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China’s wealthy elite rigs its university arms race

Children from poor and rural areas have little hope of keeping up with their rich counterparts.

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The difference in opportunities for Chinese children based on whether they are rich or poor, urban or rural, is stark.

In China, the difference in opportunities for children – based on whether they are rich or poor, urban or rural – is stark.

PHOTO: REUTERS

The Economist

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In China’s top-grossing summer film, Successor, a rich businessman seeks to motivate his son by raising him in poverty. Young Jiye believes his family is truly poor. He is told to “change his fate” by studying hard and doing well in China’s university-entrance exam, known as the gaokao.

But just in case, his father also hires undercover tutors. Fake street peddlers test Jiye’s English. The neighbourhood butcher gives him maths puzzles. A tutor posing as the family’s grandmother tells the boy that her dying wish is for him to study at an elite university. After her (staged) cremation, a grieving Jiye rushes back to his textbooks.

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