Global Times

Wuhan battles to create jobs

Many firms are hiring, but market remains under pressure

- By Zhao Yusha in Wuhan and Wang Cong in Beijing

As many in Wuhan, Central China’s Hubei Province, are gradually returning to work after a lockdown due to the novel coronaviru­s epidemic, some are facing quite a predicamen­t: They have no jobs to return to.

That was on vivid display Monday, as job seekers in the city, undeterred by the pelting rain, formed long lines outside factories and businesses to apply for the limited positions offered.

While many companies in sectors such as manufactur­ing and services have started hiring and local officials have rolled out a flurry of measures from direct cash incentives to organizing hiring events, the overall job market in the city and the broader Hubei Province remains dire due largely to low business activity, job seekers, business insiders and analysts said. Many might not be able to get a job before the end of May as some small businesses are still struggling to get back on their feet, they added.

The gloomy employment situation in Wuhan also mirrors that of the entire country, as the coronaviru­s outbreak added pressure to an already challengin­g job market due to recent economic slowdowns and industrial transforma­tion.

Top Chinese officials paid much attention to employment, which is crucial not just economical­ly but also in terms of social stability, and more targeted measures might be necessary, analysts noted.

On Monday, the bad weather in Wuhan did not curb the enthusiasm of job seekers outside a local factory of manufactur­ing giant Foxconn Technology Group. Thickly dotting the empty field in front of the factory, which is half the size of a basketball playground, they filled the streets surroundin­g the factory.

“It is a difficult year,” Jiang Yang from Xianning, another city in Hubei Province, 76 kilometers from Wuhan, told the Global Times. Jiang came to Wuhan in late March hoping to

find a job but after knocking doors from one factory to another, he said he hasn’t heard any good news yet.

A manager for the factory, who only gave his surname as Dong, said that they saw a surge of job hunters this year as they restarted operation on April 9, one day after the city lifted the 76-day lockdown.

“Five or six hundred people came for interviews each day on average. In the past few years, no one came for interviews on rainy days, but today we still have hundreds pouring in to try their luck,” said Dong, noting Monday is the last day of his factory’s recruitmen­t drive.

There are encouragin­g signs, as the demand for workers are also surging in line with work resumption at major factories in the city, according to Zhu Liang, a representa­tive for career services provider BOSS Zhipin’s Wuhan division. For example, Foxconn, personal computer manufactur­e Lenovo and micro-electronic­s firm Wuhan Tianma are hiring more than 10,000 new workers this year.

Wuhan officials have also launched more than 300 online job fairs. On the jobs website operated by Wuhan’s Human Resources and Social Security Bureau, there were more than 168,000 job listings and over 131,000 applicants as of Monday. The city has also offered nearly 19,000 public welfare jobs.

However, that might not be able to absorb the layoffs from consumer-centric businesses such as catering and entertainm­ent, and the job market might not improve until the end of May, according to Dong Dengxin, director of the Finance and Securities Institute at Wuhan University of Science and Technology.

“As soon as these businesses return to normal, probably at the end of May in the best-case scenario, employment will be also boosted,” Dong Dengxin told the Global Times, whisking off risks for potential social turmoil stemming from rising unemployme­nt.

Extra pressure

Zhou Yulin from Hubei’s Huanggang city said she returned to Wuhan on the weekend after she lost her job in a factory in South China’s Guangdong Province.

“The Guangdong factory was ordered to shut down when the virus was rife. When it reopened, the manager told me I was no longer needed. I tried my luck at other factories in both Guangdong and Fujian provinces. But they all turned their back on me when they heard I came from Hubei Province,” said Zhou.

Zhou was not alone. Her experience was also shared by many job seekers waiting in front of Wuhan’s factories.

According to Dong, the manager at Foxconn, this year they have also seen a larger proportion of Hubei workers than previous years. “Ninty percent of job hunters are Hubei locals this year; previously they only accounted for roughly 70 percent at most,” he said.

Due to the gloomy situation, some have taken to lesser-paying jobs because there weren’t any better options.

Businesses also have no better options too when it comes to cutting paychecks.

National issue

What Tong and many in Wuhan have to face are also faced by people across the country, as the coronaviru­s epidemic has dealt a major shock to businesses and has led to massive economic losses.

In March, the unemployme­nt rate stood at 5.9 percent, slightly lower than the all-time high of 6.2 percent in February but sharply higher than the 3.62 percent in 2019, according to official data released on Friday.

“Wuhan is on the frontline in terms of stabilizin­g jobs, but this is very much a national issue. It is probably the most important issue because this is not just about the economy but also about people’s livelihood­s” Tian Yun, vice director of the Beijing Economic Operation Associatio­n, told the Global Times.

Top officials have also called for extra attention to the job market. A meeting of the Political Bureau of the Communist Party of China Central Committee held on Friday called for more efforts in “securing people’s basic livelihood­s,” a reference analysts say represents more priority in policy to stabilize the jobs market.

 ?? Photo: Li Hao/GT ?? A heavy downpour fails to stop a crowd in Wuhan, capital of Central China’s Hubei Province from gathering at Foxconn to apply for a job early Monday.
Photo: Li Hao/GT A heavy downpour fails to stop a crowd in Wuhan, capital of Central China’s Hubei Province from gathering at Foxconn to apply for a job early Monday.

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