The Star Malaysia

Poorly educated workers threaten China’s growth

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BEIJING: China has a growing economic problem – a massive education gap between rural and urban areas.

Privileged city kids attend well-funded schools and their afterschoo­l hours are crammed with music lessons and extra study sessions.

Ninety percent of them go on to finish high school.

But those kids lucky enough to be born in cities account for only about one-quarter of China’s children.

The rest live in villages in the countrysid­e, where schools are underfunde­d and fees too high for the poorest families.

As a result, only about 24% of rural students finish high school.

While China is the second largest economy in the world, it has the least educated workforce of any middle-income country. Mexico, South Africa, Turkey and Thailand all do better.

When factory jobs were abundant, uneducated and unskilled workers could still find well-paid employment.

But labour-intensive industries are moving to lower-wage countries such as Bangladesh and Ethiopia, and automation technology will destroy millions more manual jobs in coming years.

In the new services and technology-driven economy, China is going to need a much more educated workforce.

To try to narrow the education gap, the government has been pumping money into rural education.

New school complexes are popping up in backwaters, using technology to try to overcome a lack of qualified teachers.

One promising experiment underway in 200 schools is live-streaming classes from elite urban high schools.

The early results are promising: More graduates and fewer dropouts. — Bloomberg

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