New graduates flock to job fair as China's spring hiring spree begins

Young journalists club

News ID: 20030
Publish Date: 12:54 - 01 March 2018
TEHRAN, MARCH 1-Thousands of job seekers and hundreds of companies gathered on the grounds of the old train station in the northern Chinese city of Shijiazhuang this week to mark the start of the traditionally busy hiring season.

New graduates flock to job fair as China's spring hiring spree beginsTEHRAN,Young Journalists Club(YJC) -Thousands of job seekers and hundreds of companies gathered on the grounds of the old train station in the northern Chinese city of Shijiazhuang this week to mark the start of the traditionally busy hiring season.

In this city of 10 million known for smoggy skies and heavy industry, crowds of job hunters browsed information about positions at firms ranging from steel parts makers to environmental protection companies.

“I’ve been urgently looking for a new job since the holiday ended a few days ago,” said Wang Xinjie, who works at auto manufacturer Great Wall Motor in nearby Baoding.

“I want to find a new job with a higher salary and more opportunity for growth,” he added in remarks that were echoed by many at the fair, which was held after the long Lunar New Year holidays.

China’s labor market has been remarkably resilient over the last two years despite a campaign to shutter outdated industrial plants and as low-end exporters move offshore to cheaper countries in South and Southeast Asia.

Restructuring in the industrial sector was expected to lead to millions of layoffs, including in Hebei, China’s largest steel producing province where Shijiazhuang is located, but there have been few signs of large-scale unemployment.

The large state firms that dominate heavy industry have often kept redundant workers on their payrolls, though sometimes at lower salaries. And local governments have stepped in to offer training and redeployment services in a bid to avoid a rise in unemployment.

The central government has funneled significant funds into supporting the industrial sector, including a new 350 billion yuan ($55.2 billion) fund to help restructure state enterprises, and 100 billion yuan to finance layoffs in the coal and steel sector. Both initiatives were announced in 2016.

A rebound in the economy has also helped. A housing boom and a jump in infrastructure investment last year helped spark a dramatic turnaround in China’s industrial sector.

And with winter pollution curbs set to expire this month, steel producers are eager to ramp up production to take advantage of high prices and strong demand.

A representative from Shijiazhuang steel-focused conglomerate Hebei Jingye Group said at the job fair that the company was recruiting a large number of new staff this year.

Fast-growing consumer services and technology industries have also helped pick up the slack in job growth.

Government officials boast that 13.51 million new jobs were created in China last year, and a tight labor market in some sectors have driven salaries up significantly.

But some companies say hiring has become more difficult as graduates demand more in terms of salary and types of jobs.

“Young people either want to be their own boss and start their own business, or they lack independence to the point that their parents accompany them to the job fair,” said Wang Yandong, a representative of Hebei Hengxin Wire Mesh Manufacturing.

The government last month pledged to roll out more job growth measures this year, though companies often say it’s not easy to find candidates with the right skills.

Nogeteks Ltd, a local startup that sells a chemical solution to control dust at construction sites, on Sunday was advertising a salary of 2,500 yuan ($395.07) to 3,000 yuan a month for an accountant with a few years of work experience.

While many job seekers said they were just browsing, Wang Xinjie, the Great Wall Motor technician, saw some real results.

He got an offer to join Lizhong Wheel Group in Baoding with a salary increase of about 15 percent to 4,000 yuan a month, he said by text after the fair.

China says its urban-registered jobless rate fell to 3.9 percent in 2017 - the lowest since 2002.

Many analysts say, however, that the official data is an unreliable indicator of employment conditions, as it measures only employment in urban areas and doesn’t take into account millions of migrant workers.

Source:Reuters

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