How Bad Is Unemployment In China? | Street Interview

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  • čas přidán 5. 06. 2024
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    DISCLAIMER: The views expressed in this video do not represent that of Asian Boss or the general Chinese public.
    00:00 Are you employed?
    00:34 How hard is it to find a job in China?
    06:08 Are the Chinese avoiding blue-collar jobs?
    10:01 What type of jobs are the easiest to get?
    11:34 Is there any financial aid for the unemployed?
    13:48 Is AI impacting the unemployment rate in China?
    16:40 Message to unemployed people
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Komentáře • 1K

  • @AsianBoss
    @AsianBoss  Před měsícem +25

    For more authentic insights like this from Asia, you can watch some of our exclusive videos not available on CZcams for free here: asianboss.io/yt/123-exclusivevideos

    • @kyginger8005
      @kyginger8005 Před měsícem +1

      Thanks for your coverage on this topic! I'm really looking forward to another episode of the unemployment topic targeting minor cities in China. Because unemployment in China is much worse in smaller, especially aboriginal towns than in major cities like Shanghai, where governmental resources and business investment concentrates.

    • @seymorefact4333
      @seymorefact4333 Před měsícem +3

      😭😭i work 3 jobs in the USA just to pay rent and eat. 2 jobs are delivery of food and medical device. 3rd job is caring for the elderly nursing on weekends. Can't find a decent job in the USA. I have no benefits because these jobs are all part-time. i'm 43 yrs old with a degree in business admin. I have $50k in student loan debt since i graduated 20yrs ago. My gf has 2 jobs, her parents has 2 jobs, my dad has 1 part time job and my mom passed. WE ARE ALL STRUGGLING TO PAY RENT IN THE USA!

    • @jxy7096
      @jxy7096 Před měsícem

      cia shill

    • @BloodyPandas
      @BloodyPandas Před měsícem

      @@kyginger8005 where did you get the data about the smaller towns being worse. I heard completely different stories from you. People lost their jobs or cannot afford their livings in big cities went to back to work in smaller cities/towns. They got paid less but they still lived a sustainable life.

    • @kyginger8005
      @kyginger8005 Před měsícem +1

      @@BloodyPandas There is no publicized data that backs my thoughts directly, just personal experience being a Chinese living paycheck to paycheck, combining with what I see and hear.

  • @astroch
    @astroch Před měsícem +509

    Basically the same as everywhere. There are two different unemployment situations: there are no jobs and there are no jobs you are willing/able to do. The more college educated people, the more specialized, and your expectation of job market becomes narrower.

    • @seymorefact4333
      @seymorefact4333 Před měsícem +28

      😭😭i work 3 jobs in the USA just to pay rent and eat. 2 jobs are delivery of food and medical device. 3rd job is caring for the elderly nursing on weekends. Can't find a decent job in the USA. I have no benefits because these jobs are all part-time. i'm 43 yrs old with a degree in business admin. I have $50k in student loan debt since i graduated 20yrs ago. My gf has 2 jobs, her parents has 2 jobs, my dad has 1 part time job and my mom passed. WE ARE ALL STRUGGLING TO PAY RENT IN THE USA!

    • @xiphoid2011
      @xiphoid2011 Před měsícem +12

      What the hell? The US job market is super good right now. My wife and I are both mid level managers, and the pay + bonus have been going up fast in the last 2 years. There are so many jobs and not enough workers that I have several interviewees who just don't show up and don't even call to cancle. This happens because jobs are so easy to get that they are not afraid to burn bridges. We Chinese Americans, having focused on advanced degrees and having high paying jobs and plentiful investment opportunities, are very prosperous.

    • @zeidrichthorene
      @zeidrichthorene Před měsícem +5

      Also, the more specialized and higher the expectations of the workforce, the harder it is for people to find people willing to work low prestige jobs. This means that these positions end up being understaffed, leading to the people in those positions ending having to work longer hours to keep up. The pay for these jobs will be lower than high prestige jobs, but they end up going up still, so the gap between them and high prestige jobs go down, but people still don't appreciate them because there is still an image that they are still low prestige. This leads to prices of the every day things that these jobs provide going up. The more accessible that it is for unemployed people to access enough money to live, the less willing that people will be to do these low prestige jobs, because why not just... not? Especially if taking something like a labor or factory job means low pay and overtime, you will not have energy to search for the kind of job that you think is ideal because you will be too busy working. If you can get by without that, and spend your time searching for the good job, this is more rational a strategy. But this effects the fundamentals of the economy.
      I think the problem is actually ironically that we are too educated. Too many people go to post secondary education. Nobody wanted to do those jobs in the first place, and there was work that was better that required post secondary education. So people start to think that getting post secondary education means getting one of those good jobs. But for every 2 good job there is 8 bad jobs that need to be done to support its existence.
      Ironically, what helped the west get by is they shipped the "bad jobs" to China. This helped improve the Chinese economy. Now Chinese people are getting richer. Now they ship the "bad jobs" to the rural people. But you end up either having to force people to work, or you end up in this situation ultimately. I think China tries to mange this by restricting the ability for people to migrate internally. This way you can keep some provinces poor and dependent on this unwanted work for survival.

    • @dannyz2560
      @dannyz2560 Před měsícem +15

      @@xiphoid2011 Wow I'm also Chinese American freshly graduated from University and have been looking for a job for the past 4 months - if the positions that have had several interviewees not show up are still available, mind sending me the application link? Haha Thanks 😅😅

    • @xiphoid2011
      @xiphoid2011 Před měsícem +5

      @@dannyz2560 I'm hiring pharmacists and pharmacy technicians in a major metro in Texas. We have been having trouble filling job openings since COVID started and many boomers just chose to take early retirement. This is why US is so short of labors right now. We hospitals have been stealing staffs from each other back and forth, each time the wages go up, but the labor shortage is still here after 4 years! It's a real headache for us in mid level management, but yes we Chinese and Asian Americans are enjoying the higher pay and secure jobs.

  • @ashtonso6662
    @ashtonso6662 Před měsícem +88

    I like the philosophy , advice and positivity of the old guy and the rabbit lady.

    • @Fergurson
      @Fergurson Před měsícem +1

      me too

    • @yonghuawu2596
      @yonghuawu2596 Před měsícem

      Because he is old and from local, and has nothing to worry about.

  • @vincentc7920
    @vincentc7920 Před měsícem +174

    In Australia, i know someone graduated from master of arts and couldnt find a job. I know some migrants who could hardly speak english found jobs in construction industry. There are jobs but no one want to do. There are people who couldnt find what they WANT to do.

    • @firedup692
      @firedup692 Před měsícem +5

      It only makes sense to cater your skills to suit to the needs of the industry.

    • @user-rj9ee7hw8u
      @user-rj9ee7hw8u Před měsícem +1

      I agree with you

    • @blackbelt2000
      @blackbelt2000 Před měsícem +12

      The issue is that person graduated with a useless degree and a masters is double useless.

    • @vincentc7920
      @vincentc7920 Před měsícem +10

      @@blackbelt2000 that is exactly what happens in china. More middle class family who sent their kids to study uni , they all want to sit in the office. Whereas there are still shortage of blue collar workers. To some, working as plumbers etc are still classified as low level jobs.

    • @swaggery
      @swaggery Před měsícem +4

      If your skills and personality are better suited for something else, should try and do it. Another issue with a lot of places is sure you can get some jobs if you need one, but one that pays enough for essential expenses is a bit harder to find.

  • @khadijah3519
    @khadijah3519 Před měsícem +51

    GREAT interviews as always!
    Grandpa keep it sweet, simple and REAL!! Thanks☺️

  • @pragueexpat5106
    @pragueexpat5106 Před měsícem +457

    The former HR guy basically described most single men: his expense isn't much because he is single, so he can easily get by for at least 6 months. I'm not unemployed, but If I was laid off today and not paid any severance, I'd be just fine for 3 years, not because I make much, only about 40% more than the local median, but because I don't have unnecessary expenses like wife, kids, girlfriend, alcohol, cigarette and other drugs, car payment etc.

    • @patatedouceyaim1407
      @patatedouceyaim1407 Před měsícem +14

      you have 3 years wages in savings ? how is that possible if your not 40+, do you live at home ?

    • @Xenonarth
      @Xenonarth Před měsícem +135

      calling kids and a wife unnecessary expenses is based

    • @neoastral7950
      @neoastral7950 Před měsícem +100

      Unnecessary expenses 💀💀💀

    • @ayushsenseisama
      @ayushsenseisama Před měsícem +18

      ​@@Xenonarth idk about others but for a lot of us gen z getting married and anything that follows is an unnecessary expenses

    • @pragueexpat5106
      @pragueexpat5106 Před měsícem +13

      @@patatedouceyaim1407 No, I'm not 40 yet, although getting close, and I live alone paying rent for now because mortgage interest rate is a bit too high these days.

  • @paullacotta5645
    @paullacotta5645 Před měsícem +232

    The older man at the end...he nailed it❤

    • @fintech1378
      @fintech1378 Před měsícem +8

      inspiring

    • @stevenliew2507
      @stevenliew2507 Před měsícem +13

      Yes. Life is not just only chasing for💲.
      Health is no. 1 of anyone priority as without health you have nothing.
      With health, one can have many options including what type of lifestyle, career and family life.

    • @CattleFarmer667
      @CattleFarmer667 Před měsícem +5

      @@stevenliew2507 Young people dont understand and it is not their fault. In my chart-group with classmate, we all talk about money when we were younger. Because we still have children, house and car mortgate etc. Now we talk about health because children grown up, paid mortgage and some on use went to grave because health issues.

    • @jjsamuelgunn1136
      @jjsamuelgunn1136 Před měsícem +2

      it's life perspective. when you are that old you have life experience and pretty much already figure out how 'things', society, people etc flows.

    • @seymorefact4333
      @seymorefact4333 Před měsícem +10

      😭😭i work 3 jobs in the USA just to pay rent and eat. 2 jobs are delivery of food and medical device. 3rd job is caring for the elderly nursing on weekends. Can't find a decent job in the USA. I have no benefits because these jobs are all part-time. i'm 43 yrs old with a degree in business admin. I have $50k in student loan debt since i graduated 20yrs ago. My gf has 2 jobs, her parents has 2 jobs, my dad has 1 part time job and my mom passed. WE ARE ALL STRUGGLING TO PAY RENT IN THE USA!

  • @brokelaowaiinchina
    @brokelaowaiinchina Před měsícem +24

    It's not that bad, it's just that young people are simply no longer willing to do certain jobs. I will upload a video on this topic on my channel too, featuring both local and foreign job seekers.

  • @thorsinhow
    @thorsinhow Před měsícem +305

    Expat living and working in China here, and I would say unenployment isn't as serious as many other countries. I have some colleagues join job interviews two or three times a week and reject offers all the time. It seems more like it's more about choosing the right job than not being able to find a job.

    • @bullpup1337
      @bullpup1337 Před měsícem +19

      wumao

    • @realtissaye
      @realtissaye Před měsícem

      ​@@bullpup1337 westoid

    • @loganlin6109
      @loganlin6109 Před měsícem +19

      Are you in a large and prosperous city in China? If you are then that could explain your observation since smaller cities and rural areas where the majority of China’s population lives have to experience more economic hardship.

    • @jjsamuelgunn1136
      @jjsamuelgunn1136 Před měsícem +69

      @@bullpup1337 what's wrong with you. please stop trolling.

    • @thorsinhow
      @thorsinhow Před měsícem

      ​@@loganlin6109 I currently live in Shanghai and used to study and work in Beijing before. I have some local friends who live and work in second or third-tier cities, and I would say that the job options there are definitely not as diverse as in bigger cities, since most of China's biggest companies (especially in the tech sector like Tencent, Alibaba, ByteDance) are located in larger urban areas such as Shanghai, Beijing, Shenzhen and Hangzhou. People working at smaller cities do earn less money, but that's because the minimum wage calculation is defined by each province and whether it's in the urban, oustkirts or rural area to match the local living expenses standards. Actually living there is not bad at all and perfect if you dislike the hectic life of big cities.
      For the younger generation, they tend to come to big cities to study and work since there aren't many growth opportunities in their hometowns. (By the way, 60% of the Chinese population lives in urban areas)

  • @nnf9431
    @nnf9431 Před měsícem +48

    Basically same thing in Canada but because China has such a massive population the unemployment problem is amplified. If you have 10+ years of experience with industry specific certifications you'll always be able to find a job.

    • @lindazhang8004
      @lindazhang8004 Před měsícem +1

      here is not that easy, they box you into age. over 35 no matter how good u r, your chance will be much slim. for Chinese companies mostly. unless you are super lucky.

    • @bentchudy2704
      @bentchudy2704 Před měsícem +1

      More importantly, the China government is more inclined to protect the interests of enterprises, so that China's labor law can not fully play its role so far. For job seekers, this is a double dilemma. On the one hand, whether they can find a job, on the other hand, how long they can work without being laid off.

    • @TheJulianhuang
      @TheJulianhuang Před měsícem

      Not the same, China doesn't import 2 million people a year.

    • @L-K-K
      @L-K-K Před měsícem +1

      @@bentchudy2704 It's the same everywhere. And probably even worse in very capitalist countries like US etc., where politicians actually work for the big corporate interests, not the voters who elect them.

    • @DougC83
      @DougC83 Před měsícem

      @@bentchudy2704i would say it strongly correlates with the city you reside in and the corporate culture

  • @heididlr5433
    @heididlr5433 Před měsícem +52

    The fact that they have unemployment benefits is already an advantage and a privilege on their part as other countries don't have that.

    • @matthewmoore6647
      @matthewmoore6647 Před měsícem +1

      Yes they do!

    • @Yo-ot1rn
      @Yo-ot1rn Před měsícem

      No we don't​@@matthewmoore6647

    • @rpg1663
      @rpg1663 Před měsícem

      which countries are u referring to? Like African countries? lol

    • @matthewmoore6647
      @matthewmoore6647 Před měsícem +1

      @@rpg1663 Troll or just a tool? I'll let you decide. If it's not too hard for you?

    • @pkhaloobonaccio9883
      @pkhaloobonaccio9883 Před měsícem

      it's a communist country they have to give welfare

  • @bonaudi
    @bonaudi Před měsícem +48

    Generally, a 16-year-old is considered a minor in my country of origin and should not be allowed to work full time. I live in China and own a company and I find no shortage of work or opportunities neither for me nor for employees... but it is increasingly difficult to find young people willing to work for a fix salary when they can earn more doing other type of gigs independently with no fix hours, so the current ¨unemployment¨ statistics are very biased and misleading. It is socially accepted in the USA that minors (under 18) can work as adults, instead of focusing on their education.

    • @financialgardening
      @financialgardening Před měsícem +3

      How much do you pay? The single biggest frustration among every one of the friends I have back in China is that none of them want to accept earning 3000-4000 in Tier 2s. Even 8000-10000 in a place like Shanghai has been low for forever, but there are still so many jobs that don’t pay enough for the life people want to live. They give up and live with parents. So, you may give plenty of opportunities, but do you actually pay the salaries your employees want?

    • @bonaudi
      @bonaudi Před měsícem +8

      ​@@financialgardening I'm not talking about myself, I'm in the industrial development field doing robotics and complex products. The salaries in my field are at a minimum of $4,000 USD and up for employees. Salaries in Shanghai are high, and that's why many Europeans and Americans look for positions and opportunities here - everything is happening here now. It doesn't matter if it's a second or first-tier city, what matters is what you can do and what credentials you have to prove it. I personally know many professionals who decided to quit the big city life and went back to their hometowns to generate much more money in e-commerce or other online gigs. That's what's really going on with the statistics - not much unemployment, but undeclared self-employment. There is also another group of self-overpraisers who can't accept positions they feel are not good enough for them, so they fill the unemployment number even when is their own choice. In China, you can get a job within a day if you want, as there is a wide spectrum of salaries based on your capabilities. The jobs you mentioned are at the lower end of the pay scale, and with those salaries, you would not be able to afford a rent on your own or even live comfortably while sharing accommodations. The financial situation would be quite tight in big cities with that.

    • @jemler3speak
      @jemler3speak Před měsícem +2

      Very true, following the ban of tiktok folks in the states don't know many young people in China use it as a serious promotion platform and so as many brands, they can easily generate ¥50k~10kper month in revenue, profit rate depends on industries, product types. With the flexibility of working at home, outside or studio, those with talents and resources are not keen on working a 9-5job regardless the earning amount, given it 5k RMB or 20k, any serious survey should counts Chinese youngth Self-employed status, they will be surprised many of them have 2nd, 3rd side kicks.

  • @aeris...5389
    @aeris...5389 Před měsícem +17

    People who are 35 or older will have a harder time finding a job. Companies will not consider their application because they are deem to old. They’re laws to prevent companies from discriminating based on race, ethnicity and gender. There should also be laws in place to prevent age discrimination.

  • @lindazhang8004
    @lindazhang8004 Před měsícem +26

    最后的老爷叔说的很对!灵活一点,善待自己!

  • @TheSkullies
    @TheSkullies Před měsícem +7

    I like what the old man said in the end. really a good advice for younger generation.

  • @polypOFjejunum
    @polypOFjejunum Před měsícem +69

    India's unemployment rate 8% or more and out of unemployed peeps, 83% are youths 😢. Economy is growing but not the job numbers. How bad can be the jobless Economy???

    • @koldaf
      @koldaf Před měsícem +4

      It depends on which State you are in also ,,for eg in my state of Karnataka the unemployment rate goes from a range of 0.9% -2.8% and youth unemployment will hover around 8-15%..but when you consider the whole nation majority of our youth are in UP and Bihar which do not have enough job opportunities which brings up the unemployment rate....

    • @AnonymousIsSus
      @AnonymousIsSus Před měsícem +1

      Situation got so messed up when you realise the unemployment rate is more in Haryana and J&K but it's people are still not poor infact many are rich but unemployment rate in up and Bihar is low but still their people are poor

    • @pomodoro385
      @pomodoro385 Před měsícem +6

      High growth rate is due to Modi changing the method of calculating GDP in 2015, growth jumped from 4.5% to 7% since then. Many prominent economists had questioned the data, Central Bank governor Raghuram Rajan, Chief Economic Adviser Arvind Subramanian.....Look up article,
      Is India exaggerating its economic growth? - BBC
      GDP Numbers Are Mystifying, Don't Add Up -- theWire

    • @sdsdj626
      @sdsdj626 Před měsícem +4

      Will India's unemployment rate count women? I have seen very few women working in India.

    • @PakistanChinaFriendship
      @PakistanChinaFriendship Před měsícem

      Because the wealth of India is controlled by mostly Brahmins

  • @athomenotavailable
    @athomenotavailable Před měsícem +85

    Rabbit lady has a very positive attitude!

  • @avinli7806
    @avinli7806 Před měsícem +192

    4:33 the lady said "我们在小城市觉不出来“,that should be the regional dialect means "we don't feel that much(of unemployment) as we're in small town". Maybe the translator thought it's "决不出来"= “never come out”, where it should be "觉不出来“ = ”don't feel much"

    • @yaofangzhu8798
      @yaofangzhu8798 Před měsícem +8

      I agree. It sounds like a mis-translation.

    • @SADBOY-di3th
      @SADBOY-di3th Před měsícem +6

      故意的

    • @antediluvianclockwork9769
      @antediluvianclockwork9769 Před měsícem +4

      even non-native Chinese speakers can feel that the translation was incorrect, as it's obvious she said she didn't feel the effects of unemployment.

  • @victj1300
    @victj1300 Před měsícem +30

    Three of my colleagues were laid off last year in shanghai,two of them got new job fortunately in three months. The another one found a job in hongkong last week,he got alot of increase in his salary.

  • @tonysofla
    @tonysofla Před měsícem +78

    With a brand-new studio apartment costing $165/month in China (Chongqing), should not be hard to come up with money that with side hustles,
    in U.S the rent would be $1650 and out of work means you would be homeless.

    • @2WheelsGood.01
      @2WheelsGood.01 Před měsícem +17

      I wish you were exaggerating but it's 100% true. Housing is easy and plentiful in most of China. Been there 4 times for months at a time. Here in SoCal a studio will run you close to 2k. Or rent a bedroom in a house for ≈$1400...miserable experience.

    • @tonysofla
      @tonysofla Před měsícem

      @@2WheelsGood.01 I uploaded the video, Condo associations fee is maybe not included (a normal thing in China to not) but for this size would be ~$20/month.
      czcams.com/users/shorts8xI6sVxI31w

    • @tonysofla
      @tonysofla Před měsícem

      I uploaded the video of it, the ~$25 is condo association is maybe not included.
      czcams.com/users/shorts8xI6sVxI31w

    • @tonysofla
      @tonysofla Před měsícem

      @@2WheelsGood.01 I uploaded the studio tour to my shorts

    • @tonysofla
      @tonysofla Před měsícem

      @deliriumskid What does that even mean, by the warf rent is probably more expensive.U S has 600'000 homeless with no way to come up with f.l.s of $6K and paystub showing $5K/month to get approved.

  • @jacksonkingsnow6105
    @jacksonkingsnow6105 Před měsícem +26

    I know a lot of people were expecting worse because these days the hate people have for china and its government is tough. im glad these people where honest. Unemployment is everywhere,it depends on the job you want.

    • @junliu6108
      @junliu6108 Před měsícem

      The Western mainstream media either describe China as an evil superpower that is gonna rule the world soon or as a collapsing autocratic country that fakes all economic numbers

    • @siroyiryuu
      @siroyiryuu Před 18 dny

      Many people have not received a good education, and their parents are no exception, so they are easily manipulated and ordered by American politicians to hate people they have never met before.

  • @jjian5
    @jjian5 Před měsícem +152

    That's crazy how the graph can be so misleading. I've hearing about the 25% unemployment rate posted everywhere, But I never knew it was 25% including full time students. Truly unbelievable how media lie to us.

    • @mauriziohu5085
      @mauriziohu5085 Před měsícem +2

      Il 25% dei giovani appartenenti alla fascia 16-25 anni

    • @bullpup1337
      @bullpup1337 Před měsícem +5

      no its 25% ON TOP of that! nearly 50%!

    • @FrostKaiser
      @FrostKaiser Před měsícem +16

      According to different surveys, the unemployment rate in my country is between 4-5%. If the survey only counts 16-24 years old then the unemployment rate will become almost 80%. Because most of the kids are in highschool till 18/19. Except a few, most of them will continue their education. Since our country is still developing, there's no part time jobs available, the only way those university students can earn some money is through tutoring or freelancing. Also a small percentage of the students are joining content creation. They'll join the job market only after graduation at 23/24. So if those survey didn't include those external factors, then the whole result will show opposite result of the true situation of job market in my country. This is how the west mislead it's people and rest of the world. They'll make fake news about their enemies and demonize the normal people of their enemy country. Be careful of what you see on the news. There's too many misinformation this days.

    • @chiwanau
      @chiwanau Před měsícem

      Unemployment is high. Otherwise you wouldn't be seeing big numbers of Chinese with a nest egg, risking that, and their lives to get to America.
      All this video shows is no one knows what's going on in China besides their own bubble bc the media is so controlled by the gov.

    • @xiphoid2011
      @xiphoid2011 Před měsícem +9

      The Chinese government revised the unemployment measures, removed students, but the revised unemployment is still 19%. 😮 that's really high for young people.

  • @Fergurson
    @Fergurson Před měsícem +1

    thanks for the interview

  • @The_Truth_Army
    @The_Truth_Army Před měsícem +18

    Please make a survey on INDIA.
    The unemployment here is the highest in 45 years.

  • @philipw8911
    @philipw8911 Před měsícem +6

    No matter what your situation is, stay optimistic, this is the core

  • @TechieWidget
    @TechieWidget Před měsícem +17

    Unemployment rate is also rising in Canada. Especially the tech sector and I heard stories about some of my friends being laid off because their companies just don’t have work for them.

    • @JalomMatia
      @JalomMatia Před měsícem

      as always, easy to find jobs in Alberta.

    • @AmelieZh
      @AmelieZh Před měsícem

      @@JalomMatialol

    • @edgychico9311
      @edgychico9311 Před měsícem +1

      Just go farming instead and that's the easiest way to get a job is.

  • @belamo11y
    @belamo11y Před měsícem +1

    For those don’t understand Chinese… I just want to say they are all so well articulated 🎉.. impressive

  • @weixia7899
    @weixia7899 Před měsícem +4

    The last gentlman summarized it all. Well said, bravo!

  • @mittelego1098
    @mittelego1098 Před měsícem +8

    That speech by the old ma at the end was really moving

  • @walkinginsingapore8548
    @walkinginsingapore8548 Před měsícem +5

    Thanks!

  • @zzzzzsleeping
    @zzzzzsleeping Před měsícem +2

    The last guy's word is epic.
    Really good to follow

  • @xiphoid2011
    @xiphoid2011 Před měsícem +6

    My nephew is going to graduate school because getting a STEM degree apparently still have a tough time getting a biology job, so he is going to graduate school to avoid unemployment and save face. Studying more, learning things automation can't do has been the human refuge for the last 200+ years since the industrial revolution. We started with elementary school, even 40 years ago high school was enough, now undergrad is barely enough, soon it will be masters or doctorates. And with each jump in higher learning, we delay our lives further. My wife and I (we met in graduate school in the US) have doctorates, but marriage and children had to wait until 30 years old. However, with shockingly fast advancement of AI in just 1 year, now with the ability to be creative, I'm really worried, not just for my nephew but my own children. In another 10-20 years will there be anything AI and robots can't do?
    My wife and I talked, and our conclusion/safety net is what the Chinese culture had already made us do -- save and invest ALOT. Our discussion lead us to hypothesize that in the future there will mainly be 2 class of people: the owners/controllers of AI/robots and the rest. The majority of the people, most likely jobless, will live on some kind of social welfare with a small annual increase to maintain social stability. While the owners of the AI/robots (capitalists) will be able have control of almost unlimited wealth. The middle class, be it skilled labor or former professionals like doctors, will basically be gone. We know which side we want our children to be on. So we concluded that capital investment and accumulating wealth was, is, must be the goal in the next 10-20 years.
    Of course, there is another possibility that technology may indeed become sentient and governments/nations have failed to build a safety barrier around AI. Well, in that case, money won't matter, but neither would anything else, anyone would be lucky to be alive.

  • @athomenotavailable
    @athomenotavailable Před měsícem +7

    6:37 onwards explained the essence of the situation for many advanced countries. The economy is still like before, so the demand for the worker demographics does not match the actual demographics available, so the least competitive people become forced to either innovate or take up jobs they don't like or low pay or they are unsuitable for. But this also leads to entrepreneurship, which should gradually change the economy to require worker demographics closer to the actual demographics

  • @AJ_
    @AJ_ Před měsícem +6

    The Chinese unemployment landscape perfectly encapsulates the dangers of “Degree Inflation”. The more undergraduate, masters and even PHD degrees you have the less valuable they become in the labour market. Normalise not going to college at all and instead taking up a trade skill. Avoid wasting years of your life chasing higher levels of college education without an equivalent reward.

  • @Travelwithmiracle1
    @Travelwithmiracle1 Před měsícem +9

    Though there is unemployment in China, I think China is doing a great job fighting unemployment considering its massive population. China’s unemployment problem is a bit low according to this video compare to many countries with less population that have crazy unemployment rates.
    Also one of the men said there are jobs but not to the standard you may want or qualify for. China Is a high-production country so unemployment will never get bad cause there is a lot of production which also needs workers.
    China is also a country that encourages entrepreneurship so a lot of citizens run their own businesses instead of needing a job.

    • @AvoidTheCadaver
      @AvoidTheCadaver Před měsícem

      In their way, a strong single government does have its benefits. A path forward is set and metrics defined, bow it's just up to the local governments to enact it. Whereas in the west there's just lots and lots of talk and lobbying and things get shelved for years. I mean, in Sydney it took almost 35 years before the second airport finally broke ground. The train system had to be totally overburdened before expansions were started even though a review 40 years ago said that a significant capacity increase through those coming 40 years would be needed. But nothing was done for 30 years... Again

  • @Razear
    @Razear Před měsícem +39

    I can't say I'm surprised that the unemployment rate is highest among the college educated. Employers are sticklers when it comes to screening for past experience, and most job candidates in that age cohort will be lacking. In terms of AI's impact, the entry-level white-collar class will have their job security threatened the most. Many mundane cubicle jobs are already being wiped out. The trades will be immune to automation for a while, because robots won't be able to perform any of the complex, physically strenuous tasks that carpenters, electricians, mechanics, etc. perform.

    • @user-vw9mm7xt4h
      @user-vw9mm7xt4h Před měsícem +3

      You won't get the answer if you interview people who are still in the city, because when China's economy was good, most of the migrant workers came from the countryside. Now that the unemployment rate is serious, many migrant workers have gone home.
      China's real estate is the best reflection of the problem.
      Many rental properties are vacant because migrant workers have returned

    • @jw841
      @jw841 Před měsícem +1

      The trades will only be safe for a short while. As these will be the only type of jobs people will be able to get there will be a saturation in the trade market pretty quick. So carpenter and plumber willl face huge competition in the future which will bring down wages to next to nothing.

    • @serriajohn
      @serriajohn Před měsícem +1

      Chinese working classes are migrant labor workers, they are farmers or villagers from inner land area. China is now developing rural area, to use high techno for agriculture , the farmers need more training to improve food production. modern farming is a promising future for farmers.

    • @serriajohn
      @serriajohn Před měsícem +1

      Some Chinese state companies are working with rural villagers to raise pigs, chicken or grow rice and vegetables , therefore, some farmers who were used to move into city for jobs, now choose to stay in countryside and work with government farms, because the salary is also OK for them.

    • @swaggery
      @swaggery Před měsícem

      Robots can. It's just there's so many use cases and each one needs to be trained with through software, so it will take a while because of that. Plus, there needs to be a bit of a industry presence with robotics given the construction industry are typically a later adopter of cost savings innovations.

  • @NeonNoodle22
    @NeonNoodle22 Před měsícem +83

    “Rich people have 24 hours a day. Poor people have 24 hours a day. Being kind to ourselves and living happily is success.”

    • @zarategabe
      @zarategabe Před měsícem +22

      It's not really true though because 24 hours are very different for rich and working people. Working people clean, cook, take kids to school, care for children and family members, work multiple jobs, and work while studying. Rich people pay others do to all those tasks for them.

    • @xuli3961
      @xuli3961 Před měsícem

      But do not stop trying go up, it will came out better than not trying.

    • @razzahling8951
      @razzahling8951 Před měsícem +1

      @@zarategabe
      and as much as possible, be kind to yourself and don't clean, cook, care and work too hard
      take enjoyment in the tasks that you do

    • @kiang1653
      @kiang1653 Před měsícem

      @@zarategabe so true... even the time is the same, but the poor need to sell their most time for survival and basic needs, while the rich could spend more hours on how to live with their hobbit and passion.

    • @hsiu4425
      @hsiu4425 Před měsícem +3

      Rich can decide what to do for the day , poor have to decide what they can do for the rest of the day

  • @FaizLang
    @FaizLang Před měsícem +6

    I'm sure this depends very heavily on which Chinese city you are in.

  • @lovetrustandpixiedust
    @lovetrustandpixiedust Před 24 dny

    "Being kind to ourselves and living happily is success." The old man's words at the end are so positive, and I love the rabbit lady's optimism!

  • @a9udn9u-vanced
    @a9udn9u-vanced Před měsícem +37

    Lol. My fellow Chinese are immune to American propaganda campaigns.

    • @passby8070
      @passby8070 Před měsícem +2

      yep, we felt it in Australia too, Its very depressing. I stop reading mainstream news now days.

  • @nellydefaut5130
    @nellydefaut5130 Před měsícem +3

    Great interview. I really enjoyed watching it. The older man at the end was gold.

  • @vaibhavi84864
    @vaibhavi84864 Před měsícem +3

    Chinese look so calm, composed and articulate their thoughts very clearly & honestly.. that's so impressive!!

    • @sdfsafasfsf5545
      @sdfsafasfsf5545 Před měsícem +1

      Didn't you find it's staged?

    • @matthewlipton2998
      @matthewlipton2998 Před měsícem +1

      @@sdfsafasfsf5545 It's not staged, this is incredibly average as far as interactions go with Chinese people.

  • @alphaglucopyranose6928
    @alphaglucopyranose6928 Před měsícem +2

    According to some statistics, in china this year, unemployment for 18-29 years olds increased, but for 30-59 years olds, it decreased.

  • @not_a_sp00k
    @not_a_sp00k Před měsícem +11

    Amazing hat.

  • @1971gift
    @1971gift Před měsícem +8

    Really enjoyed this segment. I think because China's economy is dynamic and not a fiancialized economy, the variations in the sentiment seems emblematic of that. The attitude of 'lower your expectations' i think can be better characterized as step back and gain perspective; regroup. CNA Insider had a mini doc a couple of years ago of young Chinese returning to the countryside and redefiing their expectations on careers and livelihood there (as several folks mentioned). This was an illuminating behind the numbers segment. Thank you. I'd love to have a set of interviews on the laying flat and let it rot movements. And how are people responding to the population decrease--as the young man in the end mentioned.

  • @hoti3960
    @hoti3960 Před měsícem +3

    i see china people are more open and honest than before. Keep it up

    • @moneymoneymoney335
      @moneymoneymoney335 Před 28 dny

      We are always like this, it’s just how the US media keep bashing us. And they are CIA funded

    • @pmcpegasus
      @pmcpegasus Před 27 dny

      @@moneymoneymoney335The CIA doesn’t have to do anything to make you look bad little pink, you do that quite well without our help 😂

    • @moneymoneymoney335
      @moneymoneymoney335 Před 27 dny

      @@pmcpegasus the CIA has spent so much money one their propaganda

  • @RobertoTorres-gi8vh
    @RobertoTorres-gi8vh Před 29 dny

    Good reporting and gives me a better idea of the unemployment in China .

  • @garyyang3485
    @garyyang3485 Před měsícem

    The main problem is entry level job pay adjustment, a few year ago, you can enter an company with 8000+ salary and now the entry level jobs have gone down to 4000-5000, the recent graduates doesn’t want to take the low paying jobs because they still think 8000+ jobs are out there

  • @ragnarokws2670
    @ragnarokws2670 Před měsícem +8

    China they dont count food staller , delivery service on the employment rate. As i know theres many youth cant find their dream job so they go do delivery service or open stall by themselves.

  • @in4ad8
    @in4ad8 Před měsícem +8

    North America's got a lot of jobs, but you will need 3 or 4 jobs to keep afloat. We are getting killed by inflation.

    • @doujinflip
      @doujinflip Před měsícem +1

      Primarily driven by lack of supply, especially in essentials like housing. All while corporations report record revenues. Our wallets circle the drain of a deliberate profit-price spiral.

    • @JalomMatia
      @JalomMatia Před měsícem +1

      depends where you live. inflation has risen prices, no doubt, but most people I know, including young people have no problem finding jobs that can provide for all their living expenses.

    • @serriajohn
      @serriajohn Před měsícem +2

      China also have many jobs, unfortunately many factories can hardly to recruit baseline workers. The X generation prefer office jobs.

  • @fedupwithbs1782
    @fedupwithbs1782 Před 25 dny

    Other videos from other channels make it seem like 50% of people are unemployed in china..
    What makes this video different from all others is ur actually asking ppl about it
    Love asian boss bc i trust it

  • @bananaborealis9515
    @bananaborealis9515 Před měsícem +54

    the elder in the end is a total chad.

    • @kevin_aldo
      @kevin_aldo Před měsícem

      For real😂

    • @xiphoid2011
      @xiphoid2011 Před měsícem

      Being middle aged, what he says is inspirational but practical. The truth is just working hard and staying positive won't make a good life. You must couple hard work with a good plan to have a good life. Look at us Chinese Americans. We prospered far beyond even white Americans. Meanwhile you have Hispanics and African Americans that stays poor even though they have been here longer and were richer than us when we chinese first came here. Blacks and Hispanics work very hard too, but the difference is they don't make long term education focused plans. This is why we Asian Americans went from the poorest to the richest race in the US in just 30-40 years, while they remain poor even after more than 100 years.

  • @gunnarlowack8435
    @gunnarlowack8435 Před měsícem +5

    Same in every Asia country, not only in China

  • @abcdefg-oj5wn
    @abcdefg-oj5wn Před měsícem +11

    The HR guy spoke well… when companies are hiring they’re not looking for “the perfect applicant,” they’re just looking for someone who they can train to do the job ASAP. Fresh college graduates will have high standards and don’t want to work a job with a title/ salary that they think is beneath them or their education level.

    • @ishwarabhat
      @ishwarabhat Před měsícem

      As a tech founder in India, surprisingly it is the same. Fresh college grads have high expectations, the brainwashing that Gen Z is different etc. Very hard to find freshers with right attitude. It is not their fault. 'Education' & 'trainings' have spoiled them and made them less emploayable.

    • @deadgamer4140
      @deadgamer4140 Před měsícem

      ​@@ishwarabhatbecause you pay 3 lpa in 2024

    • @ishwarabhat
      @ishwarabhat Před měsícem

      @@deadgamer4140 For the benefit of those who listen, few points: I understand how many socialist activist influencers are peddling some stories. Few points : (a) From 2004 to 2024, fresher competency has not increased. (b) It costs more to train freshers because the experienced members are more expensive now. (c ) Attitude and behavior don't depend upon level of CTC once a job is accepted. (d) Many of the top leaders of large companies say that irrespective of salary level, freshers are too distracted. Many think they already know everything etc. Now these companies, pay much higher. Due to these factors, many reputed companies are delaying onboarding. I hope freshers stop watching content of self-serving influencers.

  • @erichuang2553
    @erichuang2553 Před měsícem +1

    Nice!

  • @only_solutions
    @only_solutions Před 29 dny

    Grandpa hit the nail on the head...May he enjoy a long, healthy and happy life!💝

  • @jonwick7635
    @jonwick7635 Před měsícem +91

    not just China, but all over the globe. But China has it smoother than a lot of countries I think

    • @michaelgothenburg364
      @michaelgothenburg364 Před měsícem +5

      Nope, much worse than other countries. American unemployed is 3.6% for example

    • @seymorefact4333
      @seymorefact4333 Před měsícem +21

      😭😭i work 3 jobs in the USA just to pay rent and eat. 2 jobs are delivery of food and medical device. 3rd job is caring for the elderly nursing on weekends. Can't find a decent job in the USA. I have no benefits because these jobs are all part-time. i'm 43 yrs old with a degree in business admin. I have $50k in student loan debt since i graduated 20yrs ago. My gf has 2 jobs, her parents has 2 jobs, my dad has 1 part time job and my mom passed. WE ARE ALL STRUGGLING TO PAY RENT IN THE USA!

    • @CharonTFM
      @CharonTFM Před měsícem +7

      @@michaelgothenburg364that’s because US also count any form of employment, such as casual. China counts full time or part time. They don’t count delivery services

    • @kjhkkgkgu
      @kjhkkgkgu Před měsícem +2

      @@michaelgothenburg364 3.6% is the overall unemployment rate, not youth unemployment rate, the unemployment rate of China is about 5% still higher than USA though

    • @jamesgarner327
      @jamesgarner327 Před měsícem +1

      @@michaelgothenburg364 The US is on another level, you can't really compare...

  • @bdjohan
    @bdjohan Před měsícem +7

    Good advice from the last guy.

  • @satyayana1399
    @satyayana1399 Před měsícem +1

    my advice to those currently unemployed : just take whatever job available that you can do (just think of it as stepping stone). while its not bad to desire job that you find suitable / higher pay, save idealism for when you actually have option. when there no option, dont be picky

  • @John-.-Smith
    @John-.-Smith Před měsícem

    When were the interviews conducted? Recently or years ago?

  • @kevinxu5299
    @kevinxu5299 Před měsícem +12

    Chinese people are so smart, balanced thinking and calm.

  • @user-qg2gy5lg4g
    @user-qg2gy5lg4g Před měsícem +3

    I think the woman at 4:39 and the man at 6:58 summed it up best. It's not that jobs aren't available, but the jobs that are available might not be acceptable to the people looking. Although to be fair, depending on their stage in life it may be difficult to continue their standard of living on those unfavorable jobs. But of course I'm speaking as someone who knows very little about the Chinese economic environment. 😅 But it sounds a lot like American culture, quite shockingly. I also like the girl at 10:26, her answer was adorable. Haha

  • @tonywei423
    @tonywei423 Před měsícem

    The last is the best, everyone should listen to the senior guy in the end, very wise and positive, I agree with him 100.

  • @RelaxWorld975
    @RelaxWorld975 Před měsícem +1

    Where was the street interview conducted? I believe the survey could be vary a lot across different regions in China. Some eastern provinces in China, which are close to the major harbors for international tradings, may have a higher employment rate due to the stronger economy, whereas the remote provinces on the western or northern side are facing a more difficult situation I believe.

    • @user-gv9du8pg8l
      @user-gv9du8pg8l Před měsícem +1

      A large proportion of Shanghai's population comes from other provinces, and it is likely that none of the interviewees are locals. They emphasized their assessment of the unemployment rate of their friends, including their hometowns!

    • @RelaxWorld975
      @RelaxWorld975 Před měsícem

      @@user-gv9du8pg8l seems like you just made up a delusion for yourself. Usually even if one man is a newcomer, he would entitle a precondition before answering, like "in my hometown...".

  • @michaelm8166
    @michaelm8166 Před měsícem +13

    只要你肯吃苦就有吃不完的苦🎉

    • @AmelieZh
      @AmelieZh Před měsícem +3

      Same goes for everywhere

    • @serriajohn
      @serriajohn Před měsícem +3

      Success comes out of hard working and an attitude of never give-up. many people are caged in mindset.

    • @JS-ih7lu
      @JS-ih7lu Před měsícem +10

      不肯吃苦的才有吃不完的苦😂

    • @amberlee9651
      @amberlee9651 Před měsícem

      如果你不想爬起来,没人会逼你爬起来,生活变好不是靠中彩票,如果信了不想吃苦的鬼话,那一辈子也就那个样子了。

    • @loop3357
      @loop3357 Před měsícem

      @@serriajohn Nope, the younger generation in China doesn't think this way, so I don't think the U.S. needs to do anything to stop China, they will collapse in the future.

  • @blablup1214
    @blablup1214 Před měsícem +3

    I can really not understand those guys saying something like.
    I had a job but I resigned during the pandemic.
    I mean the last I wanted was losing my job during the pandemic.

    • @julioduan7130
      @julioduan7130 Před měsícem +1

      During the pandemic, job market was not affected in China. So they are able to resign and find a new job.

    • @Dayvit78
      @Dayvit78 Před měsícem

      I resigned before the pandemic, best decision I ever made :)

    • @serriajohn
      @serriajohn Před měsícem

      everything is OK during covid, some people were locked down at home, while many essential workers have to work harder and got salary increased, and these essential workers are pretty stressful, such as nurses, doctors, delivery guys and HR dept.

    • @user-fk8pr1hp8v
      @user-fk8pr1hp8v Před měsícem

      China is a large country, not everyone has been affected by the pandemic, and people in many areas continue to lead normal jobs and lives.

  • @mondo6595
    @mondo6595 Před měsícem

    My wife tried to find a job in 2022, she applied to about 200 companies but got no response. She is a great designer, just happened to be stuck at the age of 35.I run a small company too, recently, when I saw the resumes of these good people born in 1994, I already thought I had to pass. I also interviewed some, but for various reasons, those born after 2000 became my priority

    • @dhwang960
      @dhwang960 Před měsícem +1

      That might depend what is the job for and if it has tech barrier or not. I am at my 40s and a normal engineer, sometime I feel like hard to find a job, 20% of my colleagues got laid off last year and at my similar age and all found jobs and some even got 20-30% salary raise

  • @zhengchaoczc
    @zhengchaoczc Před měsícem +1

    0:03 this location is the second largest apple retail store in the world, which just opened last month.

  • @muharathataron8731
    @muharathataron8731 Před měsícem +3

    What a great interview. I believe the employment in every town or city is just like Shanghai. Most people can get a job easily and the government provides financial aids to everyone nationwide.

  • @RandomBb56
    @RandomBb56 Před měsícem +14

    4:33 she means 觉不出来 as in 觉察不出来 “couldn't feel it" not 绝不出来 ”never come out“

  • @user-ge9iq7gq1c
    @user-ge9iq7gq1c Před 11 hodinami

    我好喜欢最后那个老爷说的,谢谢🎉🎉

  • @Combrot
    @Combrot Před měsícem

    Here in Dongguan area I see lot of job vacancies at the many factories around here. Not to be mentioned small home industry and some restaurants, I frequently see job vacancies even though some of them Freelance or Part Time.

  • @edwardchua1248
    @edwardchua1248 Před měsícem +2

    But many Japanese consulting firms is opened in china and still unable to hire to their quota. Why nobody say anything?

  • @charleslewis375
    @charleslewis375 Před měsícem +31

    7:17 When you obey this man's advice,namely being employed first and choosing a job later,you will find all the options are based on your first job.

    • @fintech1378
      @fintech1378 Před měsícem +1

      why?

    • @charleslewis375
      @charleslewis375 Před měsícem

      @@fintech1378 That's Chinese labor market

    • @Wilson24678
      @Wilson24678 Před měsícem +5

      That's probably true in US or EU, but Chinese job market is way way more vibrating than you think.

    • @charleslewis375
      @charleslewis375 Před měsícem

      @@Wilson24678 poor prisoner

    • @KKRCeb
      @KKRCeb Před měsícem

      @@Wilson24678 lolll obviously you haven't seen the chinese legal market

  • @user-xc9ie1fm9f
    @user-xc9ie1fm9f Před měsícem +1

    I've kind of unemployed for one year, by kind of I mean I'm still on the company's pay roll, but I don't have any job to do or position or title. I get paid by a salary as lowest as legally possible by the company

    • @Harsha-D311
      @Harsha-D311 Před 18 dny

      It's ok
      In india teachers make 13k per month

  • @qqliudl
    @qqliudl Před měsícem

    well said

  • @TheDysartes
    @TheDysartes Před měsícem +3

    I think unemployment in China is probably a lot like America because of country size and population, where in employment or lack of it will depend on where you live. Some places there'll be high unemployment and in some cities there's an abundance of work. I also suspect that some graduates, just like in many countries won't or aren't prepared to take work that isn't in their field of study they did at University. I was always taught it's better to be in work and looking for a new job than out of work and looking. Employers are more likely to more favourably on you if you're working even if it's in a job that's not related to your qualifications, it shows to them good work ethic.
    What I found interesting when the subject of Ai came up and they didn't think it was an issue, as like they stated it's in the early stages of the tech. Yet ask the same question in the West and the response would be the complete opposite.

    • @user-rj9ee7hw8u
      @user-rj9ee7hw8u Před měsícem +1

      Some people are obsessed with their educational level and neglect their majors. In other words, their majors are easier, so competition in society is more intense. My cousin is a master's graduate in materials science, who lives in a small city in China and works for a private chemical enterprise. His salary exceeds more than 90% of people in China, including Beijing and Shanghai.

    • @serriajohn
      @serriajohn Před měsícem

      @@user-rj9ee7hw8u this is very true, good factories are normally located in remote area or outskirt of a city, and salary is higher than these who live in cities. I worked in a RND center , located in an outskirt area, need to drive 2 hours to get back home in city center. however, salary is pretty good , dorm and canteen food are all free, coffee , fruit and snickers are free to supply too.

    • @user-fk8pr1hp8v
      @user-fk8pr1hp8v Před měsícem

      Many undergraduates in China will go on to further their level of education because survival is not a major issue for them, and their families will continue to provide for them until Generation X decides it is time for them to go to work. So they will choose to further their education instead of looking for a job.

  • @davidrichards1741
    @davidrichards1741 Před měsícem +6

    And in China, almost everyone can afford to go eat out well. In the US today, almost nobody can afford to go eat out anymore. We can't even afford to shop in grocery stores anymore!

    • @wq8119
      @wq8119 Před měsícem

      how and why? bro

  • @user-wh9cc5zx1v
    @user-wh9cc5zx1v Před měsícem

    Successful interviews!

  • @finalfan321
    @finalfan321 Před měsícem +1

    we are replacing junior vacancies with AI at the moment

  • @happymeatbeer9925
    @happymeatbeer9925 Před měsícem +2

    “努力就能成功 一下找不到工作就休息一个月,旅旅游”,最后那些鼓励的话也就+5%的“衰退”经济体的人说得出来😅

  • @zaysyang2607
    @zaysyang2607 Před měsícem +10

    The first girl looks like actress in firework of my heart

    • @user-hq3ht2hp6x
      @user-hq3ht2hp6x Před měsícem +1

      No, more like 陈都灵

    • @wq8119
      @wq8119 Před měsícem

      @@user-hq3ht2hp6xlike your avatar😂

  • @gozaddy
    @gozaddy Před měsícem

    The unemployment problem is serious but only when you are not looking to be a boss. As a foreigner in China, one who understands the Chinese language, and one who comes from a country where the government has not done enough in the areas of development, I will say this...I would not look for a job for a day if I was Chinese. The opportunities to do great things by yourself are huge.

  • @luxatrix775
    @luxatrix775 Před měsícem

    Damn, that sucks, but this does make me feel better.. TT

  • @georgesiew6203
    @georgesiew6203 Před měsícem +21

    The unemployment situation in China is completely overblown. It is in fact way easier to find work in China than it is in the west. The high youth unemployment is because of several factors,
    1) Family finances are much more lenient now, particularly in the cities. This has led to lying flat for many youths who cannot find ideal jobs. Most families are in the 4-2-1 arrangement in the cities from the one child policy, so many youths stand to inherit substantial resources without having to do anything. Many don't have the need or motivation to grind out a difficult career.
    2) Record numbers of Chinese students are going to graduate school and investing in further education which leads to a later entry into the work force.
    3) The general social trend to a much later entry into the work force to to the growing sophistication of modern high value add jobs is taking place everywhere. In China it is happening far faster than it did in the west.
    The reality of the labor situation is this. High wage, high value added jobs have gotten more competitive with the slowed growth in the past 4 years since the pandemic. Young people are particularly feeling the squeeze to land their ideal dream jobs. However generic jobs are extremely plentiful. With the exception of construction which used to be red hot, manual labor jobs are booming due to the chronic shortage of workers. Seasonal work is also extremely plentiful in Chinese cities. Outside of almost every fast food restaurants you will see job wanted for cooks and waitstaff. Sales people and service staff wanted adds are also outside of shops all over the city. The issue is just are you willing to work in these menial labor jobs in the services sector.
    This is not like in Canada for example where 300 people line up to apply for jobs at Walmart and can't get them. The equivalent of Walmart in China always has an unlimited number of jobs and not enough candidates.

    • @TheVampB
      @TheVampB Před měsícem +1

      I don't think the point is how bad it is in absolute terms, but how abruptly it's changing. Also, working in a Walmart is much less a class issue in Canada than in China. Relatives in my family paid 300k to get a niece of mine a 2k/month job so they get the slightest sense of relief. It is not the same

    • @georgesiew6203
      @georgesiew6203 Před měsícem

      @@TheVampB Working at Walmart in Canada is for sure a class issue. You will not find any well to do families with any family members that work at Walmart. Also if you knew the people that worked at Walmart which I having worked at these places while in school do know, you will know they are not normal middle class people. People that work at Walmart are mostly desperate lower class people that can't rub two $50 bills together. The wages from lower end retail and service jobs in the US and Canada are not living wages. Also when times are bad you cannot just get extra shifts to work extra time to make ends meet. You can get hundreds of ppl lining up for McDonalds jobs at the worst of times.
      Things are changing but the speed is normal for China. Things go boom and bust in weeks in China. Ppl go from making a million dollars in one year to losing a million dollars the next year. That's just how the unfettered market system for the service sector works in China. If you want no income volatility and just high incomes that doesn't exist in China or anywhere else.
      The problem with Chinese people and their insecurities is they want a guarantee for everything. They want to buy their kids a guaranteed high income for life and complain if they can't buy this or it is too expensive. This kind of thing doesn't exist anywhere in the world. You can't buy your kid's way into being a doctor or a AI engineer at google. Your kids have to earn that on their own. If you buy their way to live in opulence the only way to do it is by giving them a trust fund. Any other way will cost you exponentially more money. For example you can buy your mediocre kid a degree at Stanford for 2 million and put him in a high paying job at a company that you generate millions of dollar of income for. But then your just spending 10 million dollars to buy 4 million dollars of value. The only thing you can arbitrage between China and the West is that the competitiveness of the average worker/student is significantly lower outside China. If you talk about how the average uncompetitive person is doing. They do even worse in the West than in China. The bottom 20% of the population out here live extremely poorly.

  • @Mike20100711
    @Mike20100711 Před měsícem +5

    I love the cover girl

  • @eggsnest32
    @eggsnest32 Před měsícem

    Ms. Bunny Ears was spitting straight wisdom 👏👏

  • @fernandogirard9702
    @fernandogirard9702 Před měsícem +2

    The bunny woman is just grteat! And the guy at the end is just right.

    • @user-uh1dd2jb2p
      @user-uh1dd2jb2p Před měsícem

      Not good because their married life is very chaotic and many Chinese women hit men. Gives more pressure

  • @seymorefact4333
    @seymorefact4333 Před měsícem +3

    😭😭i work 3 jobs in the USA just to pay rent and eat. 2 jobs are delivery of food and medical device. 3rd job is caring for the elderly nursing on weekends. Can't find a decent job in the USA. I have no benefits because these jobs are all part-time. i'm 43 yrs old with a degree in business admin. I have $50k in student loan debt since i graduated 20yrs ago. My gf has 2 jobs, her parents has 2 jobs, my dad has 1 part time job and my mom passed. WE ARE ALL STRUGGLING TO PAY RENT IN THE USA!

    • @user-gv9du8pg8l
      @user-gv9du8pg8l Před měsícem +1

      As a Chinese, I actually envy you because you can earn three wages in one day! A job in China may last more than 10 hours, haha,

  • @lirenzeng592
    @lirenzeng592 Před měsícem

    THe older man is an inspiration to all ...

  • @nitomurray6137
    @nitomurray6137 Před měsícem

    The issue is everyone studied for finance, everyone tried getting finance jobs etc. Its just oversaturated and some are inflexible to adapt to that reality. There are plenty of jobs, but there are none in finance.

  • @adolft_official
    @adolft_official Před měsícem +8

    Streets are Clean in China compared to India

    • @ellawang7603
      @ellawang7603 Před měsícem

      you should go to China, you will find everywhere is so clean in china😄

  • @pohkhui
    @pohkhui Před měsícem +4

    There is job, however many choose job.

  • @csong9940
    @csong9940 Před měsícem +1

    The volume being all over the place was very distracting

  • @AvoidTheCadaver
    @AvoidTheCadaver Před měsícem

    Once you strip out geopolitics people are the same everywhere, they just want to have a good job, financial stability and the time to lead a good life.
    Like old uncle said, being kind to onself and living well is success

  • @davidrichards1741
    @davidrichards1741 Před měsícem +15

    Hi from Singapore. The relevant thing is China has no inflation while US suffers runaway inflation leaving most people hopeless! In china, 85% of the people own their own homes. But in the US today, almost nobody under age 40 owns their own house and they never will.

    • @davidrichards1741
      @davidrichards1741 Před měsícem +5

      FACT: China enjoys the highest rate of home ownership among all major nations.

    • @weiwei7109
      @weiwei7109 Před 23 dny

      @@davidrichards1741 it's not china,but Singapore

    • @davidrichards1741
      @davidrichards1741 Před 23 dny

      @@weiwei7109 Yeahbut US thinks it's the same. US senators accused the Tiktok CEO, who/s singaporean, of being "CCP" and used that to justify the senate banning it.

    • @davidrichards1741
      @davidrichards1741 Před 23 dny

      @@weiwei7109 the reality of the ban ofc is different, twofold. One, it's plain theft. Two, they wan power to control and censor its content. No more gaza videos for example. They don't want your eyes to see the truth.

  • @ashishkumarsharma2584
    @ashishkumarsharma2584 Před měsícem +5

    Come to India most of young are unemploymed

  • @Craigsinglee
    @Craigsinglee Před měsícem

    It is a ripple effect, first the low level factory workers (now) are out of job due to factory shutdown and moving away to other south East Asian countries, then later it will impact middle class. The high unemployment of China now are mostly labour workers and young workers and graduates, eventually it will ripple to other experienced middle class workers. By the way middle class only accounts for about 10% of Chinese population

  • @skylinec83
    @skylinec83 Před měsícem +5

    Everything she’s saying is legit, logical, and practical…….
    But I can’t take her seriously with that hat on especially when I know she can make those ears flop up and down. 😂😂

    • @serriajohn
      @serriajohn Před měsícem +1

      she was a tour-guide, very open minded, and optimistic on life. Tour guide is kind of free lancer. it means she earned enough before COVID time.

  • @fioniafrankin7429
    @fioniafrankin7429 Před měsícem

    young generation people are not willing to go to factories and constructions, harsh working environment and the frequent shift are the big factors.