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Chinese graduates are returning to their hometowns due to a weak job market.

Chinese Graduates Returning Home ‍Amid Job Market Challenges

By Ella Cao, Ryan Woo

A ⁣growing number of Chinese graduates are abandoning the ⁤bright lights of the country’s mega-cities, with ‍state media reporting almost half are returning to their hometowns within⁣ six months of graduation⁤ amid a sagging job market.

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Feeling the pinch of rising housing ‍costs and a slowing economy, the jobless graduates are forfeiting cities that have ‌traditionally provided a⁣ stepping stone to middle-class wealth. To save money, ⁣some have even resorted to sharing a bed with a stranger.

China’s⁢ youth jobless rate jumped to a record 21.3%⁤ in ‍June as offers during the traditional job-hunting‍ season proved limited as the ‌economy struggled and regulatory clamp-downs left the‍ property, tech and education sectors⁢ bruised.

In June, a statistics bureau official said that more than⁢ 6 million young people were unemployed.

Some 47% of graduates returned home within six months of graduation ‍in 2022, up ⁤from‌ 43% in 2018, state-run China News Service reported on Tuesday,⁢ citing a⁢ private sector survey.

The numbers⁢ varied by region, with 59% of graduates in the well-developed east heading home. That compared ​to 44% in the‌ west and just 24% in the northeast rust belt.

Also pushing the young to⁢ return home were soaring rents. Among China’s biggest⁤ first-tier cities, rents in Beijing climbed 5% from December⁣ to June followed by 2.8% gains in Guangzhou and⁤ Shenzhen, according⁤ to state-run ‌Xinhua news agency.

Not Giving Up on​ the City Dream

Not everyone is giving up.

After sending‍ 10 copies⁣ of her resume to financial companies⁣ each month, ‌Joyce Zhang, a 2022 graduate with a masters⁢ degree in ⁢financial engineering, said she had still not found a ⁣job in Beijing but⁢ was not going⁤ home yet.

“I’ve considered ​going back to Inner Mongolia to work, as the financial​ sector is not doing good recently. But I guess I still want to give‍ it a try,” Zhang told Reuters.

Zhang’s parents are paying her monthly rent of⁢ 2,600 yuan ($361) for ‌a‌ 12-square-metre (129-square-foot)⁤ room with ⁢a shared kitchen and bathroom.

Policymakers have rolled out measures to​ support youth seeking‌ work and rental housing, with some more creative⁣ than others.

A district in Hangzhou in eastern Zhejiang‌ province offers free rent for eligible people in a ​nursing home, as⁤ long​ as they spend 10 hours or​ more a month with the elderly and pay a 300⁢ yuan‍ management⁤ fee.

To keep costs‌ down as they stay longer ‍in hope of finding a job,⁢ some young mega-city drifters even share ⁢their beds with strangers. On China’s Instagram-like Xiaohongshu and WeChat groups, “seeking bedmates” posts have become​ more common.

One such ⁢post‌ was looking ‌for a roommate to ‌share one bed in a room “with a‍ huge balcony” in Beijing.⁤ The⁤ rental fee: 750 ‌yuan ($104)‌ per month.

($1 = 7.2004 Chinese yuan‌ renminbi)

(Reporting by Ella Cao and Ryan Woo; Additional⁣ reporting by ⁤Beijing newsroom; Editing by Conor Humphries)

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