China’s Youth Unemployment Conundrum
China’s rising levels of youth unemployment is rapidly turning into a large-scale crisis. This has warranted extensive action by the Communist Party of China (CPC), including an overhaul of policy measures and selective reporting. In June 2023, the National Bureau of Statistics of China stooped releasing regular reports of unemployment which had reached a record high of nearly 21.3 percent. This is in stark contrast with rates from October 2023, when the youth unemployment rate was approximately 18 percent. About a year previous to this, in November 2022, the youth unemployment rate was 16.7 percent. The graph below shows the rapidity with which youth unemployment is growing in China.
Source: National Bureau of Statistics
Structural Unemployment Amongst Chinese Youth
Structural unemployment is a result of industrial reorganisation, something the Chinese economy has undergone over the last five years. The causes for this include technological developments that make certain jobs redundant and others popular, demographic challenges, regulatory crackdowns and cultural expectations. Due to radical changes in industry structure made by technological advances, the pandemic and other abovementioned factors, China’s youth unemployment crisis is in part caused by these structural inaccuracies.
Cyclical Unemployment
Cyclical unemployment is caused by a slowdown in economic activity. As demand for products falls, the demand for workers involved in production also falls. Owing to several issues, including the pandemic, an economic slowdown has contributed towards youth unemployment in China.
Measures by the Chinese government to combat the youth unemployment crisis
Conclusion
China’s youth unemployment crisis has many causes. The Chinese government has been combating the issue for several years, with varying degrees of success and failure. Unfortunately, the number of unemployed youths far outstrip the number of employment opportunities created by said policies. Furthermore, the cultural factors trace some of the root causes of the crisis to the social fabric of the country. Due to this, the crisis has turned into a chronic problem facing the Chinese economy. Despite multiple efforts being made by the government, the Chinese economy will continue to face this issue for the time being as restructuring of industries and labour force is a change that occurs in the long run.
Akshata is an undergraduate student majoring in International Studies at FLAME University. Her primary interests lie in research and cultural perspectives in politics.
Get a daily dose of local and national news from China, top trends in Chinese social media and what it means for India and the region at large.