40
of aggregate disposable household income in 2001, the richest 10 percent earned 35
percent (World Development Indicators, 2006).
This rise in relative poverty should, of course, be seen in the context of the widening of
the
overall
dispersion of income distribution in China during the reform period; see, for
instance, Renwei (2000). According to the World Bank (2003a, 2004), the Gini
coefficient of per capita household income in China increased from 0.28 in 1981 to 0.32
in 1990, and to 0.43 in 2001; several other studies give similar results.
70
It is well known
that increased income gaps across provinces and (from the mid-1980s) also between urban
and rural areas have contributed to this development.
71
In the words of Zhang et al.
(2001), China’s provinces have developed into so-called “income clubs”– with rich clubs
in the eastern (coastal) regions, middle-income clubs in the center, and poor clubs in the
western (highland) regions.
While the relative per capita income gap
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