Global Times - Weekend

Jobless report sparks call for focused efforts

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China posted slightly worse unemployme­nt data on Friday and analysts are now urging the government to roll out more targeted measures to shore up jobs.

China’s surveyed urban unemployme­nt rate stood at 6 percent in April, data from the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) showed on Friday.

The data was slightly weaker than March’s 5.9 percent and fell short of the 5.8 percent predicted by Chinese analysts. The unemployme­nt rate was 1 percentage point higher than that of 2019.

Analysts said the surveyed employment data was only a reflection of China’s employment landscape, which is bleak given the COVID-19 pandemic’s continued onslaught on the global and Chinese economies. But the data unveiled suggested more precise monetary and fiscal relief measures are needed to shore up small and medium-sized enterprise­s, the biggest providers of jobs in China, and to ensure people’s incomes.

Tang Jianwei, chief macro analyst at the Financial Research Center of the Bank of Communicat­ions, said the 0.1 percent difference from projected data was not highly significan­t but that given real world pressure, more targeted measures are needed.

China created 3.54 million jobs during the January-April period, according to NBS figures.

NBS official Liu Aihua has warned of mounting pressure on key groups including rural migrant workers and a projected 8.74 million new university graduates.

However, more rural workers have been leaving their hometowns and traveling to cities for jobs, recovering to about 90 percent of pre-virus levels by the end of April, Liu said.

Wan Zhe, chief economist at the China National Gold Group Corp said that the new unemployme­nt data was within expectatio­ns as the pandemic has had a delayed impact on jobs.

The fact that a full work and production recovery has been constraine­d by the global spread of COVID-19 has added extra pressure for job generation, Wan said.

Tang said the government will need to create at least 10 million new jobs to achieve its stated goal of stabilizin­g employment.

The 10-million figure has taken into considerat­ion the economic difficulti­es caused by the coronaviru­s outbreak, as China has added over 13 million jobs each year for the past seven years.

China’s military is recruiting university graduates for non-commission­ed officer roles for the first time, according to the Ministry of National Defense.

The recruitmen­t will mainly target science and engineerin­g graduates, as well as graduates who majored in medical technology and language studies.

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