Guardian Unlimited -
17 hours and 19 minutes ago
divimg alt=""
src="http://hits.guardian.co.uk/b/ss/guardiangu-feeds/1/H.15.1/75372?ns=guardianpageName=World+news%3A+Millions+of+Chinese+graduates+out+of+work+after+fivefold+rise+in+university+placesch=World+newsc3=The+Guardianc4=China+%28News%29%2CInternational+education+news%2CEducation%2CWorld+newsc5=Not+commercially+useful%2CEducation+Weekly+Education%2CStudents+Educationc6=Tania+Braniganc7=2008_12_04c8=1128381c9=articlec10=GUc11=World+newsc12=Chinac13=c14=h2=GU%2FWorld+news%2FChina"
width="1" height="1" //divpSu Yinyin's family were thrilled when she won a place at university. As
impoverished farmers, they knew it promised a comfortable middle-class life and a giant step up the
social ladder for their daughter./ppBut now Su, 21, is wondering whether she can reach the next
rung. As she looked around the heaving employment fair in Beijing, where 10,000 job-seekers vied
for the attention of recruiters, she acknowledged that her parents' pride was increasingly tinged
with anxiety. "When I became a student, it was both happy and worrying for my family," she said.
"We are not rich. I took loans for university. I just hope I can get a stable job after graduation
and repay them."/ppMore than 6 million Chinese students left university this year and up to a
quarter are still struggling to find work. As the global slowdown bites, students such as Su know
it can only get worse./pp"The grim economic situation poses an unprecedented challenge for college
graduates to get a proper job," the ministry of education warned yesterday./ppBut the problems
predate the crisis and mark both a success and failure on China's part. "The number of graduates
increased too quickly - by 2006 there were already five times more than in 1999. The labour market
can't take that big an increase in such a short time," said Professor Yang Dongping of the Beijing
Institute of Technology, the author of a report on graduate employment./ppThe expansion of higher
education reflects China's aspirations: the world's factory needs more skilled workers to move up
the chain, away from cheap mass production. Yet there are not yet enough higher-end jobs. Four
million graduates in recent years have yet to find their first job, according to officials.
However, the true figure is probably higher as the current system relies on reporting by
universities, who have a vested interest in showing that graduates can find work./ppGraduates are
now competing with people made redundant. "I've had interviews, but they want people with
experience," said Liu Jing, who has been job-hunting for six months. "There are more graduates, so
there are more competitors for every post."/ppLike Su, she hails from a farming family; she had
hoped to earn 2,000-3,000 yuan (pound;200-pound;300) a month to pay off her 20,000 yuan education
bill. Now the 21-year-old will settle for 1,000 yuan./ppHigher expectations are clashing with the
deteriorating economic reality./ppUntil 1981, the government assigned jobs, with those who dreamed
of becoming engineers sometimes ending up as cooks or clerks. But while their parents took the work
they were given, these students grew up in an age of personal choice. They expect fulfilling jobs
and good remuneration; few want to leave the big cities or take up underpaid teaching work./ppGuo
Qing, 22, should not have been at the fair at all: he found a design job after graduating this
summer. But he admitted he packed it in not long afterwards. "I was very picky when looking for
jobs before. I felt this or that didn't fit me. Later I realised it was my problem,
psychologically," he said. "Our education was idealistic. But you realise the gulf between realism
and idealism once you reach the real world. When you're job hunting you have to be
practical."/ppYang thinks China needs to change, too. "Only 6% of the labour force has higher
education, much lower than in most developed countries. There have to be structural problems," he
said./ppSpending per student has slumped by almost two-thirds and most investment has gone into new
buildings. Yang said that meant a drop in teaching quality and an explosion in liberal arts
courses, while resource-hungry subjects such as engineering have lagged behind./ppThe government is
reining back expansion and promising more help with job-hunting. But many of this year's graduates
are hoping for more direct support. On Sunday, a record 775,000 applicants sat civil service exams
- 130,000 more than last year - for only 13,500 jobs./pp"I didn't think of beating so many
candidates," one graduate told the state media. "But I have to - because I've submitted my
reacute;sumeacute; to about 60 firms and got only 10 replies, and no offers." /pp·
Additional research by Chen Shi/pdiv style="float: left; margin-right: 10px; margin-bottom:
10px;"ullia href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/china"China/a/lilia
href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/education/internationaleducationnews"International education
news/a/li/ul/diva href="http://www.guardian.co.uk"guardian.co.uk/a copy; Guardian News Media
Limited 2008 | Use of this content is subject to our a
href="http://users.guardian.co.uk/help/article/0,,933909,00.html"Terms Conditions/a | a
href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/webfeeds/1,,1309488,00.html"More Feeds/a pa
href="http://feedads.googleadservices.com/~at/8T8vZCh3c7tqIl2s6KGZHfJL3n0/a"img
src="http://feedads.googleadservices.com/~at/8T8vZCh3c7tqIl2s6KGZHfJL3n0/i" border="0"
ismap="true"/img/a/p

|