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Human Capital Development in an Emerging Economy: The Experience of Shenzhen, China: Research Note*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 February 2009

Extract

Human capital refers to the skills, knowledge and values that individuals acquire in formal schooling, in the workplace and in other settings that raise their productive capacity. In an increasingly global economy, investment in human capital is seen as one of the major strategies for enhancing the economic competitiveness of firms and nations and a major factor in determining the extent of economic polarization among social groups and nations.

Type
Focus on Employment Issues
Copyright
Copyright © The China Quarterly 1999

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15. Shenzhen Municipality, formerly named Baoan county, is about 2,020 square kilometres. Shenzhen includes three districts – Shenzhen Special Economic Zone, and two rural districts, Baoan and Longgang. As economic development in the special zone has strong impacts on the two rural districts, “Shenzhen” in this study refers to all three districts.Google Scholar

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26. The eight types of ownership refer to state-owned; collectively owned; joint-ventures with firms from Hong Kong, Macau and Taiwan; joint-ventures with firms from other countries; sole-investment firms from Hong Kong, Macau and Taiwan; sole-investment firms from other countries; local private firms; and corporate firms. The first two are considered typical in the planned economy and the latter six are new forms of ownership that have occurred in the transferred economy after 1980. Due to space constraints, this paper does not present results on training and education in enterprises of different ownership, which fall into another focus of analysis.Google Scholar

27. Shenzhen has a population of 3.4 million with a workforce of 2.45 million. Among this workforce, there are 0.46 million town inhabitants, 1.1 million village dwellers, 0.89 million registered employees and 0.05 million others. The first group consists mostly of original local populations who now own village-run enterprises and rent premises for a living. The second and the third groups consist mostly of the immigrating population from other parts of China. They held temporary residence permission status when they first came. Those in the second group usually find a temporary job in village-run enterprises, usually in the two rural districts, Baoan and Longgang. Those in the third group are hired by firms and organizations in the formal sectors that register their employees with the municipal government labour department or personnel department. These registered firms are located in all three districts in Shenzhen, but are mostly in the urban areas. Employers of the second and third groups could apply to the government to convert the temporary residence permission of their employees into a permanent one when they have completed more than one contract term or worked over three years, but on the conditions that the employees' skills are important to the production or service of the organization and development projects in Shenzhen. Otherwise, employees could stay with the employers on renewable contracts and temporary residence permissions. Currently, Shenzhen has kept its permanent resident rate at 29%. For our study, we only sampled the third group, the registered workforce.Google Scholar

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35. These programmes include economics and finance, electronics and electrical engineering, humanities subjects, construction engineering, accounting and clerkship, business administration, management in industry, public relations and sales, adult secondary specialized certificate study, adult secondary upper-general certificate study, business law, transportation and road engineering, art and design, journalism, continuing studies in medicine, cuisine, biology and food processing, security guard training, sports training, quality control in industry, and so on. Another study (see J. Xiao, “Education expansion in Shenzhen, China”) found that adult education centres offer almost all the vocational and technical programmes that VTE schools or specialized secondary schools offer, except three specialized occupations-policing, kindergarten teachers and nursing. See J. Xiao, “Education expansion in Shenzhen, China,” Table 8.Google Scholar

36. A three-hour course is counted as a half-day, six-hour courses are counted as a whole day.Google Scholar

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41. For the sake of clarity, Figure 4 omits information on the distribution of on-the-job training and adult education by education qualifications. The analysis showed that among those with vocational/technical education qualifications, 52% had on-the-job training, and 22% had adult education. Among those with general education qualifications, 48% had on-the-job training and 20% had adult education. For those having obtained post-secondary education, 52% received on-the-job training while 48% had adult education. This on-the-job training was provided equally to all groups with different education qualities. Skilled workers with post-secondary education qualifications also attended more adult education than other groups.Google Scholar

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47. Training provided by employers was also perceived by employees as trust in them and served as a binding force, which encouraged employees to stay with the firm. Turnover was not seen as a problem in firms.Google Scholar

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50. Ibid.

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