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ā€˜Zero cases’ aim back in China, now for graduate unemployment

Tough job market forces authorities to introduce measures aimed at simplifying graduates’ entry into the workplace

Published on
June 13, 2023
Last updated
June 13, 2023
Source: iStock

With a record-breaking number of graduates facing another tough year of job hunting in China, authoritiesĀ are increasing pressure on institutions to help their students find work and looking again at policies thatĀ might be harming recruitment.

In anĀ  published at the end of May, the education department for Henan Province said institutions should follow a strategy akin toĀ China’s zero-CovidĀ policy – known asĀ ā€œdynamic zero-caseā€ – butĀ aimed at eradicating all cases of graduate unemployment instead.

The directive did not specify what universitiesĀ would be required to do to achieve the goal but it is believed actions will include steps such as organisingĀ career fairs and asking universities to match specificĀ positions with students.

The plan was prepared in response to the calling of a nationwide ā€œ100-day sprintā€ by the Chinese Ministry of Education to boost the graduate employment rate.

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This followed another measureĀ aimed atĀ streamliningĀ the job search for university graduates. The Ministry of Human Resources and Social Security of China Ā it had stopped requiring graduates toĀ use the ā€œregistration cardā€, a system that logs graduates’ job records after leaving universities.

Students had complained that the card – a relic from the days when university graduatesĀ were given jobs automatically under the planned economy – complicated theĀ graduation procedureĀ because it required travelling to different offices in different cities toĀ obtain the documentation.

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Dian Liu, associate professor in the Department of Media and Social Sciences at the University of Stavanger, said theĀ measures represented ā€œprogressā€Ā in the government’s efforts to simplify working processes for graduates and facilitate graduate employment.

The country had experiencedĀ a harsh graduate employment situation in recent years, especially since the pandemic, which is not yet seen as over in China, she said.

Nearly 20Ā per cent ofĀ 16- toĀ 24-year-olds are not working, according toĀ Ā published inĀ March, with universities being partly blamed for the situation.

It has been reported that the number of university graduates in China is estimated to reach 11.58 million this year, another peak after it surpassed 10 million for the first time last year.

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The tough reality has led to governmentĀ pressure on both institutions and industries, including theĀ mandatory requirement for vice-chancellors to visit companies in person. Experts have also called for institutions to adjust the designĀ of their programmes to cater for students’ job prospects.

Although she welcomed the new policies, Dr Liu called for ā€œother supporting measures at the local levelā€: for example, looking at the country’s household registration system, which she said ā€œrestricts the mobility of graduates and young job seekersā€ to move away from home while looking for work.Ā 

ā€œI look forward to measures breaking the restrictions, especially for those from socio-economically disadvantaged backgrounds.ā€ she added.

ā€œAs well as measures to promote opportunities for female graduates and gender equality, in nexus with the many male-oriented or male-prioritised social norms in society.ā€

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karen.liu@timeshighereducation.com

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