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Tags: China,
The increase of college graduates each year from 800,000 to 6 million has created a class that is worse off in employment opportunities than workers in China's factories.
Grouped Articles
A Dearth of Work for China's College Grads
BusinessWeek 09/01/2010
China's Workers in No Need of Stimulation
Wall Street Journal 06/04/2012
Wall Street Journal 03/05/2014
China's Army of Graduates Faces Struggle
New York Times 12/11/2010
BusinessWeek 01/27/2011
New York Times 01/28/2012
Keith Bradsher describes the life of one family of migrant workers in China. The dad is a worker in coal mining, the mother works in farms nearby. The daughter has made it to sophomore in college but lacks optimism for the future because of the lack of jobs in China for new college graduates. The parents see the daughter as someone who would care for them in their old age as they hardly have any retirement savings.
Grouped Articles
Strains Show in China's Job Market
Wall Street Journal 06/11/2013
Peterson and Hanushek: The Vital Link of Education and Prosperity
Wall Street Journal 09/11/2013
College Tuition Increases Slow, but Government Aid Falls
Wall Street Journal 10/23/2013
New York Times 10/22/2013
A Dearth of Work for China's College Grads
BusinessWeek 09/01/2010
Left-Behind Children of China's Migrant Workers Bear Grown-Up Burdens
Wall Street Journal 01/17/2014
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