China jobs: street vending returns as popular, and sometimes lucrative, side hustle
- In a difficult economic time when jobs are hard to come by, selling wares and trinkets on the streets has growing appeal
- Shanghai is among cities encouraging people to set up street stalls in designated areas, and vendors are seeing more foot traffic in a post-Covid China
Just two weeks after Linda Xiong started posting online about her street-vending experience, around 900 like-minded netizens joined the group chats she created on Xiaohongshu, China’s Instagram-like platform.
Discussing ideal locations to set up street stalls, and popular goods among passers-by, some hoped to take on a side hustle after work, while others were looking to be full-time street vendors.
“I really don’t want to go back to work in the office,” one said.
“I just lost my job,” another said.
“The government is encouraging people to set up street stalls in designated areas. So, I resumed business,” said the 31-year-old who sells mainly hand-knit toys near shopping malls around Shanghai. “So far, it’s not bad. I can make 20,000 yuan (US$2,900) a month if I work for most of the day.”