“Social Inequality and Mobility in Chinese Societies: Towards a Comparative Study”, December 16-17, 2011

Following the success of a symposium on “Youth and Social Change” held last year, the Center for Applied Social and Economic Research co-hosted an international conference on “Social Inequality and Mobility in Chinese Societies: Towards a Comparative Study” with the Central Policy Unit, HKSAR Government on December 16-17. Scholars and researchers from Hong Kong, Mainland China, Taiwan, US, and elsewhere shared their empirical works with more than 150 conference participants including representatives from government bureaus, think tanks and NGOs and many other audiences. Frequent exchanges between the panel and the floor deepened our understanding about topics of inequality in different Chinese societies. Apart from highly academic terminologies, presentations and discussion extended to heated social topics, such as $6,000 cash handout in Hong Kong, the upcoming presidential election in Taiwan, and etc. and their relationships with social class, social stratification, economic inequality, and welfare re-distribution.

Programme of the conference is as follows:
View Programme








Inequality Conference (16-17 Dec, 2011)

"Employment, Education, Poverty and Inequality During the Great Recession" by Prof. Tim Smeeding, University of Wisconsin-Madison: 3.30pm on Dec 15

Distinguished Lecture Series on Inequality and Poverty jointly organized by the Institute for Advanced Study and the Division of Social Science for the year of 2010/11 will continue this semester. A forthcoming lecture to be delivered is “Employment, Education, Poverty and Inequality During the Great Recession” by Professor Timothy Smeeding from University of Wisconsin-Madison. Details of the seminar and the speaker are as follows:


Date: December 15, 2011 (Thursday)
Time: 3.30 - 5pm
Venue: Chen Kuan Cheng Forum (LT-H)

Abstract:
The “Great Recession” (GR) is the most dramatic economic downturn the U.S. has experienced in more than six decades. Tumbling stock and housing markets erased more than $15 trillion in national wealth in 2008, or nearly 10 percent of real total national financial assets, the largest drop on record (since 1945). As financial markets and the rest of the economy slowed to a halt, real Gross Domestic Product did not grow in 2008 and fell by 2.6 percent in 2009, the largest decline in six decades. In addition house prices have dropped 30 percent since their 2005 peak (Kowalski, 2011). Overall, the GR has resulted in over $7,300 in foregone consumption per person, or about $175 per person per month by 2011 (Lansing, 2011) and 20 percent of prime age workers (25-54) are jobless, the largest fraction since records began in 1947. Poverty and inequality have both risen during the crisis. The GR tremor was felt much less strongly in Asia and most of Europe. The long term outlook here is that the race between technology and education is so far being lost in the United States, but won in Asia and elsewhere.


Bio of the speaker:
Timothy M. (Tim) Smeeding is the Arts and Sciences Distinguished Professor of Public Affairs and Economics at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and Director of the Institute for Research on Poverty (IRP) and founder of the Luxembourg Income Study (LIS). Professor Smeeding’s recent and forthcoming publications include: Cross-National Research on the Intergenerational Transmission of Advantage (CRITA—under final review); Persistence, Privilege and Parenting: The Comparative Study of Intergenerational Mobility, co-edited with Robert Erikson and Markus Jantti (Russell Sage Foundation, September 2011); the Handbook of Economic Inequality , co-edited with Brian Nolan and Weimer Salverda (Oxford University Press , April, 2009); Poor Kids in a Rich Country: America's Children in Comparative Perspective, co-authored with Lee Rainwater (Russell Sage Foundation, 2003); The Future of the Family, co-edited by Daniel Patrick Moynihan and Lee Rainwater (Russell Sage Foundation, 2004; paperback ed., 2006) and The American Welfare State: Laggard or Leader?, co-authored with Irv Garfinkel and Lee Rainwater (Oxford University Press, February 2010). His recent work has been on mobility across generations; and inequality, wealth, and poverty in a national and cross-national context.