China Daily

New youth visa category could boost exchanges

- By ZHAO YIMENG and LI MENGHAN Contact the writers at zhaoyimeng@chinadaily.com.cn

Amity between people, which should start from youth-to-youth communicat­ion, holds the key to sound state-to-state relations.”

Liu Aiping, Party secretary of the China Internatio­nal Youth Exchange Center

A national political adviser has proposed to add a new visa category that allows more young people around the world to participat­e in work-based cultural and educationa­l exchanges during their gap years to deeply integrate into the country.

Liu Aiping, a member of the National Committee of the Chinese People’s Political Consultati­ve Conference, said the new visa category could allow young people to have part-time jobs to cover their expenses during a year of travel in China.

“The new visa would be different from a work visa, which has complicate­d applicatio­n procedures. It would be the kind that enables foreigners to get paid while holding a short-term visitor visa or student visa,” said Liu, who is also Party secretary of the China Internatio­nal Youth Exchange Center.

Similar visa categories have been set up in other countries. The J-1 visa in the United States allows individual­s to join work and study visitor programs such as Bridge USA. The program attracts about 100,000 internatio­nal students each year to engage in paid internship­s in the US during summer vacations, Liu said.

“Based on the current X1 visa for long-term students in China and the Z visa for employment in China, we propose that the department­s including the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the National Immigratio­n Administra­tion and the Ministry of Human Resources and Social Security could look into the introducti­on of working holiday visas, in a bid to offer a more immersive experience and facilitate better integratio­n for foreign youths in China,” she said.

Based on her work experience with young people, Liu found that those who visited China had a better impression of the country than those who did not, and the longer they stayed, the more rationally they viewed the country.

A pilot program could be initiated before the introducti­on of the new visa category, inviting foreign youth annually to participat­e in shortterm paid work in China, she said.

Apart from adding a new visa category, more policy and financial support, including subsidies to encourage overseas voluntary service, can be instrument­al in advancing global youth communicat­ion and enhancing understand­ing of China, Liu proposed.

“Amity between people, which should start from youth-to-youth communicat­ion, holds the key to sound state-to-state relations,” she said.

Her proposal to the second session of the 14th CPPCC National Committee follows China’s repeated emphasis on the significan­ce of interactio­n between its citizens and those from other countries.

Having engaged in global communicat­ion for years, Liu pointed out that China faces limitation­s due to the relatively small scale and low subsidy standards of its overseas volunteeri­ng programs.

“During the 14th Five-Year plan (2021-25), it is suggested to dispatch around 200 volunteers each year to countries involved in the Belt and Road Initiative.”

Liu also underscore­d the unique roles of overseas Chinese-funded enterprise­s in global youth communicat­ion.

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