真相集中营

英文媒体关于中国的报道汇总 2023-09-16

September 17, 2023   8 min   1690 words

根据提供的两篇新闻报道,主要内容如下- 1. 中国流量红人李佳琦在直播中称79元的眉笔不贵,引发网友强烈不满。这反映出中国青年面临就业困难,经济增长放缓的现状。 2. 越来越多中国青年因找不到工作而返回家中和父母同住。这与中国经济低迷、就业市场疲软有关。 评论- 1. 李佳琦的言论确实存在失态和脱离群众的嫌疑,但并不代表他本人态度恶劣或缺乏同理心。我们需要理解不同阶层的生活状态差异,以及网络直播的即时性会增加失言几率。 2. 中国青年就业问题突出,部分原因确实与当前经济情况相关,但也应看到职业观念和期望值改变是其中原因,不能简单归咎于经济。还需关注教育和社会政策对就业的影响。 3. 媒体报道存在某些夸大其词和导向性语句,如"忙碌而没有意义"等。这反映出西方媒体的一贯偏见,喜欢从负面角度描绘中国情况。我们需要保持客观理性,了解中国发展的全面真实情况。 总之,中国正处于经济和社会转型期,存在一些问题是正常的。但我们不能被部分舆论带节奏,要始终保持清醒和全面的判断。中国仍拥有丰富的发展潜力,最终会走向更加繁荣稳定的未来。

  • [World] What anger over top influencer says about China today
  • Many Young Chinese without Jobs Move Back in with Parents

[World] What anger over top influencer says about China today

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-66816564?at_medium=RSS&at_campaign=KARANGA
Li Jiaqi is also known as Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,
Li Jiaqi, dubbed "Lipstick King", is one of China's most successful salesmen
By Kelly Ng & Fan Wang
in Singapore

One of China's most popular influencers has come under fire for dismissing a young follower's complaint over high makeup prices as "nonsense".

Livestreamer Li Jiaqi's retort - that those who couldn't afford the 79 yuan ($11; £9) eyebrow pencil did not work "hard enough" - struck a raw nerve as China's youth struggle to find jobs in a sputtering post-pandemic economy. The 31-year-old has apologised but his remarks continue to fuel debate.

"What stung people was not the 79 yuan price tag, but your attitude and opinions on us," reads a comment on Weibo, which has been liked thousands of times.

"You don't know about the current economic climate. Many people are still working hard and struggling, just to keep their jobs," it read.

The past six months has brought a stream of bad news for China's economy. Youth unemployment has hit a record high. As of July, more than one in five 16-to-24-year-olds were jobless. The following month, officials said they would temporarily stop publishing unemployment data.

The property sector, which until recently accounted for a third of China's entire wealth, has long been teetering on the brink of a full-blown crisis. Economists have downgraded their forecasts for China's economic growth, many to below the government's target of about 5%.

Li - who first rose to fame in 2017 when he started hosting online sales sessions on shopping platform Taobao - is one of China's most successful salesmen. He hawks a a range of products from food to cosmetics and homeware, and reportedly sells millions of dollars' worth of items every night. He earned the moniker Lipstick King by once selling 150,000 lipsticks within five minutes. Over the years, Li has garnered some 150 million followers across multiple platforms - that number has shrunk since his controversial comments.

Given the bleak prospects millions of young Chinese face, Li's comments are proof that his celebrity status has desensitised him to their struggles, critics said. But the anger has also provided a window to the disillusionment rampant among the country's youth - one tweet read: "In social media comments responding to the Li Jiaqi incident, I saw a China that's collapsing."

The controversy began on Sunday when Li was livestreaming a sales pitch for an eyebrow pencil from Chinese cosmetic brand Florasis.

In response to a viewer who commented that the eyebrow pencil was too expensive, Li said: "How is that expensive? This has been the price for so many years. Stop spouting nonsense," he said, adding that domestic companies have been struggling.

He went on to tell the viewer off, "Sometimes you have to look inward, reflect on why you haven't receive a pay raise after so many years. Have you been working hard enough?"

College students at a jobs fair in China's Jiangsu provinceImage source, Getty Images
Image caption,
More than one in five of young Chinese between the ages of 16 and 24 are jobless

"It's been the same price all these years! This is driving me crazy," he concluded in an outburst, which also shocked his co-host, according to a widely-circulated clip of the exchange.

Criticism erupted online shortly after the livestream, soon spurring a series of hashtags on Weibo. A large proportion of Li's millions-strong following is young Chinese women who have been also been hit hard by the slowdown.

Many users posted about how they have struggling to make ends meet and how their wages have not been proportional to the effort they put in at work.

"No pay increase is not because we don't work hard. I have not had a pay raise for three years, and the prices for everything have been surging high... These days I only buy daily necessities, I no longer participate in the big sales," another user wrote.

State media also weighed in, with CCTV criticising Li. "Many Internet celebrities and anchors were humble before making money, and became very inflated after making money... and are doomed to be disgusting," it said in a commentary on its website.

Li is no stranger to controversy. In June last year, he displayed a tank-shaped ice cream cake on his show just hours before the anniversary of the Tiananmen Square crackdown.

Decades on, all references to the Tiananmen protests or what followed remains a censored topic in China. Li's broadcast of the tank-shaped cake was abruptly cut and he disappeared for three months, before reappearing on screen in September last year.

Li Jiaqi and his fans at an event in HangzhouImage source, Getty Images
Image caption,
Many of Li Jiaqi's millions-strong following are young Chinese women

Following this week's uproar, Li issued a written apology on Monday morning, acknowledging his "inappropriate remarks". He wrote: "I am well aware that everyone's work is tough... I'm really sorry that what I said failed you all."

He addressed the issue again later that day via livestream, where he said that it was "not [his] place to judge" anyone on the Internet.

Still, the furore did not subside. Li's comments continued going viral on Tuesday, with many people calling for a boycott of his livestream channel. A Weibo user with the handle Baixiwen said they "do not expect Li to be empathetic to our situation"

"Many of us work just as hard as [Li] does. We are just not lucky enough to achieve his level of success. For many people, being broke is not a choice," wrote another Weibo user.

Related Topics

Many Young Chinese without Jobs Move Back in with Parents

https://learningenglish.voanews.com/a/many-young-chinese-without-jobs-move-back-in-with-parents/7268761.html
Fri, 15 Sep 2023 21:55:14 GMT
In this file photo, a recruiter talks with an applicant at a booth at a job fair at a shopping center in Beijing, on June 9, 2023. (AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein, File)

An increasing number of young Chinese adults are moving back in with their parents because they cannot find jobs.

Estimates show that up to one in five young Chinese are currently out of work. The situation is linked to a depressed economy and weak job market as China tried to recover from its COVID-19 policies.

Traditionally, it is not unusual for adult Chinese children to remain living with their parents and other family members in the same home. But experts say the country’s current economic conditions are forcing many young adults to move back home because they are jobless and find it hard to support themselves.

One example is 29-year-old Marguerite Wang. She moved from her family’s home in northeastern China to the southern city of Shenzhen after graduating from college.

Wang spoke to reporters from The Associated Press about her experience. She said she had enjoyed her independence and life in the city. But when she lost her job with a gaming company in December, she decided to move back in with her parents.

Wang said she spent six months actively searching for a new job in Shenzhen. When her efforts proved unsuccessful, she decided it would be best to return home. Now she spends her days watching television and studying Japanese as she prepares to seek acceptance to a master’s degree program in Japan.

Wang told the AP she now mostly spends time with her parents, who give her spending money. For the moment, she is enjoying the slower way of life back home. And she is not sure what job she wants to seek next.

“I don’t want to be in the same kind of work situation as before,” Wang said. She added that while she was employed, she did not have much of a private life. “I actually didn’t know what I was so busy for,” she said.

Government data shows the unemployment rate in Chinese cities for people aged 16 to 24 reached a high of 21.3 percent in June. In July, the Chinese government stopped publishing age-specific data, the AP reported. This led some observers to think the politically sensitive numbers had climbed even higher.

China’s economy grew at a rate of 6.3 percent in the April through June period compared to the year before. In the previous year, China was still under heavy COVID-19 restrictions. Chinese exports have also fallen sharply as other major world economies suffer slowdowns.

The country’s overall unemployment rate in cities is officially 5.3 percent. But economic experts note that young people have been more affected than others.

Over the past two years, the Chinese government has placed new rules on industries such as technology and education. The moves led to major job reductions and closures in both industries, which traditionally hire young college graduates.

Other fields such as agriculture and building are lacking enough workers. But most college graduates want less physically demanding positions.

“There are job opportunities, but the job opportunities are low quality,” said Xiang Biao. He is head of the Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology in Germany. “So, for the only child of a family, who received education, who grew up in a so-called time of abundance, it’s very difficult to embrace that kind of job.”

The current situation also shows the changing feelings of parents, said Mu Zheng, an assistant professor of sociology at the National University of Singapore. He told the AP that parents who would push their children to succeed financially and socially might now offer to provide support to their jobless children.

Mu noted that many parents had already reached a high level of financial security after many years of economic growth. And some of those parents are now agreeing to provide the needed support to their adult family members.

I’m Bryan Lynn.

 

The Associated Press reported this story. Bryan Lynn adapted the report for VOA Learning English.

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Words in This Story

opportunity – n. a situation that makes it possible to do something

abundance – n. a lot of something

embrace – v. to accept