Manuscript received July 19, 2024; revised August 22, 2024; accepted September 17, 2024; published December 20, 2024.
Abstract—Under the macro background of increasingly aging population and decreasing working age population, how to attract highly skilled labor force and even introduce and retain high-level talents has become an inevitable choice for many cities to achieve innovation driven and high-quality development, while deepening the reform and innovation of registered residence policy has become an unavoidable important path. At the same time, from the original intention of the registered residence restriction policy, the most important thing is to control the inflow of large-scale population and prevent the excess of the city’s carrying capacity, especially the crowding out of scarce public services. This concern may still exist in many cities today. Therefore, this paper focuses on the literature review of the impact of deregulation of registered residence registration restrictions on economic growth, public services and the implementation path of registered residence policy reform. Among them, in terms of economic growth, it covers income, consumption, investment and other contents in the macroeconomic framework; In terms of public services, we will start from aspects closely related to the pursuit of a better life, such as housing, medical insurance, children’s education, and urban infrastructure construction. The research summary of this paper will help to understand the registered residence system more comprehensively, provide a theoretical basis for the study of the impact of the cancellation of settlement restrictions on Nanjing, and provide a path reference for the design of registered residence policies.
Keywords—registered residence restrictions, economic growth, public services, path selection
Cite: Jin Zijie, "A Review of Research on the Impact of Lifting Household Registration Restrictions on Nanjing," Journal of Economics, Business and Management, vol. 12, no. 4, pp. 447-452, 2024.
Copyright © 2024 by the authors. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited (CC BY 4.0).