In a clear sign of how scarce city jobs have become, southwestern Yunnan province recently offered new college graduates an annual subsidy of 50,000 yuan ($7,464) per person to work in rural villages. Some netizens joked it was a replay of the 1968 “down to the countryside movement,” when Mao Zedong sent privileged urban youth to remote areas to learn from farmers.
As to whether Yunnan can deliver, it is anyone’s guess. The subsidy is no small sum — it would be about five months of the average starting salary for graduates from the elite Tsinghua University.
Two years ago, China’s job market bounced back quickly from the initial pandemic outbreak. There was not much economic trauma then. Only a small area around Wuhan, Covid ground zero, was affected. Within three months, life was back to normal.