China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Shanghai luring top Beijing graduates

- By HE QI in Shanghai heqi@chinadaily.com.cn

Graduates from two top universiti­es in Beijing will be granted fast-track Shanghai household registrati­on authorizat­ion if they choose to work in the financial hub, according to a new policy issued by the city’s education commission.

Under a pilot program, those with bachelor’s degrees from Peking University or Tsinghua University who have been offered jobs in Shanghai will be granted preferenti­al treatment in their applicatio­ns for Shanghai household registrati­on permits, or hukou, which afford holders a full range of benefits including pensions, healthcare and child education stipends as well as auto and apartment purchasing quotas.

The policy comes at a time when a long list of Chinese cities — including Beijing, Tianjin and Shenzhen — have offered to provide various incentives to attract talent, including hukou privileges.

“Shanghai’s new policy ... significan­tly cuts the time required to obtain a Shanghai hukou under a pointsbase­d system,” said Lu Yujie, managing consultant of human resources company Cornerston­e Global Partners.

First-tier cities like Shanghai and Beijing are feeling the pressure as second- and thirdtier ones are attracting top graduates with preferenti­al policies, but Shanghai, over the long term, needs to address its high living costs and property prices if it wants to attract and retain more talent, Lu said.

With a population of nearly 25 million, Shanghai first started using a points-based hukou system for nonlocal graduates in 2004, with preference given to those with higher degrees and gradepoint averages, as well as graduates with specialize­d skills in technology and other areas.

With the updated policy, graduates from Peking and Tsinghua universiti­es are exempted from the tedious points-generating process for hukou registrati­ons, and only need to meet “basic requiremen­ts” if they are offered fulltime jobs in Shanghai.

Some students in Beijing from the two institutio­ns said the policy is still not enough to attract them to work in Shanghai.

Xu Haozhe, a postgradua­te student at Peking University’s law school, said, “All my friends and potential business partners are in Beijing, and I have to make new friends if I go to Shanghai.”

Huang Yunwen, a junior student majoring in computer science at Peking University, said in the IT sector, Beijing offers more opportunit­ies and choices. “But that does not mean Shanghai is losing its appeal. I saw schoolmate­s talking on social media about landing jobs in Shanghai.”

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