China’s Young Elite Clamber for Government Jobs.
Some Come to Regret It.
With youth unemployment high, millions will take this
month’s Civil Service exam. But for those who get jobs, the reality can be
monotonous work that blurs the line with personal lives.
Claire Fu
By Claire
Fu
Jan. 2,
2023, 5:00 a.m. ET
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/01/02/business/china-youth-unemployment.html
In Beijing
and cities across China, as many as 2.6 million job applicants, including
graduates from the country’s top universities, will report to testing centers
in early January to face exceedingly long odds and compete for 37,100
entry-level government jobs.
The
national exam is an annual rite for young Chinese, some of whom spend thousands
of dollars for prep classes and many hours cramming for it. It comes at a
fraught time. It was supposed to be given in early December, then was canceled
at the last minute. The government cited Covid-19 lockdowns, but the exam was
postponed days after protests in more than a dozen cities against China’s
severe pandemic restrictions.
Jobs in
China’s vast Civil Service have long been considered prestigious launching pads
for a career. They include entry-level roles typical in any economy, like
clerks in municipal government, and some that are unique to China, such as
assisting in the country’s extensive censorship bureaucracy.
But these
days the jobs are also coveted out of necessity, because it’s especially hard
for new graduates to find employment at private companies.
Nearly one
in five people between the ages of 16 and 24 in China are unemployed. Alibaba,
Tencent and other tech firms have laid off workers. Economic growth has been
battered by a sharp real estate slump, and small businesses suffered under the
Covid restrictions, which paralyzed large parts of the country for weeks or
months at a time. The “zero Covid” policy has been scrapped, but the economy is
not expected to quickly snap back.
“It’s just
that they don’t have so many opportunities in the private sector,” said Alfred
Wu, a professor at Singapore’s Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy.
The
competition for public service positions is so fierce that people often refer
to them with a Chinese saying: “thousands of troops crossing a single-plank
bridge.”
The exam is
rigorous. Test takers must answer about 130 multiple-choice questions covering
topics like math, data analysis, science and economics. They are asked to write
five essays of 200 to 1,000 words each on social issues and government
policies. Scoring highly increases the chances of getting a job, although
getting hired means enduring a battery of interviews, background checks and
other reviews.
Then
there’s the reality of Civil Service work. Some say their days are ruled by
rigid hierarchies and involve monotonous chores. Others, while saying they
enjoy their jobs, complain that their responsibilities often sprawl beyond normal
work hours. The role they had to play enforcing China’s zero-tolerance approach
to Covid the past three years was a sore spot.
Amy Liu,
who has served as a clerk in Beijing’s municipal government for the past six
years, said she mostly enjoyed her work, learned a lot from it and found her
days satisfying.
But in the
last few years, she has been dragged into the “zero Covid” campaign. Like
everyone in her department, she was required to volunteer at virus testing
sites once a week when there were a high number of cases. She was instructed to
stand guard and keep crowds in line.
“This type
of thing irritates me so much,” Ms. Liu said.
This was in
addition to other required tasks unrelated to her job, such as study sessions
about Communist Party history, ideology lessons organized by the propaganda
department, and tutorials about law and discipline from the anticorruption
department. These topics have taken on greater importance throughout China
since Xi Jinping took power in 2012.
Working in
public service has a rich history in modern China. Government jobs were once
prized — an earlier generation referred to them as “iron rice bowls” because of
their stability. They offered security and regular work hours. But after the
Chinese economy started to open up, many young people chose instead to pursue
the riches and opportunities available in the private sector.
That trend
has reversed under Mr. Xi. The heavier hand of the state on parts of the
economy like technology has made those private-sector jobs less attractive and
harder to find, while also putting new burdens on Civil Service workers.
“The
culture of the entire Chinese local government has changed, from encouraging
the innovative economy and developing tourism to achieving the goal of
political security and pleasing the supervisors,” said Xiang Biao, a professor
of social anthropology at Oxford University who focuses on Chinese society.
These jobs
have been particularly tough during the pandemic. China’s rigid policies
created a thicket of rules that civil servants had to enforce, and that made
frontline workers “punching bags” and “decompression valves,” Liberation Daily,
a Chinese Communist Party newspaper, stated in an April article during a
lockdown in Shanghai that lasted two months.
Mr. Xi has
said China needed to ease the burden on lower-level government workers by
reducing “formality for formality’s sake and bureaucracy,” noting how
government departments in some cities force staff to complete paperwork that
doesn’t solve real problems. But it’s not clear whether the relaxation of “zero
Covid” will change the nature of the entry-level jobs, at least in ways that
will make the work more appealing.
It’s a hard
time for a young person to start a career in China. “They know that the
opportunities generated by China’s rapid growth no longer belong to this
generation,” Mr. Wu, the China expert in Singapore, said. That frustration
among many young people, he said, was expressed in the surge of protests that
rocked China in November.
“Of course,
the protests must have had something to do with Covid, but they also showed
their desperate side,” he added.
Despite
dissatisfaction with their work, some of the young civil servants said they
felt trapped because there was no guarantee that they would find something
better in the private sector. In addition, they said they often felt pressured
by parents who value a stable job and revel in the status of a child working
for the government.
“My parents
think it’s good to be a civil servant,” Ms. Liu said. “They think I should
never leave.”
Katherine
Shi has a job that, at first, sounds alluring to many young graduates: She
watches television for a living. Ms. Shi is a government censor who searches
for vulgarity, politically sensitive content and other forbidden subjects on TV
and in movies.
The job has
become hard to bear, she said. Some days, she is asked to censor 100 hours of
video and make sure nothing slips by. Even with watching videos at double
speed, Ms. Shi said it was impossible to deal with the workload.
She often
feels conflicted at work, she said, because there are many things that she does
not find objectionable but that fall under censorship guidelines. She is
ordered to censor an ever-growing list of content, such as videos about
L.G.B.T.Q. people, tattoos or so-called “lie flat” values, a counterculture
approach that has gained popularity in China for embracing a lack of ambition
and wanting an easy, uncomplicated life. In a crime movie, censors need to make
sure that criminals are always punished.
“Culture
should be very free, and you should allow the expressions of some so-called
negative energy and the dark side of society because they truly exist,” Ms. Shi
said. She said she felt that some people in the government had closed their
eyes to how the world really was.
“I was very
distressed about this,” she said, adding that she is considering quitting to
study abroad.
Claire Fu
covers news in mainland China for The New York Times in Seoul. @fu_claire
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