP’s inception.

MP’s website is now archived and no new work will be published henceforth on this site. Please visit www.paulsoninstitute.org for future research and policy work on a range of global issues.

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Harnessing China’s Untapped Labor Supply

But Xin Meng argues that this is not correct. In fact, she suggests, the shortage of unskilled labor in Chinese cities is mainly a consequence of institutional restrictions, explicit or implicit, on rural to urban migration. And her policy memorandum provides evidence for this argument, drawn from the latest data. She discusses how a misreading of China’s “shortage” of urban labor as an absolute shortage, rather than as the result of institutional restrictions, has led to policies that could generate challenges to China’s future urbanization and economic development.

Her memo offers topline recommendations to deal with and ultimately correct these problems. Put simply, she suggests that Chinese policymakers need to reduce their overreliance on central planning, reform the system that currently constrains migration, and make other changes that reflect economic development needs rather than the bureaucratic assumptions of a plan.


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