- published: 15 Jan 2012
- views: 506
11:06
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China's HuKou System
China's HuKou System - The HuKou system is a class system of residency which dates back to...
published: 15 Jan 2012
China's HuKou System
China's HuKou System - The HuKou system is a class system of residency which dates back to ancient China, where household registration is required by law in China.
8:19 = bike crash scene
This video was made for a Debating Globalization class at Fudan University in Shanghai, China.ene
- published: 15 Jan 2012
- views: 506
3:47
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Chinese 'Apartheid'? Hukou System Comes Under Fire (LinkAsia: 2/1/13)
Hukou, China's controversial household registration system, was originally designed to mon...
published: 02 Feb 2013
Chinese 'Apartheid'? Hukou System Comes Under Fire (LinkAsia: 2/1/13)
Hukou, China's controversial household registration system, was originally designed to monitor the population and limit mass migration from the countryside to major cities. LinkAsia contributor Mark Dreyer reports that Chinese have taken to social media to voice their complaints about the injustice of the houkou system.
Watch more at http://linkasia.org.
IMAGE: Zhan Haite poses for a picture at home in Shanghai, December 21, 2012. Police broke up a small protest in Beijing on Saturday calling for reform of China's divisive household registration system, an action prompted by a Shanghai schoolgirl's widely publicized plea for equal access to the education system: REUTERS/Aly Song
- published: 02 Feb 2013
- views: 614
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Chinese Demography and Hukou System Presentation Sample
Mapping China's demographic transition, and an overview of the Hukou/ Household Registrati...
published: 07 Feb 2012
Chinese Demography and Hukou System Presentation Sample
Mapping China's demographic transition, and an overview of the Hukou/ Household Registration System.
- published: 07 Feb 2012
- views: 539
3:45
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China's migrant children
Eight year old Yuhui is the daughter of migrant workers in Beijing. Despite being born in...
published: 15 Mar 2010
China's migrant children
Eight year old Yuhui is the daughter of migrant workers in Beijing. Despite being born in the capital her access to education and other services is limited by China's household registration system, the hukou. Tania Branigan and Dan Chung report.
- published: 15 Mar 2010
- views: 19824
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Jonathan Fenby: Hukou System An Entry Point In China's Next Stage Of Reforms
Visit http://www.ChinaMoneyPodcast.com for more great interviews!
In this episode of Chi...
published: 26 Apr 2012
Jonathan Fenby: Hukou System An Entry Point In China's Next Stage Of Reforms
Visit http://www.ChinaMoneyPodcast.com for more great interviews!
In this episode of China Money Podcast, well-known British writer and China expert Jonathan Fenby gives his diagnosis of China's long-term challenges to our host, Nina Xiang. Will the world's second largest economy go on to surpass the U.S. in a couple of decades? Or, is an apocalypse in the cards?
Listen to the podcast above, or read an excerpt below.
Q: In your latest book, Tiger Head, Snake Tails, you point out that China's future dominance is far less certain than people have been led to believe. Why is that?
China has certainly achieved a lot in the past thirty years. But China is now in a stage where it must rethink its economic model. The assumption that China will continue in the rapid pace of economic growth and that it will bring in political dominance is far from established.
Its economy needs re-balancing, reshaping and remodeling. China will spend the next ten years or so on getting its economic model up and running rather than thinking about dominating the rest of the world.
Q: The Chinese government certainly understands that the model needs to be changed, but with the complicated system now China finds herself in, it seems hard to find a starting point?
The difficulties with reforms in a situation like China after all those years of growth is that everything is interconnected. If you start reform in one area, for example, if you privatize farm land, people can then build up much more efficient farms in China.
That would be good, but if you do that, the local authorities which own the farm land and rely on selling them for revenues, they will need to introduce new tax systems to give the local authorities much more power to raise taxes locally and spend it themselves. If that happens, Beijing will lose an element of control over local authorities.
Another example is energy and water, which is under-priced in China. If you freed water prices and they rose rapidly, it will have an effect on inflation.
If you can start in one place, I would say the one area where you could consider is the Hukou registration system. You could allow migrant workers, especially second generation migrant workers, greater rights and the possibility to buy properties in the cities.
Q: There is a consensus that the reform process in China is stalled and needs to be jump-started again. How likely do you think it can pick up speed under the next leadership?
I think it will be slow and cautious. The people who run China have adopted a consensus style of leadership management. There are so many special interests involved in any debate of change.
The idea of coming to China to simply exploit cheap land, cheap labor and tax breaks, that stage is over.
Q: Lastly, what is your forecast on the Chinese economy this year at Trusted Sources?
We expect the economy to grow at 7.5 percent; inflation rate to fall below 3 percent; and exports to decline but not as fast as forecasters think they will. We think monetary easing in China will be prudent. It will be staged and slow.
We don't see a property crash in China. We expect a 10 to 15 percent decline in property prices with an upturn in the second half of the year. Overall, this will be a shift of investment away from infrastructure towards machinery and factory to improve productivity.
Jonathan Fenby is co-founder and managing director of the China research team at UK-based consulting firm, Trusted Sources. He is formerly editor of the UK newspaper, The Observer, and Hong Kong-based daily, South China Morning Post. A prolific writer, he has published 12 books in the last 14 years. His latest book, Tiger Head, Snake Tails: China Today, How it Got There and Where it is Heading, analyzes China's future.
Visit http://www.chinamoneypodcast.com
- published: 26 Apr 2012
- views: 207
2:45
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the Challenges migrant workers face due to China's current system
the Chinese Hu kou system gives people access to medical insurance, social security, free ...
published: 17 Dec 2009
the Challenges migrant workers face due to China's current system
the Chinese Hu kou system gives people access to medical insurance, social security, free education for someone who live at where his hukou is. However, The migrant workers move all the time to where jobs are available, and thus losing access to these social welfare.
- published: 17 Dec 2009
- views: 747
3:54
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China With More Urban Than Rural Population Now
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published: 22 Jan 2012
China With More Urban Than Rural Population Now
Follow us on TWITTER: http://twitter.com/cnforbiddennews
Like us on FACEBOOK: http://www.facebook.com/chinaforbiddennews
According to China's statistics, in 2011,
over 50% of the population lived in urban areas.
For the first time in China's history, urban population
exceeds the number of people living in the rural regions.
Scholars point out that China's policy is not ready
for farmers to move to the cities.
As migrant workers are treated unfairly,
the social conflict can only intensify.
Statistics from January 17 indicate, in 2011 China's urban
population was 690 million, or 21 million more than in 2010.
Population in rural areas was 657 million, or 14.6 million less;
thus 51.27% of China's population lives in urban areas now.
This is the first time in China's history,
when the urban population exceeds the rural population.
Feng Xingyuan, deputy director of Beijing Uni-rule Institute
of Economics, believes farmers are forced to shift to cities, when their land is expropriated.
However, many practices on how to handle the farmland
are illegal.
Feng Xingyuan: "If it is illegal, farmers can take it back.
At least, the authorities should arrange the compensation.
Now the land expropriation does not meet civil procedures,
nor the contract law."
Sun Wenguang, a retired professor from Shandong University,
said China's policies are not ready for farmers moving to cities.
Now migrant workers can not be counted as city citizens,
according to China's policies.
There is household registration system restriction,
and many unfair treatments exist.
Chinese Communist Party's (CCP) regime doesn't welcome
farmers moving to cities, but has no way to stop them either.
Prof. Sun: "The ruling groups only care about minority's
interests, they only treat farmers as cheap labours in cities.
Many policies contain the discrimination of farmers
living in cities.
Farmers do not have rights to use national health care,
nor governmental funds for low income families."
The urbanization will worsen traffic congestion,
housing shortage and other issues.
In addition, the CCP policies exacerbate social conflicts,
provoking protests and resistance.
Prof. Sun: "More migrant workers coming to the cities,
will expose more social conflicts.
Migrant workers are discriminated, they demand their rights,
putting some pressure on the society and the CCP."
Voice of America quoted China's socio-economic expert,
Cheng Xiaonong's comments on the issue.
Cheng says that in other countries urbanization is a natural
process, but in China is entirely enforced by the government..
According to Cheng, farmers were forced to live in towns,
which happened in many areas.
For example, Bo Xilai promotes this policy in Chongqing,
in order to change rural areas into city level areas.
They built new town buildings, forcing farmers to move in,
thinking "urbanization" can be achieved this way.
Cheng Xiaonong believes that when farmers live in cities,
they can be treated as city residents and share national welfare.
However, if farmers live in cities but never have the same
rights as city citizens, can they actually be called city citizens?
Feng Xingyuan said, implementation of urbanization should
allow people to be equal; current policies need to be reviewed.
At the moment however,
China lacks strength on a decision-making level.
Feng Xingyuan: "In country areas they should ease household
registration system (Hukou) and its management function.
Hukou system should be used for information and population
management purposes only, not for administration.
And shouldn't be used to divide the population
into urban and rural class citizens."
Cheng Xiaonong points out that many local governments
are focused on "urbanization."
However, behind it lies the evil intention to grab the farmland
illegally, not missing the chance to make money from real estate.
NTD reporters Chen Han, Song Feng and Wang Mingyu
《神韵》2011世界巡演新亮点
http://www.ShenYunPerformingArts.org/
- published: 22 Jan 2012
- views: 706
2:10
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Rural Versus Urban: China at War with Itself (LinkAsia: 12/7/12)
The controversy over China's Household Registration System, or "Hukou", has been reignited...
published: 08 Dec 2012
Rural Versus Urban: China at War with Itself (LinkAsia: 12/7/12)
The controversy over China's Household Registration System, or "Hukou", has been reignited by a 15-year-old student who was unable to take the national university entrance exam in Shanghai because her parents migrated there from rural China. LinkAsia takes a look at the social media reaction in China to this contentious topic.
Watch more at http://linkasia.org.
IMAGE: Chinese farmers wait to get their salaries at a construction site in Wuhan, the capital of China's central province of Hubei: REUTERS/China Photo
- published: 08 Dec 2012
- views: 763
3:37
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Chinese People are Born Unequal
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published: 25 Jun 2011
Chinese People are Born Unequal
Follow us on TWITTER: http://twitter.com/cnforbiddennews
Like us on FACEBOOK: http://www.facebook.com/chinaforbiddennews
On June 22, Chinese artist dissident Ai Weiwei
was released on parole and is under surveillance.
Beijing's legal aid org Open Constitution Initiative
(OCI) director Xu Zhiyong was arrested on June 22,
for submitting a petition with 30,000 signatures
to call for "equality in education". Let's take a look.
On June 22 at midnight, Xu Zhiyong was taken away
by Beijing police, to prevent him from participating in
the 12th petition by "non-Beijing resident" parents.
The petition was scheduled to take place on June 23.
The petition calls on the authorities to allow children
without Beijing "hukou" to take the national exam
and to enjoy equal treatment with local candidates.
Hukou refers to a "class system" of residency permits.
Sun Wenguang (ex-professor of Shandong University):
The local students in Beijing can get admitted,
even if their entrance exam marks are relatively low.
However, the required mark is very high for rural kids.
This is a kind of discrimination!
Therefore, many children of migrant workers have to
return to their rural hometowns to take the exam.
It's unequal treatment, discrimination against farmers.
On June 23, the released Xu told Radio Free Asia
that the petition was initiated in July 2010.
So far, over 3,000 parents' signatures have been
collected for submission to the Education Ministry.
Sun said that in large cities like Beijing and Shanghai,
even rural children graduate from local universities
still cannot work locally or get a local hukou.
However, the privileged officials' children would soon
obtain a urban hukou.
Sun Wenguang: This creates inequality in cities.
Children born to migrant worker parents in cities
receive different education and employment treatment
from the locals, especially from the officials' children.
This is man-made inequality among people.
The migrant workers are treated as the pariah.
The psychological damage to their children is serious.
Xu Zhiyong published a report in March 2010 --
"Born Unequal - Beijing non-resident Population
Education Investigative Report". In it, Xu said that
in Beijing alone, millions of families live separately.
Unfamiliar environment and time away from parents
have destroyed the future of many children.
Sun stressed the consequences of the discrimination.
Some migrant workers are unwillingly to tolerate this.
When opportunities arise, they would vent their anger,
and protest with actions. This is a hidden trouble.
Its root cause is the communist party's dictatorship.
To maintain its rule and the interests of the privileged,
the party divide the people with the hukou system.
Xu Zhiyong's arrest has attracted people's concerns.
Xu's friend, rights activist Liu Shasha wrote on Twitter,
"Look, the release (of Ai Weiwei) made people happy,
so the authorities arrest another one to frustrate us."
Liu Shasha: Since parents want to go to Education
Ministry today (June 23) to ask for equal rights,
they took Xu away last night. So, he couldn't join them.
NTD reporters Li Yun, Tang Rui and Wang Mingyu
《神韵》2011世界巡演新亮点
http://www.ShenYunPerformingArts.org/
- published: 25 Jun 2011
- views: 318
3:48
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Migrant Workers vs. Authorities
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published: 22 Jun 2011
Migrant Workers vs. Authorities
Follow us on TWITTER: http://twitter.com/cnforbiddennews
Like us on FACEBOOK: http://www.facebook.com/chinaforbiddennews
A UK Financial Times' (FT) editorial on June 19
said that due to unfair treatment of migrant workers,
mass protests are on the rise in China.
China risks an explosion of nation-wide unrest.
Chinese and foreign scholars pointed out that
workers' rights are continuously deprived.
The conflict of interests between the workers and CCP
(Chinese Communist Party) is becoming acute.
The UK editorial gave examples of mass protests.
Migrant workers making foil papers for funeral rites
demand compensation for lead poisoning.
The mistreatment of a pregnant vendor by local
authorities in Guangdong resulted in a riot of thousands.
Another worker was stabbed for asking for his wages.
This caused a clash between workers and the police.
These are only 3 of tens of thousands riots yearly.
Despite the authorities' best efforts to conceal
this information, the news spread via the Internet
and mobile phones. CCP is worried
about local incidents triggering nation-wide unrest.
A State Council Development Research Center report
attributed the cause of social unrests to labor issues.
Around 150 million migrant workers are marginalized
and discriminated against.
However, in the past three decades, they have been
the reason for the rapid economic development of China.
If handled improperly, stability would be threatened.
Ex-editor-in-chief Li Hongkuan of Big News
a Chinese-language magazine based in US, said:
"The fundamental reason is the irrationality
of China's social system. China's social shift
is not achieved on the basis of fairness and justice.
By now, the pie's distribution has been completed.
Migrant workers' children cannot afford schooling.
They have no money for medical treatment.
Their basic rights are not protected.
Meanwhile, the rich are enjoying their wealth.
The wealth gap between the rich and poor is still growing."
FT stated China's inflation has been accelerating,
with food prices rising more than 10% a year.
The real estate bubble is in danger of bursting.
With land acquisitions and forced house demolitions,
local officials across China continue to fill their pockets.
This has built resentment in landless farmers.
On June 16, landless farmer Wang Benhua in Hefei,
Anhui Province, had his tricycle damaged by police.
This triggered a large-scale clash
between the police and thousands of people.
Dozens were arrested. Thousands protested
by blocking roads for 4 days.
Locals said that police brutality was only a fuse,
which detonated the landless farmers' grievances.
Chinese Academy of Social Sciences Social Issues
Research Center director Professor Yu Jianrong
believes that social injustice and
public discontent are on the rise.
These lead to more frequent and violent incidents.
He said the solution is not suppression.
If the issues remain unresolved,
new resentment will be generated.
NYC University political science Professor, Xia Ming,
analyzed the underlying reasons of recent riots.
Professor Xia Ming: "They are due to the formation
of interest groups, who profit but don't want to make
any concessions. In the past 3 decades, in China,
some people, particularly the workers and farmers,
have their interests damaged and rights deprived.
Between them and interest groups backed by CCP,
the conflicts are becoming more and more acute."
FT suggested to abolished the "Hukou system,"
which breeds the rural-urban inequality,
so migrant workers can enjoy the same rights
as the urban residents, like health care.
The editorial warned at the end that, at present,
authorities use suppression to deal with protests.
Suppression can only work for a while.
If the underlying causes are not addressed,
China risks an explosion of nation-wide unrest.
NTD reporters Li Yuanhan and Xiao Yu
《神韵》2011世界巡演新亮点
http://www.ShenYunPerformingArts.org/
- published: 22 Jun 2011
- views: 351
4:20
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China's Household Registration System Facilitates Corruption
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published: 25 Jan 2013
China's Household Registration System Facilitates Corruption
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The terms "House-Uncle" and "House-Sister" have
recently become the new hot topics in China's media.
These phrases were newly invented by Chinese
netizens, as a way of identifying corrupt officials
of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) regime.
Reportedly, many officials owned dual or multiple
Hukou (record of official household registration).
Tis has greatly shocked the ordinary Chinese people.
Commentators indicate that multiple home ownership
has facilitated these CCP officials to commit corruption.
Media commented that exposure
of multi-Hukou holders is a must.
Gong Aiai, former Vice President at Rural
Commercial Bank in Shenmu county, Shaanxi
Province, has recently become notorious.
It was disclosed that Gong owns
real estate worth over 1 Billion yuan.
The Beijing Times newspaper confirmed the news,
and added that Gong also holds at least four Hukou.
Three of these Hukou were registered in Shaanxi, and the
other was in Beijing, but all were under different names.
Under existing regulations, each Chinese citizen is
allowed to have only one Hukou, and one ID number.
The Qilu Evening News in Shandong commented that
the Hukou system confines many civil rights in China.
This includes marriage, house buying, social welfare
benefits, opening bank accounts, and application for
passports, as well as the right to elect and to be elected.
The article says that once the regulation is undermined,
it will be legally and ethically embarrassing.
It may even trigger unpredictably bad results.
Therefore, exposing multi-Hukou holders
is a must, according to the media reports.
Mr. Zhang, netizen and ex-police officer): "By buying
off people, one can apply for and get numerous ID cards.
These cards are therefore under different names.
Multi-Hukou facilitates buying many houses, money
laundering, which is also hard to be uncovered.
Probes will find only the three
houses registered under a name.
This is a way that facilitates money
laundering for those corrupt officials."
Shenzhen-based Jingbao newspaper reviewed that
over 20 civil rights are bound into the Hukou system.
In particular, in large cities, such as Beijing and
Shanghai, where local Hukou entitles a person
to better social welfare benefits and conveniences.
The Jingbao article indicates that corruption
is the root of these multi-Hukou incidents.
Liu Kaiming, director of a civil think tank
in Shenzhen: "Without Hukou, such as in
Beijing, you are ineligible to buy cars and houses.
But with Hukou, one can get many ID cards and passports.
This is very easily done for those officials when they need.
In the case of 'Shenmu house-sister', who isn't
an official, but has money and connections,
she was able to get several Hukou."
Liu Kaiming adds that the CCP regime
implements a very strict Hukou system.
However, it allows privileged officials to behave unchecked.
Wang Taiyuan, a professor at the Chinese People's
Public Security University, analyzed the issue.
He says that multi-Hukou can be easily created
through the online official Hukou management network.
Therefore, all that needs to be done is buying off the
person in charge, and those involved in the approval.
Mr. Zhang, netizen and ex-police officer: "The regulation
states that a local police chief can approve any new ID
card application, or a name change or Hukou alterations.
Especially for an adult who wants to changes his name, that
will definitely be able to be approved by a local police chief.
The head of the local police station has no authority on this.
If the case is investigated, I believe many police officials
can be pulled up, but can they make a real investigation?"
Mr. Zhang, a former police officer, says that forgery
is very rampant in the public security sector.
If the case is truly investigated, all staff in the public
security bureau who are involved may be arrested.
He speculates that the case would end in the arrest
of those civil police officers who handled the case,
or finding some temporary staff to bear the blame.
Corrupt CCP officials holding multi-Hukou
are very commonplace in China.
Lately, it was disclosed that a former chief of the local Real
Estate Administration in Zhengzhou city owns 29 houses.
Each family member held two Hukou.
Other dual-Hukou holders include Chen Wenzhu,
the former head of the State Tobacco Monopoly
Administration in Shanwei, and Tao Yong,
the former police chief of Fengyang in Anhui.
Another case is Luo Yaping, former chief of Land Resources
Administration of Shuncheng District, in Fushun, Liaoning.
Luo was reported to hold 12 ID cards
and 15 Hukou record booklets.
An old Chinese saying goes that a
"smart mouse has more than one exit hole."
This seems to pale in comparison to CCP officials.
《神韵》2011世界巡演新亮点
http://www.ShenYunPerformingArts.org/
- published: 25 Jan 2013
- views: 121
5:23
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China talks of changing divisive hukou - Biz Wire - March 8,2013 - BONTV China
Go to http://www.bon.tv/Biz-Wire/ to watch the full episode
Follow us on Weibo http://wei...
published: 11 Mar 2013
China talks of changing divisive hukou - Biz Wire - March 8,2013 - BONTV China
Go to http://www.bon.tv/Biz-Wire/ to watch the full episode
Follow us on Weibo http://weibo.com/u/2419600955 or Twitter.com/ChinaBizWire
China's new leaders who are planning a system of national residence permits to replace the household registration or 'hukou' regime. This is seen as a vital reform that will boost China's urbanization campaign and drive consumption-led growth. The hukou system, which dates to 1958, has split China's 1.35 billion people along urban and rural lines, preventing many of the roughly 800 million Chinese who are registered as rural residents from settling in cities and enjoying basic urban welfare and services. For years, critics have called for changes and a government researcher told Reuters that a unified national residence permit system would be adopted as policy as part of a 10-year urbanization plan to be published after the current annual session of parliament. Benefits and entitlement under the new system are expected to be, according to the researchers, basically equal, although the changes would be eased in slowly. Previous administrations have experimented with reform on the fringes of hukou for years but have not delivered on calls to overhaul the system, which affords services to people based on where they live, like health insurance, retirement pension, and schooling. In a speech to the Chinese parliament on Tuesday, outgoing Premier Wen Jiabao said hukou reforms should be accelerated to drive an urbanization effort that he said would underpin economic development. While it's easier said than done, Wen Jiabao did say that to advance urbanization, the government should register eligible rural workers as permanent urban residents, and expand the coverage of basic public services in urban areas to migrant workers. In his final Government Work Report as premier, Wen also advised the new government to keep mega-cities like Beijing and Shanghai and large cities like Hangzhou and Nanjing, at an appropriate scale to drive development of surrounding areas and strengthen the ability of small and medium sized cities to develop industries, provide public services and increase employment. Hukou reform and the drive for urbanization go hand in hand, and Zhang Ping, head of the National Development and Reform Commission, China's main economic planning agency, said on Wednesday that guidelines for the urbanization plan would be launched in the first half of 2013. According to the National Bureau of Statistics, in 2012, China's urban population expanded to 52.5 percent of the population, and is expected to rise to above 53 percent this year. Bill Bishop of the Sinocism Newsletter, writes that money, resources, and bias towards rural residents are some of the major obstacles to changing the hukou system. The Wall Street Journal reported that the State Council's Development Research Center, a government think tank, estimates that the price tag for turning one rural migrant into an urban citizen is about $13,000. That means the costs of providing education, health care and pensions to even 10% of China's 200 million or more migrant workers is roughly, $260 billion dollars, equivalent to about 3% of 2012 GDP, though the figures would be much lower if pension payments were delayed. Rural children are often victims of the the hukou system, either by being left behind in the villages while their parents go to work in the cities or by joining their parents and either attending expensive, ill-equipped schools, or no school at all. Migrant workers have for years lamented inequalities in the hukou system, like the lack of local medical coverage or equal access to education. Urbanization will have many effects that we won't realize until they are upon us.
- published: 11 Mar 2013
- views: 4
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China "House Sisters" Expose Corruption, Hukou Abuse
More News: http://www.ntdtv.ca
Most people in China only have one household registration...
published: 26 Jan 2013
China "House Sisters" Expose Corruption, Hukou Abuse
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Most people in China only have one household registration or "hukou". Actually, that's the point of the whole system. But, as with many aspects of Chinese society, those with enough money and connections are able to get around such restrictions. A new outbreak of scandals has many up in arms over the issue.
The terms "House-Uncle" and "House-Sister" have recently been all over China's media.
Invented by netizens, the terms refer to Communist officials who own a lot of houses. It not only reflects extensive corruption, but also the abuse of Hukou—that's the Chinese household registration system.
One notorious case uncovered recently is that of Gong Aiai. She was the vice president at Rural Commercial Bank in Shenmu County, Shaanxi Province. It's not a high position, but that hasn't stopped Gong from owning more than 20 properties, worth over 1 billion yuan. That's 16 million U.S. dollars.
Under existing regulations, each Chinese citizen is allowed to have only one Hukou, and one ID number. These are used to register property purchases.
But, according to Beijing News, Gong had four Hukou registrations, under different aliases and registered in different places.
[Mr. Zhang, Retired Police Officer]:
"Through bribery, one can apply for and get numerous ID cards. These cards are therefore under different names. Holding multiple Hukou facilitates buying many houses and money laundering, and makes it harder to get caught."
For ordinary Chinese, applying for one Hukou registration can be a lengthy process, let alone obtaining multiples to build up a property portfolio.
Former police officer Mr. Zhang says the police chief in different regions can help powerful individuals abuse the system.
[Mr. Zhang, Retired Police Officer]:
"The regulations state that a local police chief can approve any new ID card application, or a name change or Hukou alterations."
Chinese state-run media reports that Ministry of Public Security is investigating the case. Although Zhang belives a real investigation might mean the arrest of all the involved staff at the regional Public Security Bureaus.
- published: 26 Jan 2013
- views: 7
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China's great migration from 'Hukou Hell'
Source: CNN
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Feng Shui Index offers 2013 predictions
The deeply...
published: 11 Feb 2013
China's great migration from 'Hukou Hell'
Source: CNN
Watch this video
Feng Shui Index offers 2013 predictions
The deeply discriminatory nature of China's hukou system came into clear focus last month after the fatal collapse of a bridge in Henan. Local media reports said victims' families with an urban hukou would receive 400,000 yuan in compensation compared to 180,000 yuan for those with a rural hukou.
- published: 11 Feb 2013
- views: 10
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Brückeneinsturz in Henan deckt Hukou-Diskriminierung auf
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published: 05 Feb 2013
Brückeneinsturz in Henan deckt Hukou-Diskriminierung auf
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Bei dem explosionsbedingten Einsturz einer Autobahnbrücke in der Provinz Henan am vergangenen Freitag wurden zehn Menschen getötet und elf weitere Verletzt.
Den Familien der Todesopfer wurde eine Entschädigung angeboten. Doch der Betrag war nicht immer gleich. Und das liegt an Hukou, Chinas System der Wohnsitzregistrierung.
[Li Heping, Rechtsanwalt, Peking]:
„Das ist ein Problem, das in China besteht: Leben wird nicht gleich bewertet. Sogar innerhalb einer Familie. Einige können einen städtischen Hukou haben, andere einen ländlichen Hukou, und sie würden unterschiedlich entschädigt. Das ist sehr ungerecht."
Die Henan Business Daily berichtete, dass den Opfern mit städtischem Wohnsitz umgerechnet 47.000 Euro Entschädigung gezahlt würden. Ländlichen Einwohnern weniger als die Hälfte.
Und die Entschädigungssumme hängt nicht nur von der Herkunft des Opfers ab.
Ein Familienmitglied eines Verstorbenen berichtete, dass sie ein Entschädigungsangebot vom 2. Februar abgelehnt hatten, da es zu niedrig war. Am nächsten Tag boten die Behörden weitere 50.000 Yuan, umgerechnet 6.000 Euro, wenn die Familie bis Mittag einwilligte.
[Herr Zhang, Einwohner Henan]:
„Bei öffentlichen Ereignissen versucht die Regierung immer die Wogen zu glätten. Sie fürchtet, dass sich die Opfer zusammenschließen und Gerechtigkeit verlangen. Also isolieren sie die Opfer."
Das Hukou-System steht in der Kritik, die Klassenteilung der Gesellschaft voranzutreiben, und viele fordern seine Abschaffung. Seitens der Behörden gibt es Intentionen, dieses System zu reformieren. Doch bislang sei davon noch nicht viel zu spüren.
- published: 05 Feb 2013
- views: 126
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Cost of a hukou - China Price Watch - November 01 - BONTV
Go to http://www.bon.tv/China-Price-Watch/ to watch the full episode
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published: 02 Nov 2012
Cost of a hukou - China Price Watch - November 01 - BONTV
Go to http://www.bon.tv/China-Price-Watch/ to watch the full episode
Follow us on Weibo http://weibo.com/chinapricewatch
Along with opening the door to Beijing's rich educational resources, the city's hukou also helps with other life necessities.
- published: 02 Nov 2012
- views: 28
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China Updates College Entrance Exam System for Migrant Students
China is trying to reform its college entrance exam system to level the playing field betw...
published: 03 Jan 2013
China Updates College Entrance Exam System for Migrant Students
China is trying to reform its college entrance exam system to level the playing field between urban and rural students, but, educators say, the new changes don't go far enough.
The exam system, called 'gaokao' in Chinese, is based on the student's registered address. This is usually their birth place because of China's household registration, called 'hukou'. This requires children of migrant workers who attend school in one city but were born in another, to return to their hometown to take the exam for college.
Critics say the system disadvantages these students. They are often forced to leave their parents, or drop out of school altogether.
[Sun Wenguang, Retired Professor, Shandong University]
"Gaokao should take place under a fair system. But now there is discrimination against smaller or rural cities, and the entrance rules in place are unreasonable.
China's Ministry of Education recently told provincial authorities to improve the system by the deadline of December 31, 2012.
Some cities have announced changes, but many still have additional requirements for migrant students.
In Beijing, the type and length of employment of the parents, whether the family has a permanent place to live, or if they contributed to social security, will all determine the student's eligibility for gaokao in the city.
[Shenzhen Teacher]
"For ordinary citizens the changes don't mean much. For an average laborer, it's impossible for them to contribute to social security or even have a stable home address."
There is also opposition to changing the rules. Some urban residents say it will create more competition for their kids, if children from rural places can take their exams in the city.
China has a growing urban population. Official figures show more than 250 million farmers have moved to the cities to look for work. They bring with them around 20 million children to urban areas. Another 10 million are left behind in rural towns.
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- published: 03 Jan 2013
- views: 61
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Hukou - China Take August 7 - BONTV
Go to http://bon.tv/china-take to watch the full episode
The full explanation of the Chin...
published: 08 Aug 2012
Hukou - China Take August 7 - BONTV
Go to http://bon.tv/china-take to watch the full episode
The full explanation of the Chinese word "Hukou".
Hukou - It concerns the document known as a Household Registration or Permanent Residence Permit. Something similar has been used for centuries in many Asian countries - not just China - to keep tabs on who is doing what and where. It links a citizen to one place.
- published: 08 Aug 2012
- views: 88