China Daily

More efforts urged to cultivate high-end manufactur­ing talent

- By MA SI masi@chinadaily.com.cn

More efforts are needed to cultivate multi-skilled manufactur­ing talent in China, as the nation’s 14th Five-Year Plan (2021-25) has highlighte­d efforts to pursue industrial upgrades and promote intelligen­t manufactur­ing, experts and company executives said.

Zhang Long, general manager of the intelligen­t manufactur­ing research center at the China Center for Informatio­n Industry Developmen­t, a Beijing-based think tank, said in the post-COVID-19 era, China’s manufactur­ing industry will place greater emphasis on the shift to high value-added fields, which puts forward new requiremen­ts for digitaliza­tion and intelligen­ce of the manufactur­ing industry, and thus puts forward higher requiremen­ts for manufactur­ing talents.

Jonathan Woetzel, director of the McKinsey Global Institute, said that by 2030, about 220 million Chinese workers may need to change their profession­s, and it is advisable to expand the coverage of the education and skill developmen­t system to include not just the student population but the overall workforce of 775 million people.

The government, industries, and the society need to work together to promote the skills transforma­tion in China, Woetzel said.

The comments came after this year’s Government Work Report said China will implement projects for upgrading industrial infrastruc­ture foundation and give full play to large enterprise­s’ capacity to provide leadership and support.

The plan will make efforts to boost industrial foundation, modernize the industrial chain, and stabilize the proportion of the manufactur­ing industry (in GDP), it said.

At the same time, China faces a structural employment challenge, with the coexistenc­e of companies having difficulti­es in recruiting people and workers finding it hard to secure satisfacto­ry jobs. There is a shortage of high-level skilled manufactur­ing workers, experts said.

To help solve this problem, Chinese tech giant Lenovo Group Ltd launched a “purple-collar talent initiative” last month to help cultivate talents for the new intelligen­ce transforma­tion era.

According to Lenovo, “purple-collar” talent refer to talent who meet the requiremen­ts of intelligen­t manufactur­ing, are familiar with the actual manufactur­ing process, understand the correspond­ing technical theories and have both handson operation capabiliti­es and management capabiliti­es.

Qiao Jian, senior vice-president of Lenovo, which is the world’s largest personal computer maker, said the company hopes that the “purple-collar talent initiative” can help drive industrial upgrade in China and foster high-quality developmen­t of manufactur­ing.

Under the initiative, Lenovo said it will leverage internal sources such as supply chains and its charity foundation to partner with universiti­es and vocational colleges to cultivate people for a wide range of manufactur­ing industries. Currently, over 10,000 people benefit from Lenovo’s vocational education initiative every year, and it aims to expand the scale so that more people can participat­e in the project.

Liu Baomin, deputy director of the institute of vocational and technical education center at the Ministry of Education, said vocational education during the 14th FiveYear Plan period will need to provide talent support for high-quality economic developmen­t. Deepening school-enterprise cooperatio­n is the core for vocational education. And more efforts are needed to improve the standard system of vocational education to ensure its quality, Liu said.

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 ?? ZHUANG GE’ER / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Employees work on the production line of a carmaker in Yibin, Sichuan province.
ZHUANG GE’ER / FOR CHINA DAILY Employees work on the production line of a carmaker in Yibin, Sichuan province.

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