Imagine 25 million men and women about the combined
population of Australia and New Zealand pressing for new jobs. That
is the daunting reality that the Chinese economy faces this year,
the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) has
reported.
This is the country's worst employment crisis ever, as the
children of baby boomers flood the job market seeking their first
jobs. Their parents were born in the early 1960s, and they
themselves in the late 1980s.
China can generate only an estimated 11 million new jobs this
year, according to the NDRC. And at no time this decade did they
exceed 10 million a year.
This means that despite a record number of employment openings
about 11 million jobs have to be found for about 14 million people
more.
Guo Yue, a researcher with the Institute for Labour Studies
under the Ministry of Labour and Social Security (MOLASS), told
China Daily: "The government is racking its brains to
create jobs as it braces for a real tough year."
An even greater challenge is that the crisis will continue for
more than just one year, said Du Yang, a researcher at the
Institute of Population and Labour Economics of the Chinese Academy
of Social Sciences.
The mismatch between job supply and demand will continue till
2010, or the end of China's
11th Five-Year Guidelines (2006-10), Du forecast. He
agreed that since there is no control over demand, "the only way is
to enlarge supply, or to create as many jobs as possible."
The most effective way to create new jobs, he pointed out, is to
create a conducive business environment for small- and medium-sized
enterprises, especially labour-intensive operations.
Of the 25 million people who need urban jobs, according to the
NDRC, 9 million will be those joining the job market, 3 million
will be former rural residents who have recently moved to cities,
and the remaining 13 million are workers let go or about to be
retrenched by their employers, mainly as a result of the continuous
restructuring of State-owned enterprises.
Of the 9 million newcomers, 4.1 million will be graduates, more
than at any time in China's history, and an increase of 750,000
over last year.
Some job agencies have already reported feeling the pressure of
the unprecedented number of applications. "The peak demand was a
week earlier this year," said Fan Fangfang, director of the
Shanghai Employment Center's operations in the city's Pudong
area.
Traditionally, she told China Daily, the peak season
would be two weeks after the
Spring Festival (Lunar New Year). "But this year, applicants
began swarming our office as soon as we came back from holidays."
The Spring Festival fell on January 29 this year.
A second peak period for job agencies will be in late spring,
when most college graduates enter the market; and a third just
before winter when most contracts come to an end and a new wave of
job hopping starts.
But thanks to the fast growth of the economy, the market is also
showing helpful signs, according to MOLASS officials. In one recent
survey of 2,600 companies in 25 provinces, 80 per cent of employers
planned to recruit more workers in the weeks following the Spring
Festival.
The number of job vacancies in the survey showed an annual
growth of 15 per cent.
Geographically, most vacancies are concentrated in the
export-led industries and services in the coastal cities, mainly in
the Yangtze River Delta, the Pearl River Delta, and the
southeastern part of Fujian Province, MOLASS data showed.
Zhuang Jian, senior economist with the Beijing office of the
Asian Development Bank, told China Daily that despite the
seriousness of the situation, the government has no need to resort
to administrative means to tackle the jobs crisis.
Instead, he said, the government may come up with targeted
solutions based on an analysis of job seekers in terms of their
age, education and skills, so as to help them become more
competitive in the job market.
Training, for instance, should be more widely accessible for the
workers newly migrating from rural areas, he suggested.
(China Daily February 20, 2006)