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The Guardian - China-Peak China Jobs local services and welfare strain under economys structural faults

September 17, 2023   5 min   943 words

中国的经济问题似乎进一步加剧,这篇报道揭示了一系列问题。高失业率、破产的地方政府和沉重的经济问题正在压垮中国的社会体系。青年失业率创下纪录,政府甚至停止了发布相关数据,这令人担忧。教育、房地产和科技领域的监管风暴摧毁了数百万工作岗位,而疫情期间,学生更多地选择继续接受教育,而就业市场几乎停滞不前,导致毕业生供应积压。 然而,中国经济的更大问题可能是结构性的。青年失业率最高的人群中,大多数都是刚刚离校的学生,他们无法获得以前维系着中国城市活力的服务业工作。数百万潜在的酒店员工、保安、快递员和保姆失业,受过教育、富有创造力的大学毕业生没有工作是一个问题,但人们找不到更多低端工作是“大问题”。自2013年以来,随着工厂迁移到劳动力更便宜的国家,制造业就业人数一直在下降,这导致了所谓的“极化时代”,高技能专业人士的工资上涨,而低技能经济部门的工人过剩推低了工资。 报道还指出,中国城市中非正规经济领域的就业份额在2004年至2019年间从33%增长到约60%。这不仅加剧了不平等现象,还妨碍了中国提高生产率的能力。同时,这也削弱了地方政府收税的能力,导致地方政府不得不依赖非税收入,如土地销售。然而,政府对房地产领域的监管冲击使地方政府面临了收入的巨大下降。 中国的省级政府几乎已经用尽了资金,地方政府债务估计总计23万亿美元,根据智库MacroPolo的数据,22个地级市面临中度或高风险违约。这些问题已经在中国各地产生了影响,包括一些城市的基础设施和服务的崩溃。为了平衡财政,北京鼓励地方政府削减福利支付,这引发了养老金抗议活动。在人口老龄化迅速增加的情况下,削减福利在“削弱需求、拖累就业和公共收入”的恶性循环中可能会损害消费。 总之,中国的经济问题似乎进一步加剧,弱势需求拖累就业和公共收入,这在没有自由市场的情况下削弱了国家支持就业和经济信心的能力。这个问题需要政府采取积极的措施来解决,以确保中国的经济能够持续增长并创造更多的就业机会。

When finding a job feels as unlikely as winning the lottery, playing the actual lottery may seem like a more productive use of time. In the first half of 2023, faced with a struggling economy, Chinese consumers spent 273.9bn yuan ($37bn/£30bn) on lottery tickets, an increase of more than 50% on the same period in 2022.

It’s just the latest symptom of an economy in distress. A record high youth unemployment rate of 21.3% in June prompted the government to stop publishing data on the issue – along with other areas such as the consumer confidence index – all which showed China’s economy was struggling.

Several factors have contributed to the unusually high youth unemployment rate. Education, real estate and technology – industries that graduates previously flocked to – have been hit by a regulatory storm in recent years which annihilated millions of jobs. And during the Covid-19 pandemic, more students stayed in education while the jobs market was all but frozen, leading to a pent-up supply of recent graduates on the jobs market.

But the bigger problems for the Chinese economy may be structural. Most of the people in the youth unemployment cohort are not recent college graduates but school leavers who are unable to get the types of service-sector jobs that have previously kept China’s cities buzzing. Millions of would-be hospitality workers, security guards, couriers and nannies are unemployed. Educated, creative college graduates going without work is a problem for a “politically significant part of the workforce”, says Eli Friedman, a professor who focuses on Chinese labour issues at Cornell University, but the fact that people are not finding more low end jobs is the “big concern”.

Since 2013, as factories have moved to countries with cheaper labour, the number of people employed in manufacturing has been in decline. That has led to an “era of polarisation”, according to a study published by economists at Stanford and Wenzhou universities, in which wages have risen for high-skilled professionals, while the surplus of workers at the low-skilled end of the economy has driven down wages.

Between 2004 and 2019, the share of people working in China’s cities in the informal sector – that part of the economy that is neither taxed nor picked up in government data – grew from 33% to about 60%. As well as contributing to yawning inequality, this hampers China’s ability to boost its productivity rates. “You don’t turn yourself into a high-income country with [close to] 70% of your economy in the informal sector,” says Scott Rozelle, an economist who led the wage polarisation study.

‘A peculiar time to be cutting entitlements’

Another problem created by the explosion in China’s informal sector is that it inhibits the ability of local governments to collect taxes. Personal income tax accounts for just 6% of China’s total tax revenues, compared with 24% in OECD countries. Only a tiny fraction of the country’s population pay any income tax at all.

As a result, local governments are forced to rely on non-tax sources of revenue, such as land sales. Between 2012 and 2021, the share of local government revenues that came from land sales increased from 20% to 30%.

But in 2020, armed with the mantra that “houses are for living in, not for speculation”, the government unleashed a wave of regulatory shocks to the real estate sector, prompting a record number of defaults and the worst slump in the housing market in the 21st century. That was bad news for local governments, which saw their land sale revenues fall by nearly a quarter in 2022.

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Residential buildings under construction in Beijing

Residential buildings under construction in Beijing. Photograph: Tingshu Wang/Reuters

The slumping revenues exposed a problem that has been brewing for years. China’s provincial governments have all but run out of money. Local government debt is estimated to total $23tn, and 22 municipalities are at medium or high risk of default, according to MacroPolo, a thinktank. The effects are already being felt across China.

In Hegang, a frosty coal-producing town near the Russian border, residents were left without heating, which is normally subsidised by the government, after the city made history by becoming the first to undergo fiscal restructuring in December 2021.

In February, the public bus operator in Shangqiu, a city of 7 million people in Henan province, said it was suspending services as it had run out of money to pay wages, insurance contributions or even to charge the electric buses.

In a bid to balance the books, Beijing has encouraged local governments to slash welfare payments, prompting pensioner protests earlier this year. With a rapidly ageing population and an already weak social safety net, it is a “peculiar time to be cutting entitlements”, Houze Song, a MacroPolo fellow, has noted, especially because reducing benefits encourages people to stash away their money, hurting consumption.

And so China’s economic problems risk falling into a vicious circle, where weak demand drags down employment and public revenue, which – in the absence of a free market – undermines the ability of the state to support jobs and economic confidence.

  • This is the second in a series of articles that examine the challenges facing China’s government and its population – at a time of upheaval for the country’s economy