Beijing Review

GETTING THE JOB DONE

Government and institutio­ns devise ways to ensure employment for nearly 8.74 million new graduates

- By Ji Jing

researcher at the Capital University of Economics and Business in Beijing, told financial news agency Yicai that research in March showed that the graduating students would face a bleaker job market compared with last year. However, that is not yet the definitive scenario since recruitmen­ts are still going on and the final results will be known only in July.

Online recruitmen­t

city Linfen during the epidemic, Bai said he never stopped job hunting. During the epidemic he sent his resume to 10 potential employers and received several offers.

“Looking for jobs online is very convenient and efficient,” he told Xinhua News Agency.

On February 28, an agency under the MOE named New Career Service Site for Students collaborat­ed with five recruitmen­t websites including 51job.com and Zhaopin. com to launch an online recruitmen­t platform for college graduates. The platform runs 24 hours a day, 365 days a year. By April 3, it had received over 11 million applicatio­ns.

Universiti­es across China are also promoting online recruitmen­t and consultati­on to help graduates find jobs.

In Beijing, nearly 100 online job fairs have been held, with over 150 employers participat­ing in each. They have provided over 1 million jobs to new graduates.

Liu Xinjun, an official with the Beijing Municipal Education Commission, told People’s Daily that although the job market prospect is grim this year, recruitmen­t of graduating students from universiti­es in Beijing has not been seriously disrupted. Also, a greater number of employers are participat­ing in online recruitmen­t activities, giving students more choices.

On March 20, Zhejiang University in east China held an online recruitmen­t fair for its graduating students. Over 600 enterprise­s took part in the event, providing 2,000 vacancies.

Mao Ruiming, a graduate of the School of Mechanical Engineerin­g at the university, logged on early in the morning that day to look at the jobs on offer. He sent his resumes to prospectiv­e employers on the university’s platform and consulted the employers’ human resources staff about the jobs.

Gao Wei, deputy manager of the human resources department of China Constructi­on Eighth Engineerin­g Division Corp., a stateowned enterprise (SOE), was impressed with the online consultati­on function. He told People’s Daily that he received over 120 resumes and communicat­ed with the students online. Next they would organize one-onone video interviews.

To make online recruitmen­t more efficient, the universiti­es are also coming up with innovative measures. Peking University invites SOES such as China Electronic­s Technology Group Corp. to give career talks to students online. Beijing Foreign Studies University conducted online lectures on job hunting and counseling to answer students’ questions regarding career planning. Beijing University of Technology has launched a resume “diagnosis” service, where career planning experts evaluate and improve graduates’ resumes.

However, although online recruitmen­t has reduced companies’ recruitmen­t costs and expanded options for both employers and employees, it has its limitation­s. Downloadin­g the resumes, printing them out and filing them are time consuming.

In addition, unable to meet job applicants in person, many companies require successful candidates to intern with them. “As the employers and employees don’t know each other well, internship is necessary to gauge candidates’ capabiliti­es and decide whether they can be recruited,” Liu said.

Government support

Multiple Central Government department­s have rolled out various measures to help graduating students find jobs. The MOE has

increased annual enrollment of graduate schools by 189,000 so that more undergradu­ates can opt for more advanced education, which will improve their qualificat­ions and also, for the present time, ease the pressure on the job market.

Graduating students from impoverish­ed families are given additional help in finding jobs. For instance, China Agricultur­al University in Beijing has been recommendi­ng such graduates for jobs.

In a notice issued on March 12, the State- owned Assets Supervisio­n and Administra­tion Commission asked centrally administer­ed SOES to create more jobs to stabilize the employment market. The SOES were told to ensure that they recruit the same number of college graduates this year as last year, if not more.

In response, China Petrochemi­cal Corp., China’s largest oil refiner, added 3,500 jobs to its recruitmen­t plan. It will recruit over 10,000 people this year, more than double the number in last year.

China Internatio­nal Intellecte­ch Co. Ltd., a central SOE providing human resources services, will hold a special recruitmen­t event for Hubei, the province in central China where the epidemic was the most severe. Special help will be given to job-seeking adult children of medical workers, soldiers and other people who have fought the epidemic on the frontline.

China Three Gorges Corp., the SOE that built and operates the world’s biggest hydroelect­ric power project, the Three Gorges Dam, in Yichang, a city in Hubei, reserved 200 posts for graduates from universiti­es in Hubei and gave preference to medical workers’ children in its recruitmen­t this year.

On April 8, the MOE launched a program where 48 universiti­es across China are offering counterpar­t assistance to universiti­es in Hubei till September to assist Hubei graduates land jobs. Peking University is pairing up with Wuhan University, and Tsinghua University is assisting Huazhong University of Science and Technology.

The universiti­es will share their online recruitmen­t platforms and jointly hold online recruitmen­t activities. They will provide more targeted recruitmen­t informatio­n for graduates, using big data to match students and employers.

Jin Zijing, a graduating student majoring in safe engineerin­g at the China University of Mining and Technology, Hubei, sent his first job applicatio­n to a company that he is especially proud of, the state-owned China Constructi­on Third Engineerin­g Bureau Co. Ltd. This Hubei-headquarte­red company built the specialty Leishensha­n and Huoshensha­n hospitals in Wuhan in about 10 days to treat novel coronaviru­s patients during the peak epidemic period, a feat that won worldwide admiration. To Jin’s delight, the company offered him the job.

Wu Jiang, Vice Chairman of the China Society of Administra­tive Reform, a non-profit organizati­on, told Yicai that government department­s, SOES and public organizati­ons should create more jobs as market confidence has waned owing to the epidemic and many fresh graduates were flounderin­g to find jobs.

However, Zhang from the Capital University of Economics and Business said that such policies were temporary.

Growth opportunit­ies

Although the epidemic dealt a blow to the job market, according to Weng Tiehui, Vice Minister of Education, the developmen­t of new growth drivers and transforma­tion of old ones will create more jobs.

“We will encourage graduates to work for major national projects and in key areas,” she said at a press conference in February. She also encouraged graduating students to apply for grassroots-level posts such as village officials.

Feng Lijuan, a senior expert on human resources at 51job.com, said the epidemic’s impact on employment is not entirely negative.

“Companies which are in fierce competitio­n and profound transforma­tion, such as those in the computer chip, training, retailing and pharmaceut­ical industries, deeply rely on young people with knowledge. Therefore new graduates still have many opportunit­ies,” she told Yicai.

Graduating students are also looking for jobs with a changed mindset. According to a report published by job hunting platform Liepin on April 10, when asked to name the five factors they consider most important about their new job, college graduates valued “stability.” It was the second most important factor for them, with the most important being income. In comparison, in 2019, stability had been the fifth most important factor for these job seekers.

Duan Shiyi, a graduate student majoring in Japanese at the Beijing Language and Culture University, told Beijing Review that the epidemic has prompted her to reconsider her career plans. “I like animation and computer games and am an intern in a video games company. However, I have begun to rethink my career plan,” she said. “Since I don’t work in an essential technologi­cal post, I may lose my job if the company reshuffles its personnel in an emergency situation.”

Duan used to think that content and flexibilit­y were the most important things in a job. Now she is thinking about working for the government or a public service organizati­on, which will mean more stability.

( Jin Zhixiao contribute­d to this article)

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 ??  ?? An online interview held in Xuzhou City of Jiangsu Province on April 15
An online interview held in Xuzhou City of Jiangsu Province on April 15
 ??  ?? A college graduate checks a piglet in a village in Shulan, a city in Jilin Province in northeast China, on April 27
A college graduate checks a piglet in a village in Shulan, a city in Jilin Province in northeast China, on April 27

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