Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

China’s youth jobs up in new reporting

It said that the 16 to 24-year-old population includes some 62 million school students, over 60% of people that age.

- ZEN SOO

HONG KONG — China published youth unemployme­nt data Wednesday for the first time since the jobless rate hit a record high in June last year, using a new method that showed an apparent improvemen­t.

China announced a 14.9% jobless rate for people between 16 and 24 in December, using the new method, which excludes students. The statistics bureau stopped publishing the politicall­y sensitive figure last year, after it reached 21.3% in June.

It came as the National Bureau of Statistics announced that China’s economy hit growth targets in 2023, following the end of the country’s years of pandemic-era isolation.

The change in methodolog­y came after youth unemployme­nt surged following an economic slowdown in 2023. Regulatory crackdowns on sectors like technology and education, which typically employed a younger workforce, also made jobs harder to find.

Previously, the youth unemployme­nt rate counted students who worked at least one hour a week as employed, and those who said they wanted jobs but could not find them as unemployed. It’s not clear how the methodolog­ical change affects the stated unemployme­nt rate.

“Calculatin­g the unemployme­nt rate by age group that does not include school students will more accurately reflect the employment and unemployme­nt situation of young people entering society,” the statistics bureau said in a statement, adding that students should focus on their studies instead of finding jobs.

It said that the 16 to 24-yearold population includes some 62 million school students, over 60% of people that age.

Excluding school students from the jobless rate will allow authoritie­s to provide youths with “more precise employment services, and formulate more effective and targeted employment policies,” the bureau said.

The bureau also published an unemployme­nt rate for 25 to 29-year-olds for the first time, to reflect the employment situation of university graduates. That jobless rate, which also excludes students, stood at 6.1% in December.

China’s overall urban unemployme­nt rate stood at 5.1% in December, inching up slightly from 5.0% for the months of September through November.

China is under pressure to boost job creation and bolster employment, with official estimates that the number of university graduates will hit a record high of 11.79 million this year.

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