Impact of the Three-Child Policy and Delayed Retirement on the Transfer of Surplus Rural Labor under Xi Jinping's New Population Vision: A Re-examination of China's Lewis Turning Point
Jun Dai, Guanqing Shi, Xiaoke Xie, Aitong Xie

TL;DR
This study analyzes how China's three-child policy and delayed retirement influence rural surplus labor transfer, revealing a slowdown in transfer, a transition past the Lewis Turning Point, and the significant impact of delayed retirement on labor supply.
Contribution
It provides an updated empirical analysis of rural surplus labor transfer in China considering recent policies and challenges previous assessments of the Lewis Turning Point.
Findings
China's wage levels have increased steadily.
The urban-rural income gap has narrowed.
The transfer of surplus rural labor has slowed.
Abstract
Chinese-style modernization involves the modernization of a large population, requiring top-level design in terms of scale and structure. The population perspective in Xi Jinping's Thought on Socialism with Chinese Characteristics for a New Era serves as the fundamental guide for population policies. The three-child policy and delayed retirement will affect the supply of labor in China and challenge the previous assessments of China's Lewis Turning Point. This study examines the rural surplus labor transfer from 2013 to 2022 based on urban and rural data. The results indicate that China's overall wage levels have continuously increased, the urban-rural income gap has narrowed, and the transfer of surplus rural labor has slowed. China has passed the first turning point and entered a transitional phase. Factors such as the level of agricultural mechanization, urbanization rate, and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsIntergenerational Family Dynamics and Caregiving · Regional Development and Environment · Migration, Aging, and Tourism Studies
