The rural labor employment was influenced by the changes of GDP. The increase of GDP can drive the growth of the rural labor employment. The influences of GDP on the rural labor employment maintain positive, though significantly fluctuant, except the transient negative impacts between 1990 and 1996. As can be seen from Table 3, GDP sustained steady growth. The number of rural employment kept stable between 1990 and 1996. The elasticity coefficient of GDP varies generally between 0.19 to 0.93, with peak in 1995 and valley in 1996. A modest increase of rural employment was observed after 1998. The fluctuations of elasticity coefficient of GDP are not significant, showing the trends of fall-rise-fall. In 2004, the level of positive influence was a minimum (0.004). However, when the GDP increased by 1% during the rest of the years, the rural labor force employment increased by about 0.05%.