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China’s Education Gap

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Gao points to the huge gap between the opportunities available for urban students compared to that of the sixty million rural students, who are "left behind" by their parents and cared for by grandparents. The rural students have much fewer opportunities and fewer resources for learning.

China's 60 million rural students, children of migrant parents who are left behind

09/04/2014

Grouped Articles

China’s Education Gap

New York Times 09/04/2014

Li Keqiang and the urbanization process in China

02/03/2009

Rapid urbanization from 10% in 1949 to over 50% today and the challenges today of integrating migrant workers in urban areas. Li Keqiang, the new premier focussed on urbanization in his research and papers.

Grouped Articles

Beijing Puzzles Over Urban Growth

Wall Street Journal 05/09/2013

China’s Vision for a ‘New’ Urbanization

Wall Street Journal 05/09/2013

Unrest Grows as Economy Booms

Wall Street Journal 09/26/2011

China’s Great Uprooting: Moving 250 Million Into Cities

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The Demanding Off-Hour Escapes of China’s High-Tech Workers

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China's Gleaming Ghost Cities Draw Neither Jobs Nor People

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The cost of college education for migrant workers in China as one generation strives for better lives for the next

02/03/2009

Keith Bradsher describes the life of one family of migrant workers in China. The dad is a worker in coal mining, the mother works in farms nearby. The daughter has made it to sophomore in college but lacks optimism for the future because of the lack of jobs in China for new college graduates. The parents see the daughter as someone who would care for them in their old age as they hardly have any retirement savings.

Grouped Articles

Strains Show in China's Job Market

Wall Street Journal 06/11/2013

Peterson and Hanushek: The Vital Link of Education and Prosperity

Wall Street Journal 09/11/2013

College Tuition Increases Slow, but Government Aid Falls

Wall Street Journal 10/23/2013

The Shanghai Secret

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A Dearth of Work for China's College Grads

BusinessWeek 09/01/2010

Left-Behind Children of China's Migrant Workers Bear Grown-Up Burdens

Wall Street Journal 01/17/2014

China's future and the experience of Japan and Mexico

05/29/2010

China devotes 3% of GDP to education compared to 5% in developed countries. The underinvestment in education and human capital can lead to stagnation in per capita incomes. This happened in Mexico. The inability to deal with bad loans in the banking system can lead to slowing economic growth. This happened in Japan. The bulldozing of schools of migrant workers reflects a failure to address balanced growth and a breakdown in assigning the right priorities.

Grouped Articles

Mexico and China look to trade away old rivalry - The Washington Post

Washington Post 04/18/2013

China's 'Shadow Banks' Fan Debt-Bubble Fears

Wall Street Journal 06/24/2013

China's Silver Linings Playbook

Wall Street Journal 06/24/2013

U.S. Stocks Shrug at China's Woes

Wall Street Journal 07/10/2013

The Slowing of Two Economic Giants

New York Times 07/14/2013

Unrest May Signal New Phase in China Economy

New York Times 05/29/2010


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