Home / China / Features Tools: Save | Print | E-mail | Most Read | Comment
Job crisis poses challenges and presents opportunities
Adjust font size:

Prospects are perplexing

This is a high-pressure time. For years degrees have been considered passports to job success. Parents pressure their only child to excel in school, get into a good college, get an excellent job, make good money and take care of their family.

A job fair held in Zhengzhou, central China’s Henan Province, on March 15, 2009, attract more than 50,000 university graduates.

A job fair held in Zhengzhou, central China's Henan Province, on March 15, 2009, attract more than 50,000 university graduates.


When the jobs aren't out there, the slaving for good grades doesn't pay off right away. Anxiety rises when graduates have to improvise. The idea of striking out on their own and starting a business is unsettling to most.

The central and local governments have taken steps to help graduates find work. There are slightly more civil service job slots. Grants and incentives are provided to some lucky young entrepreneurs. The government also provides cash and other incentives to those who move for work to rural and underdeveloped areas.

Lucky grads

There are lucky graduates like Xiao He from Shanghai University, who finally got an accounting job at a bank and a satisfying salary.

"I made many applications and tried giant companies like the 'Big Four' accounting agencies. But mostly there was no response," Xiao says. She feels insecure and worries about her future in the bank. "There are many elements that influence success: abilities, opportunities and guanxi (connections) - it's very complicated and I'm not confident about all of these."

So, she plans to study in her spare time for an advanced degree.

"If my career doesn't go well, maybe I'll quit and study abroad.

Many Chinese graduates study abroad, but in these hard times those whose families can afford it may aim for advanced studies abroad right away, avoiding the job market for now.

Going abroad

Conan Gao from Shanghai International Studies University plans to study English literature at a US university after he graduates in June. He is waiting to learn in May if he has been admitted.

"Competition in today's job market is too heated for us undergraduates because we only have a bachelor's degree - that's not competitive enough," he says. "And, after four years of study, we still have no job experience."

More graduates are taking the post-graduate exam, he says, "because of the depressing job market." And again there's so much competition and everything rides on that one score.

"So I choose to study abroad as there's less competition," he adds.

This year, 96,456 college students have taken the post-graduate exam in Shanghai, 6.6 percent more than that in 2008, according to Shanghai Education and Examination Institute.

Study in China

Many graduates can't afford to go abroad or study for a master's degree in China - putting off the day when they face the job market.

Richard Gu from Tongji University has just learned his score in the post-graduates' entrance exam - it's not bad. Now he's waiting for the announcement of the score line for entrance.

"I really hope I can succeed since I've devoted all my time to study. It would be terrible to fail to get into grad school because I have no experience in finding a job. I had no time to do such a thing before."

Civil service

Another option is working for the government. Graduates used to look down upon common civil servants and take for granted they would enter the far better-paid private sector.

But government service is now more popular than ever in the shrinking job market because it's "secure and stable." So the civil service exams are thronged. Graduates see that private companies have folded and laid off workers; that sector is less secure.

In Shanghai, more than 40,000 people took the latest exam, 2,541 more than last year, but it's not easy to get hired.

After passing the exam and an interview, less than 10 percent of those who took the exam will finally become civil servants.

Laura Zheng from East China University of Political Science and Law passed the exam and is awaiting the result of her interview.

"Civil service is very secure and the salary is good. I think my personality is suitable. It's much easier than working in companies since there's less pressure," she says.

In addition to security, the salary and benefits of civil service have been improving slowly.

Start up

Going it alone, starting a business and toiling for uncertain profit is virtually everyone's last choice if they cannot find a job.

The government and universities encourage young entrepreneurs and there are grants, tax incentives and other benefits.

According to a 2007 city government survey, only about 1 percent of college graduates started their own business. And of those, only 2-3 percent could really succeed. The numbers are probably higher today but the prospects are still daunting.

Sarah Yang and civil servant-wannabe Zheng are classmates. Yang has deliberately chosen a riskier course as an entrepreneur. She just quit her office job to take the plunge. "I want to open a shop with my friends, selling clothes and little toys," says Yang. They hope to get financial support from the Communist Youth League Committee of Shanghai. A grant from the league would free them from paying house rent and other fees for a year.

Although the economic crisis is a major cause of the job crisis, there are other reasons: rapidly expanding higher education, the belief that a degree ensures success, the phenomenon of what some call "diploma mills," lack of practical skills and unreasonably high expectations for success and money.

"Many graduates lack practical abilities," says Zheng who hopes for civil service.

"This is a problem of our education system. Unrealistic expectations are another big obstacle."

     1   2   3    


Tools: Save | Print | E-mail | Most Read
Comment
Pet Name
Anonymous
China Archives
Related >>