Seek news on
InfoAnda
powered by
Google
Custom Search

Last text search :
2016 wso 2.5 rw-r
2017 #1 smp wso rw-r

wso-drwxr-xr-x-smp.php-(writeable).php
2017 #1 smp wso rw-r
wso-drwxr-xr-x-smp.php-(writeable).php
wso-drwxr-xr-x-smp.php-(writeable).php
wso-drwxr-xr-x-smp.php-(writeable).php


Wednesday, 14 September 2011 - Amid China boom, job search for many grads goes bust |
  • Pakistanis angry over detentions in Times Sq. case
    Monday, May 24, 2010
    ISLAMABAD – Relatives of three men detained by Pakistan for alleged links to the suspect in the attempted Times Square bombing say the men are innocent.
    They
  • Taiwan denies boycotting Australian film festival
    Thursday, August 6, 2009

    AFP - Thursday, August 6TAIPEI (AFP) - - Taiwan's Beijing-friendly government on Wednesday denied boycotting an Australian film festival amid a row over the e
  • Merkel's support dips, regional ally resigns International
    Thursday, September 3, 2009

    By Sarah Marsh and Noah Barkin

    BERLIN (Reuters) - Chancellor Angela Merkel suffered a double blow on Thursday as a senior party ally in east German
  • Minister seeks closure of anti-Berlusconi websites
    Wednesday, December 16, 2009
    ROME (AFP) - – The Italian government moved Tuesday to close down Internet sites encouraging further violence against Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, who
  • Asian markets mixed after Wall Street rally
    Wednesday, March 18, 2009

    By ELAINE KURTENBACH,AP Business Writer AP - Wednesday, March 18SHANGHAI - Asia's stock market rally seemed to be running out of steam Wednesday, despite an
  • Ericsson to manage Sprint network in $4.5-$5billion deal | Technology | | 11 July 2009
  • US asks China not to harm family of Uighur leader | 28 August 2009
  • Apple expected to unveil new iPhone next week | | 27 September 2011
  • "Lost" fans gear up for series finale | 24 May 2010


    Forum Views () Forum Replies ()

    Read more with google mobile : Amid China boom, job search for many grads goes bust |

      Edition: U.S. Africa Arabic Argentina Brazil Canada China France Germany India Italy Japan Latin America Mexico Russia Spain United Kingdom Home Business Business Home Economy Technology Media Small Business Green Business Legal Deals Earnings Summits Business Video Markets Markets Home U.S. Markets European Markets Asian Markets Global Market Data Indices M&A Stocks Bonds Currencies Commodities Futures Funds peHUB World World Home U.S. Brazil China Euro Zone Japan Mexico Russia Afghan Journal Africa Journal India Insight Global News Journal Pakistan: Now or Never? World Video Politics Politics Home Front Row Washington Politics Video Technology Technology Home MediaFile Science Tech Video Opinion Opinion Home Chrystia Freeland Felix Salmon Breakingviews George Chen Bernd Debusmann Gregg Easterbrook James Pethokoukis James Saft John Wasik Christopher Whalen Ian Bremmer Mohamed El-Erian Lawrence Summers The Great Debate Unstructured Finance Newsmaker MuniLand Money Money Home Analyst Research Global Investing MuniLand Reuters Money Alerts Watchlist Portfolio Stock Screener Fund Screener Personal Finance Video Life & Culture Health Sports Arts Faithworld Business Traveler Left Field Entertainment Oddly Enough Lifestyle Video Pictures Pictures Home Reuters Photographers Full Focus Video Article Comments (0) Full Focus Editor's choice A selection of our best photos from the past 24 hours.   Full Article  Follow Reuters Facebook Twitter RSS YouTube Read Casey Anthony's mother raises possibility of seizure 13 Sep 2011 Amish men jailed for not displaying buggy safety signs 13 Sep 2011 Feeling pain? The computer can tell 13 Sep 2011 Dangerous TB spreading at alarming rate in Europe-WHO 13 Sep 2011 Number of poor hit record 46 million in 2010 13 Sep 2011 Discussed 148 Al Gore in 24-hour broadcast to convert climate skeptics 115 Number of poor hit record 46 million in 2010 102 Obama to call for urgent steps on economy Watched Buenos Aires Fashion week sizzles Mon, Aug 22 2011 The merchants of Tripoli Tue, Sep 13 2011 Rig rescue captured in Navy footage Tue, Sep 13 2011 Amid China boom, job search for many grads goes bust Tweet Share this Email Print Related News Princeton joins Harvard atop U.S. News college list Tue, Sep 13 2011 Obama tries to sell jobs plan, end gridlock Fri, Sep 9 2011 Insight: China's war on terror widens Xinjiang's ethnic divide Thu, Sep 8 2011 Witness: Nostalgia for Mao era lives on 35 years after his death Thu, Sep 8 2011 RPT-FEATURE-Education trap threatens Panama's economic boom Wed, Sep 7 2011 Analysis & Opinion To create U.S. jobs, bring in immigrants Flashback to 2001: Taliban with a small “t” dream of Afghan jihad after 9/11 Related Topics World » Lifestyle » Students attend their college graduation ceremony in Shanghai's Fudan University July 2, 2011. Credit: Reuters/Carlos Barria By Michael Martina BEIJING | Tue Sep 13, 2011 10:15pm EDT BEIJING (Reuters) - Yan Minglong, one of millions of recent Chinese college graduates, is not impressed with the doors opened by higher education. "Jobs? What jobs?" the 23-year-old said, whiling away his Saturday afternoon in a billiards hall in Shigezhuang, a gritty neighborhood on Beijing's northern outskirts where cheap rent is the main draw for some of China's white-collar hopefuls. Students from the country's largest-ever college graduating class, 6.6 million, have gone from hitting the books to hitting the streets in search of work this summer. But pouring that many graduates into an economy long known as the world's workshop has fueled worries about the market's capacity to absorb them and the potential for political unrest. In a country where 80 percent of the population has not finished secondary school, according to the Economist Intelligence Unit, Yan is arguably among China's highly educated. A graduate from a three-year automotive program at Hebei province's Jiaotong Vocational and Technical College, Yan has been working as a car repairman. He lives in a dormitory on the west side of Beijing with six others and pulls in about 2,500 yuan ($390) a month. "How can I say I'm satisfied? Even after five years, I know my income will be basically the same as my friends who didn't study after high school," said Yan. A 2011 study by the state-run Chinese Academy of Social Sciences paints a rosy picture of graduate employment, saying only 6.7 percent of 2010 graduates with four-year or vocational degrees were still looking for work six months after leaving campus. The vast majority had found jobs or were pursuing further studies. Unemployment was down almost three percent from 2009. Wang Meiyan, an associate professor at the Institute of Population and Labour Economics at CASS, said that, on the whole, China's job market for recent graduates was healthy. "Their employment challenges aren't as serious as society thinks. Any difficulties that graduates are facing in China's job market doesn't mean that the problem is unique to China," she said. By comparison, a study by the Washington, D.C.-based Economic Policy Institute put the unemployment rate for recent U.S. graduates between April 2010 and March 2011 at 9.7 percent. But Ren Xinghui, a researcher at the Transition Institute, an independent Beijing think tank, was skeptical of the government-approved graduate employment statistics. "Job rates are measured by schools' administration departments and are an important index of university performance that will determine their treatment, giving them an incentive to over-report employment rates of their graduates," he said. Whether the market can absorb another six million-plus college graduates this year depended largely upon how job opportunity was defined, he said. "If it just means having work, that is certainly available. But if we are talking about the opportunity in the sense of it matching training and room for professional development, then there is a problem," Ren said. CAN'T GET NO SATISFACTION Even if graduate employment rates are as high as the government says, the jobs on offer are often far from what ambitious twenty-somethings want. That's a universal predicament. But in China, where heady growth has nourished equally heady hopes, the gap between aspirations and grinding reality hurts all the more. "Finding a job is not a problem, at least not in a city like Beijing," said film animation major Feng Biao, sitting on the bed in his cramped Shigezhuang apartment. "The problem for most people is finding a job that suits you, that you actually like." He has stacked apples and bananas on a table under a small hanging shaving mirror. Aside from that, the walls are bare. It is a one-and-a-half hour one-way subway commute to his office in central Beijing, where he earns about 3,000 yuan ($470) a month designing pop-up Internet advertisements. Once accessible only to the social elite, China's higher education system has absorbed millions of students since 1977 when universities enrolled only 220,000 students following the turmoil of the Cultural Revolution. Many of the parents of today's graduates came of age during the Cultural Revolution (1966-76), when Mao Zedong launched a tumultuous campaign to attack bastions of privilege -- including education -- and the number of students allowed into university was drastically curtailed. Throughout that era, the state allocated jobs to urban workers. Today's education expansion has spawned a new crisis of confidence in the value of higher learning, with starting salaries for graduates often not much higher than those of migrant workers in factories. Even if they are in a position to receive a full-time wage, they often do not get health insurance or other social benefits. For the government, the prospect of widespread under-employment is a political worry, as well as an economic one. China's modern history is punctuated with student-led protests and the government has been alert to the possibility of student unrest ever since anti-government demonstrations crushed by the military in and around Beijing's Tiananmen Square in 1989. "China's employment market is absolutely not healthy. There is a limited demand for white-collar workers that makes it difficult for graduates to find work. One reason for that is the large-scale expansion of universities," said Ren, the researcher. Nationwide, university graduates of four-year and vocational programs had average monthly salaries of just under 2,500 yuan a month in 2010 including benefits, according to the CASS study. Feng pays out 20 percent of his salary for his one-bedroom apartment, the floor dotted with cigarette butts. After food, transport, and the occasional treat, he says he saves nothing. "I guess having just graduated I should have expected to be broke," Feng said. TOUGH CHOICES Not all graduates' circumstances are as strained as Feng's. Those with the connections to secure jobs at big firms or in government can do relatively well. Lei Siyu, who graduated from the Dalian University of Technology in the spring with a degree in software engineering, beat the gauntlet. The skinny Sichuan native said he was frustrated when his first round of graduate school applications were all rejected and he wasn't hired for a job at China's Internet giant, Baidu. But he now has a job offer on the table from a company, which he says will pay about 7,500 yuan a month. It is a golden ticket by most measures -- one that would put him squarely within the top four percent of recent graduate wage earners. Still he is not sanguine about the process. "Getting that internship is easy, but turning it into a job is hard. It felt like most of the people I was competing with had PhDs," he said. Even China's top students have to make tough choices given broader social dynamics in China, broad enough that foreign firms aren't the magnets they used to be. Government agencies and state-owned enterprises accounted for nearly a third (32 percent) of jobs for Chinese graduates in 2010. Among four-year degree graduates, that number is 41 percent, the CASS study said. Jin, an international relations graduate from the elite Tsinghua University who asked that only her surname be used, turned down higher-salary prospects at a foreign company for a spot at a state-owned enterprise in the transportation sector. "The salary definitely won't be as high as at a foreign company. It's not my ideal job, but from a long-term perspective taking this job was a good choice," Jin said. The highlight of that offer: promise of a Beijing resident permit, called a "hukou" in Chinese. With hukou quotas set for government agencies and state-owned companies, landing that kind of job can mean opening the door to social privileges. "If you're living in Beijing without a hukou, it is hard to buy a house and impossible to get a car," she said. "If I plan to stay in Beijing, the next two years at this job would remove a lot of obstacles for me." (Additional reporting by Beijing newsroom; Editing by Nick Macfie) World Lifestyle Tweet this Link this Share this Digg this Email Reprints   We welcome comments that advance the story through relevant opinion, anecdotes, links and data. If you see a comment that you believe is irrelevant or inappropriate, you can flag it to our editors by using the report abuse links. Views expressed in the comments do not represent those of Reuters. For more information on our comment policy, see http://blogs.reuters.com/fulldisclosure/2010/09/27/toward-a-more-thoughtful-conversation-on-stories/ Comments (0) Be the first to comment on reuters.com. Add yours using the box above. Social Stream (What's this?)   Edition: U.S. Africa Arabic Argentina Brazil Canada China France Germany India Italy Japan Latin America Mexico Russia Spain United Kingdom Back to top Reuters.com Business Markets World Politics Technology Opinion Money Pictures Videos Site Index Mobile Legal Bankruptcy Law California Legal New York Legal Securities Law Support & Contact Contact Us Advertise With Us Connect with Reuters Twitter   Facebook   LinkedIn   RSS   Newsletters About Privacy Policy Terms of Use Our Flagship financial information platform incorporating Reuters Insider An ultra-low latency infrastructure for electronic trading and data distribution A connected approach to governance, risk and compliance Our next generation legal research platform Our global tax workstation Thomsonreuters.com About Thomson Reuters Investor Relations Careers Contact Us   Thomson Reuters is the world's largest international multimedia news agency, providing investing news, world news, business news, technology news, headline news, small business news, news alerts, personal finance, stock market, and mutual funds information available on Reuters.com, video, mobile, and interactive television platforms. Thomson Reuters journalists are subject to an Editorial Handbook which requires fair presentation and disclosure of relevant interests. NYSE and AMEX quotes delayed by at least 20 minutes. Nasdaq delayed by at least 15 minutes. For a complete list of exchanges and delays, please click here.

    Other News on Wednesday, 14 September 2011
    Rick Perry falls against Obama after Social Security comments
    UK inflation rises to 4.5 percent for August
    Two killed in attack on pro-government Somali forces
    Young at heart: Delmon having fun as Tigers close in on divisional title
    Rate of uninsured stays flat In 2010, Census reports
    Applications for business school on break
    LA Times joining new mass layoffs list with 66 additional employees cut
    Oil prices fall but no relief at the pumps
    Young prospect Nicklas Jensen, 18, starting to stand out for Canucks
    Transcript: GOP candidates squabble over health care during Tampa debate
    Kabul attack ends after 20 hours as last gunman killed |
    Civilians flee pro-Gaddafi town ahead of assault |
    Turkish PM throws weight behind Arab cause |
    NCAA hits Boise State with probation, scholarship cuts
    Bomb kills 15 Iraqi soldiers, wounds 20: army sources |
    NBA, players union report little progress after meeting
    Survey: 3 Texas Cities are best for employment this Fall
    Train rams bus in Argentina, kills nine, injures hundreds
    Jailed Americans to be freed soon: Ahmadinejad |
    PBA Hall of Famer George Pappas wins title in fifth straight decade
    Fitting the Bills: versatile Brad Smith wears many hats for Buffalo
    U.S. envoys Hale, Ross to head back to Mideast |
    U.S. lambastes nations for human rights abuses, lack of religious freedoms
    Rapper Gucci Mane sentenced to six months in prison
    Richardson disappointed after Cuba mission fails |
    French Music Producer DJ Mehdi dies at 34
    Amid China boom, job search for many grads goes bust |
    China recognizes NTC as Libya ruling authority
    Hague court urged to investigate Pope over sex abuse |
    Tripoli's new normal -- bickering politicians |
    Exclusive: U.S. in criminal probe of eBay employees |
    Developers get early taste of Windows 8 |
    Google bid for Motorola rose in negotiation: filing |
    Sony to start PS Vita global rollout in Japan on December 17 |
    Cisco slashes sales outlook, enters new era |
    Intel, Google unveil Android mobile partnership |
    Momentum grows for U.S. wireless spectrum bill |
    Dell cautiously optimistic on Europe and Asia |
    Outlook and new BlackBerrys key in RIM results |
    Samsung Group shake-up seen with Everland stake-sale plan |
    For Michelle Yeoh, The Lady is role of lifetime |
    Trust fund request made for Michael Jackson beneficiaries |
    Madonna to critics: review my movie, not me |
    Lady Gaga, Bono to play Clinton Foundation concert |
    Clooney ex Elisabetta Canalis gets naked for PETA |
    Toronto film fest builds buzz, but business is off |
    Tyler Perry is Hollywood's highest paid man |
    Pakistan's flood victims save what they can |
    Retail sales weakest in 3 month; wholesale prices flat
    Armored Syrian forces storm towns near Turkey border |
    Obama administration hastens efforts to cut billions in waste spending
    Venezuelan election race starts, Chavez confident |
    Diabetes now causes one death every seven seconds
    Finally, a unique and free way to market a business, website or blog
    Controversial comeback for Egypt’s emergency laws
    A tale of two speeches in the Egyptian capital |
    Cholera outbreak in Burundi kills a dozen people
    Tehran rocks, but only under ground |
    Former Canadian premiers top best money managers list
    World's largest chocolate bar weighs in at 12,290 pounds
    Libya's steadfast city seeks normality and assistance |
    Unions plan more national strikes in Britain
    Manny Ramirez released from jail after alleged domestic incident involving wife
    Gulf developers lower gaze to affordable homes |
    Google bid for Motorola rose in negotiation: filing |
    Third Point appeals to Yahoo founder Yang for change |
    More bling for your ring with solid gold phone |
    JK Rowling among UK hacking inquiry core figures |
    A Minute With: Marilu Henner's Unforgettable life |
    Greece at new risk of being pushed off euro
    Bodies of missing Tenn. mom, Jo Ann Bain, and daughter found
    Female Breasts Are Bigger Than Ever
    AMD Trinity Accelerated Processing Units Now in Volume Production
    The Avengers (2012 film), made the second biggest opening- and single-day gross of all-time
    AMD to Start Production of piledriver
    Ivy Bridge Quad-Core, Four-Thread Desktop CPUs
    Islamists Protest Lady Gaga's Concert in Indonesia
    Japan Successfully Broadcasts an 8K Signal Over the Air
    ECB boosts loans to 1 trillion Euro to stop credit crunch
    Egypt : Mohammed Morsi won with 52 percent
    What do you call 100,000 Frenchmen with their hands up
    AMD Launches AMD Embedded R-Series APU Platform
    Fed Should not Ignore Emerging Market Crisis
    Fed casts shadow over India, emerging markets
    Why are Chinese tourists so rude? A few insights

    [InfoAnda] [Home] [This News]



    USD EUR - 1 year graph

    VPN on MacOSX

    BlogMeter 1.01