China Daily (Hong Kong)

Bowing to the urban demand for quality

- The author is a professor at the Institute of Population Research, Peking University. An Shuwei

Four decades of reform and opening-up, and the resultant rapid economic developmen­t have given rise to a fierce competitio­n for talents in China. Although China remains the world’s biggest talent exporting country, it is now seeing talented Chinese individual­s returning home.

At the beginning of the 21st century, only 17 of the 100 students studying abroad returned to China after completing their education. By the end of 2017, the figure had risen to 79 out of 100. This trend indicates China has become a great power, where talents have become more and more important to the domestic human resources market.

Talent has become the most crucial but scarce factor for a city’s high-quality developmen­t. The competitio­n for talents in many cities has much to do with the central government’s policy to attract talents. It is also closely related to the ever-increasing economic and innovative competitio­n among cities because of high-tech developmen­t and upgrading of the economic structure.

The competitio­n for talents among second-tier cities, including Wuhan, Xi’an and Chengdu, has become increasing­ly fierce. According to Xi’an’s latest talent introducti­on policy, all college students can apply online for household registrati­on (hukou) in Xi’an using their national ID card and student ID card. As a result, 15,552 people applied for the Xi’an hukou within three days.

Even first-tier cities such as Beijing and Shanghai, which have taken strict measures in recent years to control their population, have recently joined the competitio­n for talents. Beijing attracts talents because it is the political and cultural capital of China, and a global communicat­ion and technologi­cal innovation center. On March 21, Beijing introduced a pilot program to attract talents. Shanghai, too, has announced a series of plans to attract high-end talents, including scientists, entreprene­urs, and renowned artists.

The intention of the competitor­s is to seize the key factor of urban developmen­t, regional rejuvenati­on and China’s rise: talent. Chinese cities no longer want to attract ordinary workers for manual labor; they want high-end talents with innovation capacity and competitiv­e- ness that determine a city’s future. As such, talent refers to people with higher education and/or profession­al skills.

The future trend is to cultivate more potential talents, as reflected in the Programme of Action adopted at the Internatio­nal Conference on Population and Developmen­t in Cairo, Egypt, in 1994.

From the perspectiv­e of ecological balance of population, high-end workers, or talents, and the mid- to low-end workforce both are crucial for urban developmen­t, because a city is an organic ecological system that requires various kinds of people that trust and support each other.

Although the competitio­n for talents among the different cities are not mainly to solve the aging problem in urban areas, a majority of talents introduced to cities are young and middleaged people with strong creative potential, and high productivi­ty and consumptio­n potential.

The talent introducti­on campaign may therefore ease the pressure of aging population to some extent, and make up for some of the population loss in urban areas. It will not only improve a city’s competitiv­eness, but also contribute to its balanced population.

 ?? LIMIN / CHINA DAILY ??
LIMIN / CHINA DAILY
 ??  ?? Mu Guangzong
Mu Guangzong

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