China jobs: trash inspector with a master’s degree shows how ‘education reform is imminent’
- China’s people are highly educated, so where is the ‘talent dividend’? For many fresh graduates, ‘settling for an opportunity’ is the safer bet now
- China’s unemployment rate among those aged 16-24 continued its monthly rise in June, reaching 21.3 per cent
At 25 years old, Liu Maomao is no longer considered youthful by labour-demographic standards. And that means her unemployment is not reflected in the worsening job market among the 16-24 “youth”.
Instead, her lack of a job – as with other struggling adults in their mid-twenties – is now being reflected in the broader jobless rate.
“Hopefully I’ll finally get a job that takes more than a bachelor’s to do – such as sales – something that involves more thinking and innovation,” she said. “Otherwise, what was the point of me spending an extra three years on studies?”
It has been about a month since Liu finished her postgraduate studies at a university in central China’s Henan province. She has ideal jobs in mind, but she suspects it could take a few months to secure something desirable.
“The competition turned out to be fiercer than I imagined. There are many applicants even for positions that nobody would have cared to consider in the past few years,” said Liu, who has a master’s degree in tourism management and wants to work for a state-owned enterprise.