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CHINA: Too Many Graduates, Very Few Jobs By Antoaneta Bezlova* BEIJING, Oct 21 (IPS) - Feng Danya studied foreign languages. She had hoped to be part of a growing
local company and grow with them, she says. But her timing was wrong. She
graduated in the summer of uncertainty for the global economy and many
Chinese start-ups.
"I now work in an Italian deli shop, selling meat and cheese," she says
downcast. "I’m trying to keep my English up with the foreigners who come to
shop here from time to time. I tried many other places where I could at least
use my degree, but nothing came through."
Feng is at least employed. With a monthly salary of 1,400 renminbi (205 U.S.
dollars) and an accommodation shared with her parents, she can continue to
look for something better while earning a modest living. But many of her
university friends are still without jobs, scouring job fairs and talent
recruitment centres.
An explosive report released by the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences
(CASS) in September said earnings of graduates were now at par and even
lower than those of migrant laborers. The news came as a blow to many
high-aspiring parents and youngsters in a country that has for centuries
prided itself on cultivating elite Confucian intelligentsia.
"What is the point of putting so much effort and time into getting a university
degree if at the end all you get is the salary of a migrant worker?" muses
Wang Lefu, who studied business management. "One needn’t have bothered
with exams and all the bureaucracy."
Unable to find a job to his liking, Wang is now applying to continue his
studies abroad. His parents run their own business and can support his
studies in Britain or Australia. "There the education should count for
something," Wang says, adding he hopes to land a job that can take him back
to China on a foreign salary. "In a year time the economic crisis should be
over and jobs would be easier to get."
But for China the global economic crisis has exacerbated a serious
unemployment crisis that has been many years in the making and that few
believe will disappear with the first symptoms of global recovery.
China’s official unemployment rate stands at about four percent. Yet a large
group of labourers — the communist state’s 150 million migrant laborers or
floating population, as they are sometimes termed here — is not taken into
account when unemployment figures are calculated.
When the global financial crisis hit last year — diminishing trade flows and
reducing manufacturing orders for China’s factories to a dribble — some 20
million migrants were estimated to have lost their jobs and returned home.
The pressure of resolving unemployment tension in the countryside this year
has been made even more difficult for Beijing by its growing pains of finding
jobs for the country’s surging numbers of university graduates.
Some 6.1 million graduates entered the job market this summer, 540,000
more than last year. In 2008 the employment rate for graduates was less than
70 percent. This year nearly two million of graduates, many of them
postgraduate diploma holders, are expected to be left without job
placements.
Students from Guangdong Province, China's wealthiest region, are so
desperate for work that they have been applying for jobs as nannies — and
getting rejected, a local paper reported earlier this year. Well-off employers
are said to prefer peasant girls with experience instead of English-speaking
graduates in business administration.
In its ‘Green Book of Population and Labour 2009’ published last month, the
CASS said the lack of trained and skilled workers as opposed to the surging
numbers of graduates has led to the emergence of an abnormal trend where
graduates are paid the same or even less than migrant labourers.
Beijing, where Feng gets her monthly income of 1,400 renminbi (205 U.S.
dollars), is one of the costliest cities in China. But the report found that
migrant laborers in southern China’s manufacturing belt could earn up to
1,500 renminbi (220 U.S. dollars) per month.
"It is definitely a trend," says Cai Fang, fellow at the Research Institute of
Population and Labour Economics at CASS. "On one hand it illustrates how
our labour market has become more integrated, but on the other hand it tells
a worrying story about how fierce the competition for employment has
become."
College graduates are frustrated, but so are their parents. Many of them have
invested their life savings in obtaining a university degree for their single
children. Not surprisingly, many of them blame the government for putting an
emphasis on higher education as a prerequisite for young people to prosper
in the 21st century China but failing to provide jobs.
The oversupply of college graduates started in 1999 when Chinese leaders
decided to counter some of the effects of the Asian financial crisis by
boosting university enrolments. They had hoped that a generation of well-
heeled educated urbanites would boost domestic consumption and help
reduce China’s dependence on exports.
Enrollment rose quickly, from three percent of college-age students in the
1980s to 20 percent today. The trend coincided with a very public effort by
Beijing to begin a process of retooling its manufacture-driven economy into a
high-knowledge economy.
But even when the economy was booming and creating more jobs, Beijing
was struggling to find employment for its growing number of diploma
holders. Many Chinese graduates major in computer sciences, law and
accounting, but the real demand was to fill specific technical fields.
The global financial crisis, with its hiring freezes and credit crunch that
choked enterprises’ expansion, made a bad situation only worse. At the
beginning of this year Beijing issued a call to all levels of government to
combat unemployment, particularly among new graduates. 2009 is a year
that marks the 20th anniversary of Tiananmen pro-democracy student
demonstrations, and Chinese leaders feared graduates’ job concerns might
snowball into social unrest.
Even as the global economy shows signs of recovery and Chinese economists
speak of "exit" strategies from the crisis, unemployment situation remains
grim.
"University graduates and migrant workers are among the groups that have
been most severely affected by the crisis," Yi Weimin, Human Resources and
Social Security Minister, admitted at a conference specially convened last
month to mitigate the news of the CASS report.
It is high time that young diploma holders lowered their expectations and
began to see the potential of many once neglected but well-paid jobs, he told
the media. "As a result of the crisis, there will be a change in values for our
graduates," Yi said.
In its latest move to ease graduate unemployment amid the downturn, Beijing
has ordered the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) to change its recruitment
standards to attract more female graduate students.
A statement issued by the conscription office of the Ministry of National
Defence last week indicated that from now on the PLA is going to judge its
women recruit candidates on their eloquence, artistic skills and appearance –
a sweeping change from previous recruitment standards that emphasised age
and height.
*This feature was produced by IPS Asia-Pacific under a series on the impact
of the global economic crisis on children and young people, in partnership
with UNICEF East Asia and the Pacific.
(END/2009)
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