China’s growing band of university graduates must lower their expectations for landing prized jobs and schools should offer more practical training to help them in a picky job market, a senior education official said yesterday.
Chinese colleges and universities have greatly expanded recruitment in recent years, as part of the government’s drive to spur domestic consumption and create a more skilled workforce.
Yet many graduates are having a hard time finding jobs that justify the heavy investment made by their families. More than 6.6 million people will graduate from colleges and universities in China this year, a rise of about 300,000 over last year.
With the numbers in higher education constantly growing, the government faces an increasing challenge to find them not only jobs, but good jobs.
“The employment of graduates is an issue that has attracted wide concern, and is one the [government] pays great attention to,” Sun Xiaobing (孫宵兵), head of the Chinese Ministry of Education’s policy and regulations department, told a news conference.
While the government had a role to play in supporting graduates’ job searches, the onus was also on the young people, Sun added.
Graduates must “dare to go to places to work where the country, society and the people have the most need” and “not only look at the big cities or the best work positions,” he said.
“In recent years, many graduates have gone to [work in] the countryside or the army, which has been well received by society. I hope they continue to do this and make even greater contributions to the country,” Sun said.
Universities must also tailor courses to suit more vocational needs so graduates can find jobs that are needed by the economy, he added.
“Students must be able to study what is useful so that they can fulfill the development needs of society,” Sun said.
Almost 91 percent of graduates had found work as of the end of last year, according to government figures. China’s registered urban jobless rate — the only official measure of unemployment and one that private economists say does not fully reflect the job market — remained at 4.1 percent at the end of last year.
China has more than economic reasons to fear graduate unemployment. It is also a potential political time bomb.
Pro-democracy protests bloodily suppressed by the army in 1989 were led by radicalized students.
The government has worried that unsettling discontent could spread again as more and more graduates, whose families have paid steeply for their education, look for work.
Sun said he was confident the government would be able to tackle the issue of graduate employment.
“The situation is getting better and better every year,” he said.
MONEY GRAB: People were rushing to collect bills scattered on the ground after the plane transporting money crashed, which an official said hindered rescue efforts A cargo plane carrying money on Friday crashed near Bolivia’s capital, damaging about a dozen vehicles on highway, scattering bills on the ground and leaving at least 15 people dead and others injured, an official said. Bolivian Minister of Defense Marcelo Salinas said the Hercules C-130 plane was transporting newly printed Bolivian currency when it “landed and veered off the runway” at an airport in El Alto, a city adjacent to La Paz, before ending up in a nearby field. Firefighters managed to put out the flames that engulfed the aircraft. Fire chief Pavel Tovar said at least 15 people died, but
LIKE FATHER, LIKE DAUGHTER: By showing Ju-ae’s ability to handle a weapon, the photos ‘suggest she is indeed receiving training as a successor,’ an academic said North Korea on Saturday released a rare image of leader Kim Jong-un’s teenage daughter firing a rifle at a shooting range, adding to speculation that she is being groomed as his successor. Kim’s daughter, Ju-ae, has long been seen as the next in line to rule the secretive, nuclear-armed state, and took part in a string of recent high-profile outings, including last week’s military parade marking the closing stages of North Korea’s key party congress. Pyongyang’s official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) released a photo of Ju-ae shooting a rifle at an outdoor shooting range, peering through a rifle scope
South Korea would soon no longer be one of the few countries where Google Maps does not work properly, after its security-conscious government reversed a two-decade stance to approve the export of high-precision map data to overseas servers. The approval was made “on the condition that strict security requirements are met,” the South Korean Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport said. Those conditions include blurring military and other sensitive security-related facilities, as well as restricting longitude and latitude coordinates for South Korean territory on products such as Google Maps and Google Earth, it said. The decision is expected to hurt Naver and Kakao
India and Canada yesterday reached a string of agreements, including on critical mineral cooperation and a “landmark” uranium supply deal for nuclear power, the countries’ leaders said in New Delhi. The pacts, which also covered technology and promoting the use of renewable energy, were announced after Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney hailed a fresh start in the relationship between their nations. “Our ties have seen a new energy, mutual trust and positivity,” Modi said. Carney’s visit is a key step forward in ties that effectively collapsed in 2023 after Ottawa accused New Delhi