For subscribers

China’s jobless youth and the parable of Kong Yiji

How China’s growing ranks of unemployed graduates came to compare their predicament with that of a fictional Qing dynasty scholar.

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox

A graduation ceremony at Central China Normal University in Wuhan in 2021. China's youth unemployment rate for May hit 20.8 per cent.

A graduation ceremony at Central China Normal University in Wuhan in 2021. China's youth unemployment rate for May hit 20.8 per cent.

PHOTO: REUTERS

Google Preferred Source badge

Postgraduate student Shelly Gu has sent out about 80 job applications since August 2022 but secured only one offer so far.

“I consider myself lucky to get even a single offer,” said Ms Gu, 23, a chemical engineering student from a university in Zhejiang province. “I have friends who are still looking for jobs, and they have not secured anything.”

See more on