Abstract: We examine the wage trends of ordinary workers and the wageconvergence between unskilled and skilled workers in China. First, we find that wages in all non-agricultural sectors, wages of migrant workers, and wages of hired workers in the agricultural sector have increased dramatically since 2003. Second, through comparing wage differentials between migrant and urban resident workers and between heterogeneous education groups within migrant workers, and by investigating the changes in the contribution of the returns to education to wage differentials, we find that the wages of unskilled and skilled workers have converged. Both the increasing wage trends and wageconvergence are interpreted as evidence supporting the hypothesis that China has passed what can be called the Lewisturningpoint in the industrial sector. We conclude that the sustainability of economic growth in China requires an upgrading of labor market institutions to accommodate the merging of the rural and urban labor forces.
View Online ( in China Economic Review,Volume 22, Issue 4, December 2011, Pages 601–610 )