Analysis of the value chain and network structure of informal waste recycling in Beijing, China. Steuer, B., Ramusch, R., Part, F., & Salhofer, S. Resources, Conservation and Recycling, 117:137-150, Elsevier B.V., 2017.
Analysis of the value chain and network structure of informal waste recycling in Beijing, China [link]Website  abstract   bibtex   
Despite the intensive efforts that the People's Republic of China has invested in the improvement of municipal solid waste management, Municipal Solid Waste collection is still heavily contested by the informal sector. These informal stakeholders divert recyclables such as waste metals, plastics, paper and glass out of municipal solid waste and sell these along informal trading networks for a living. This study aims to present a qualitative and quantitative description of the informal sector and its role in the collection of recyclables in Beijing. Via a semi-structured and -quantitative questionnaire survey among informal stakeholders we could ascertain daily individual collection quantities (kg/cap/day), thereby generated revenues and respective trading network and structures (informal recycling value chain) of informal stakeholders. The field survey identified three groups of informal collectors, namely Waste Pickers, Waste Merchants and Middle Men, who on average collect 16, 311, and 890 kg of recyclables per day and capita respectively, and achieve turn-over levels of 1200; 2500 and 5250 CNY per month. In order to explain the strong performance of the IS the approach of the old institutional economics has been chosen as analytical tool.
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 title = {Analysis of the value chain and network structure of informal waste recycling in Beijing, China},
 type = {article},
 year = {2017},
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 keywords = {Beijing,China,Informal sector,Institutional economics,Recyclables,Waste collection and exchange structures},
 pages = {137-150},
 volume = {117},
 websites = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.resconrec.2016.11.007},
 publisher = {Elsevier B.V.},
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 abstract = {Despite the intensive efforts that the People's Republic of China has invested in the improvement of municipal solid waste management, Municipal Solid Waste collection is still heavily contested by the informal sector. These informal stakeholders divert recyclables such as waste metals, plastics, paper and glass out of municipal solid waste and sell these along informal trading networks for a living. This study aims to present a qualitative and quantitative description of the informal sector and its role in the collection of recyclables in Beijing. Via a semi-structured and -quantitative questionnaire survey among informal stakeholders we could ascertain daily individual collection quantities (kg/cap/day), thereby generated revenues and respective trading network and structures (informal recycling value chain) of informal stakeholders. The field survey identified three groups of informal collectors, namely Waste Pickers, Waste Merchants and Middle Men, who on average collect 16, 311, and 890 kg of recyclables per day and capita respectively, and achieve turn-over levels of 1200; 2500 and 5250 CNY per month. In order to explain the strong performance of the IS the approach of the old institutional economics has been chosen as analytical tool.},
 bibtype = {article},
 author = {Steuer, Benjamin and Ramusch, Roland and Part, Florian and Salhofer, Stefan},
 journal = {Resources, Conservation and Recycling}
}

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