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Job shortage to affect graduates
Beijing(China)—China’s
university graduates are braced for gloomier employment prospects next
year as the number of graduates will reach a record high of 4.95
million, the Ministry of Education said.
Spokesman Wang Xuming said next year’s number of university graduates
will represent a rise of 820,000 over this year.
“Given the already grave employment situation in the countrythe
employment pressure on university graduates will be obvious,” he told a
regular press conference.
Based on the average employment rate of 70 per cent for university
graduates upon graduation, more than 1.49 million of them may become
jobless next year.
To address the problem, the ministry has asked universities to give top
priority to better employment services for graduates in 2007, the
spokesman said.
“The employment rate will be one of the crucial criteria to evaluate a
university, and any cheating in the figure will be severely punished,”
he said.
He added that the employment rate will be considered in next year’s
recruiting plan, which is being drafted by the ministry.
But he also noted that the present 5-10 per cent growth in university
enrolment is a “normal rate” for the development of the educational
industry.
Liu Yuebo, director of the Employment Service Office of Nankai
University, a key national university in Tianjin, said the increasingly
competitive job market has prompted his university to make greater
efforts to help its students find jobs in recent years.
Every year starting from the summer, the office makes countless phone
calls to major companies and institutions across the country, enquiring
about job information or inviting them to come and recruit students on
campus.
“Companies have been entering campus (for recruitment) earlier and
earlier each year to grab the most talented graduates,” Liu said.
Liu said since this summer, some famous companies, such as P&G, LG and
Microsoft, have set up respective “Elite Clubs” in the university as a
way to reserve future employees.
“The university, short of teachers with professional experience, cannot
offer enough courses on practical skills and career planning to
students,” Liu said.
“The training and activities organized by the companies in Elite Clubs
can effectively make up this deficiency and equip students with broader
horizons and knowledge of enterprises.”
Xing Lifang, vice-dean of the university’s University of Foreign
Languages, said almost all students will eventually find jobs.
“Many students still have a craze for metropolises in the eastern part
of the country, such as Beijing, Shanghai and some coastal cities. They
also want to work for big employers, such as famous companies,
ministries in the central government and national media,” Xing said.
“But when they come to terms with reality, most of them can make
adjustments and successfully find jobs in other places.”
—The Daily Mail-China Daily news exchange item |