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The truth about an income survey

By Hu Zhan | China Daily | Updated: 2014-05-30 06:53

A recent survey of the "1980s generation" that indicates "Communist Party of China members are better paid than non-members" and "most senior managers have only a high school or bachelor's degree" has sparked a heated online debate. Since many netizens seem to have misinterpreted the findings of the survey, there is need for some clarification.

The Fudan Yangtze River Delta Social Transformation Survey (FYRST), conducted by the Institute of Social Research of Shanghai-based Fudan University since 2009, is aimed at carrying out a statistical study of people born between 1980 and 1989 in the Yangtze River Delta region, which includes Shanghai, and Jiangsu and Zhejiang provinces. This region accounts for only 1 percent of China's total area and 8 percent of its population. But by contributing 20 percent of the national economic aggregate, it has become China's largest economic zone where numerous social and economic changes have occurred.

The FYRST survey is the first all-round study focusing on a specific age group in the region. Being the first generation of "one child" families in China and having grown up with the reform and opening-up, the "1980s generation" is different from the 1970s as well as the 1990s generations, yet it serves as a link between the two. The FYRST survey covers various aspects - such as family life, marriage and employment - of this generation in the Yangtze River Delta region. Therefore, its findings are not necessarily representative of the rest of China, although they can be used as indicators for studying the social changes in the country.

The truth about an income survey

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