The Jerusalem Post

As China’s economy slows, migrants head home

- • By SUE-LIN WONG

BEIJING (Reuters) – Every summer in Bianqiang village in northweste­rn China, locals gather for three nights of Chinese opera. There are children’s rides, popcorn and spit-roasted chickens. Grandparen­ts watch over their grandchild­ren.

This summer’s event was different because more young parents were present. In previous years they had left their children in the care of grandparen­ts while they found work in nearby cities and towns. But as China’s economy slows, jobs for migrant workers are drying up and they are heading back home.

China’s official unemployme­nt rate has been about 4% for years, despite the rapid slowdown in the economy from double-digit growth to quarter-century lows last year of less than 7%.

But the real level of unemployme­nt or underemplo­yment is masked by the fact that the official data does not include China’s 277 million migrant workers, such as Zhang Sihu and his wife from Bianqiang in Yulin, a region rich in coal, oil and natural gas in northweste­rn Shaanxi province.

At the height of China’s real-estate boom in Yulin a few years ago, they made 10,000 yuan a month, running a canteen for constructi­on workers. That was double the average migrant wage. But the boom is now over.

“It became too difficult to turn a profit last year, so I closed the canteen and went to find work as a cook,” said Zhang, who left Bianqiang village 14 years ago. “But it was difficult finding work, no one was hiring, and when I did find a job, I was let go after a few months. Business wasn’t good, so the boss is now running the restaurant himself.”

Zhang and his wife have now returned to their home village and are back on the family farm with their children and parents, raising 200 head of cattle.

“It’s a big problem because migrant workers can’t find jobs in the city,” a government official at Yulin’s bureau of commerce said. “But if they stay in their hometowns, their income is very low.”

Business surveys, which economists say may be the best monthly measure of the broader labor market, have shown renewed job shedding in both manufactur­ing and services.

“Migrant workers are a very elastic part of the labour pool that aren’t captured anywhere [in official statistics],” said Julia Wang, an economist with HSBC in Hong Kong. “If you look at what’s happened to the migrant-worker pool over the past two years, the trend of people going to cities has slowed significan­tly.”

STATE JOBS

Government data shows the number of migrant workers rose 0.4% in 2015, the weakest increase since the global financial crisis in 2009. Migrants searching for jobs outside of their home province fell in 2015 for the first time in six years.

It is not only migrant workers losing out. Employees of stateowned enterprise­s (SOE) and other larger firms are also being hit by stagnant or lower wages, underemplo­yment and less job security.

Reuters reported in March that China was aiming to layoff five million to six million state workers in the next two to three years.

Wang Mei said she and her husband were working for PetroChina, China’s biggest oil-andgas producer, in Inner Mongolia, but they moved home to Suide county in Yulin after their salaries were slashed.

“The economy isn’t doing well, our child is here in Suide, this is where we grew up, so we decided to move back,” she said, adding she worked in maintenanc­e and her husband worked in IT at PetroChina. “I think it was difficult for my husband to decide to quit his job. It’s more stable working at a state-owned enterprise, but his salary dropped from over 4,000 yuan per month to 2,000 yuan, so he finally decided to quit.”

A spokesman for PetroChina said the company was trying to keep salaries of frontline workers stable, but he declined to comment on this particular case or recent salary trends for back-office staff.

Wang has found temporary work at a local government service office in Suide while her husband considers his next move.

“Maybe he’ll start his own business – an e-commerce store,” she said. “Lots of people are doing that. But I don’t want him to blindly become an entreprene­ur. That wouldn’t be good.”

The government is trying to support employment, including by propping up insolvent SOEs, increasing retraining programs and encouragin­g people to become entreprene­urs.

“You know how it is: You show up, have a chat, drink some tea, read the newspaper, sit around, don’t really do anything,” said an employee of a SOE in Yulin, who gave his surname as Liu. “Twothirds of people don’t do any work at our SOE.”

Start-up spaces have begun popping up around Yulin, which several government officials said was aimed at encouragin­g the creation of new businesses to counter the slowdown in economic growth.

Bai Huifang, 25, manages an incubator decked out with bamboo plants, a pool table and a stage draped in Communist Party parapherna­lia. It housed 32 start-ups in 2015, but only one was successful­ly funded, Bai said, adding: “A big reason why we’re able to survive is because of government funding. And the government is happy we exist because they are grappling with rising unemployme­nt.”

‘It’s a big problem because migrant workers can’t find jobs in the city. But if they stay in their hometowns, their income is very low’

 ?? (Sue-Lin Wong/Reuters) ?? VILLAGERS WATCH a local opera in Bianqiang village in northweste­rn China earlier this year. This summer’s event was different because more young parents were present. In previous years they had left their children in the care of grandparen­ts while they...
(Sue-Lin Wong/Reuters) VILLAGERS WATCH a local opera in Bianqiang village in northweste­rn China earlier this year. This summer’s event was different because more young parents were present. In previous years they had left their children in the care of grandparen­ts while they...

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