Global Times

College graduates face tough job hunt

▶ Education ministry estimates 10.76 million will hit market in 2022

- By GT staff reporters Page Editor: xiongxinyi@ globaltime­s. com. cn

“Iam paying close attention to the employment situation in 2022, as I am graduating next year,” a third- year university student based in East China’s Jiangxi Province surnamed Niu expressed his concern regarding the current job market, in an interview with the Global Times on Wednesday.

Niu’s concerns came as the number of graduates in 2022 is expected to hit a record high of 10.76 million, exceeding 10 million for the first time and 1.67 million more than 2021, according to the Ministry of Education.

Although the domestic job market is facing increasing pressure due to the ongoing COVID- 19 epidemic, authoritie­s in China have been implementi­ng supportive policies in attempt to ease the situation.

A total of 2.85 million new jobs were created in the first quarter of 2022, completing 26 percent of the annual target, Chen Yongjia, an official from the Ministry of Human Resources and Social Security said at a press briefing on Wednesday.

Chen further emphasized that the overall recruitmen­t situation remains stable.

Chen noted that the ministry will continue to prioritize and promote the employment of college graduates while working jointly with relevant department­s to meet their job seeking needs with strengthen­ed support.

Industry reports and experts said that college graduates in the first quarter are facing growing employment challenge amid the country’s battle against the latest Omicron outbreak, and a slowdown in economy.

Mounting pressure

China’s urban surveyed unemployme­nt rate averaged 5.5 percent in the first quarter, 0.1 percentage point higher than the same period of 2021, the National Bureau of Statistics said earlier this month.

Job seekers in the first three months of the year faced a markedly more competitiv­e labor market especially with a surge in demand combined with a reduction on the supply side, according to a report jointly conducted by zhaopin. com, one of China’s largest online recruitmen­t platforms, and the China Institute for Employment Research ( CIER) at Renmin University of China.

Decreased job opportunit­ies were largely the result of localized COVID- 19 outbreaks while some enterprise­s underwent structural transforma­tion, according to the report, adding that the return of more Chinese students from abroad has aggravated competitio­n.

Industry- wise, job vacancies are dropping for some previous popular choices following tightened regulation on off- campus tutoring and recent layoffs by a few internet giants, according to zhaopin. com.

The demand for jobs in the BeijingTia­njin- Hebei region has remained stable on a quarterly basis, while demand in the Yangtze River Delta and Pearl River Delta regions fell by 5 percent and 13 percent respective­ly, affected by local COVID- 19 outbreaks. The number of job seekers in the Beijing

Tianjin- Hebei region, and the Yangtze River Delta and Pearl River Delta regions however rose by 18 percent, 35percent and 37 percent, respective­ly.

Moving forward, how the labor market would evolve in the coming months is uncertain and will in large part depend on domestic epidemic control and the global situation, Zeng Xiangquan, director of CIER said on Tuesday.

Strengthen­ed support

At the press conference on Wednesday, Chen stressed that the ministry will implement a range of measures targeting four aspects including expanding recruitmen­t channels, enhancing the promotion of available occupation­s to graduates, while strengthen­ing support to provide more internship opportunit­ies and assisting students who need additional help.

The Ministry of Human Resources and Social Security has already started a campaign to offer employment guidance to graduates on campuses across the country, while implementi­ng online events for students affected by the ongoing COVID- 19 outbreak. Since March, more than 10,000 events connected to the campaign have been organized, providing informatio­n for nearly five million jobs and reaching almost six million graduates.

Meanwhile, analysts noted that jobs demand for some emerging industries such as biomedicin­e and smart manufactur­ing have been growing thanks to the country’s continuous support.

The long- term developmen­t for industries like biomedicin­e and smart manufactur­ing will be bright as the central government vowed to support the real economy, and high- tech manufactur­ing, Mao Yufei, a research fellow at CIER told the Global Times.

Although it would be difficult to make up the current demand gap by solely relying on technology- driven manufactur­ing industries, the developmen­t potential for these industries over the long run will be positive, Li Qiang, executive vice- president of zhaopin. com told the Global Times on Tuesday at the press briefing.

While responsibl­e authoritie­s have been enhancing efforts to support the labor market, domestic recruitmen­t platforms have also been working nonstop in a bid to promote the highqualit­y employment suited for college graduates.

For instance, Li noted that zhaopin. com has organized multiple online and offline events.

The company has offered different services at the same time to connect graduates directly with enterprise­s amid the outbreak in order to alleviate the immediate need for employment.

Experts also stressed the importance of exploring the possibilit­y of setting up a data monitoring system

to track national recruitmen­t data.

 ?? Photo: cnsphoto ?? Two college graduates read a job descriptio­n at a recruitmen­t fair held in Taiyuan, North China’s Shanxi Province on February 8, 2022.
Photo: cnsphoto Two college graduates read a job descriptio­n at a recruitmen­t fair held in Taiyuan, North China’s Shanxi Province on February 8, 2022.

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