China’s education spending remains resolute despite harsh lesson of economic woes
Even with China’s economic slowdown forcing people to reduce spending on big-ticket items, spending on education remains a priority
When Wendy Xiao was told she would have to take a nearly 20 per cent pay cut earlier this month, her immediate thought was to make a list of non-essential items.
As a middle-level manager of a Guangzhou-based state-owned enterprise, she had to come to terms with the fact she might not be able to buy her beloved vintage clothes, Japanese ceramic tableware, or afford her trip to Central Europe planned for early next year.
“The state-owned enterprise system has seen an overall decline in pay, and it is not a financial problem that can be solved by a single company.”
The only expense she refused to cut was the close to 100,000 yuan (US$14,00) a year spending on education, including tutoring fees, for her 16-year-old son.