The ant generation

“蚁族”, literally “the ant group”, refers to young Chinese university graduates born in the 80s who work low-paid jobs (usually making between 1000 and 2000 rmb a month), spend at least two hours a day commuting to work, and share crowded apartments with other “ants” struggling to get by in big cities like Beijing. The concept comes from a recently published book on the phenomonon, edited by Lian Si, a professor at the University of International Business and Economics in Beijing.

According to the book, this “ant generation” makes up a fourth disadvantaged group in society, in addition to farmers, migrant workers, an laid-off workers. Although they have a high level of education, they can only find low-paid and usually temporary work (with no contracts or insurance), or spend their time traveling to different parts of the city for job interviews. Like ants, they’re intelligent, they live in groups, and although they’re weak individually, collectively they can wreak havoc. They’re also hardworking, and they always seem to manage to find ways around any obstacles placed in their way.

The plight of the “ant generation” seems to have stricken a chord, especially among people my age, who either know people in this situation or know that this could easily be them if they’re unlucky when the time comes to find a job. To see more on what their lives are like, take a look at these youku clips (in Chinese) here, here (where you’ll see Happy Farmer being played on a computer in a tiny apartment) and here (to see how it’s possible to eat in Beijing for just 10 yuan a day).

If lots of university graduates are working low-paid and relatively low-skilled jobs, that seems to imply that there’s probably an oversupply of university graduates. (At the same time, there’s often talk about China’s talent shortage, especially at the highest levels, but this probably has more to do with the quality of university education than the number of people with degrees). In a country that places such an incredibly high value on education, it makes sense that more people might pursue advanced degrees than the market needs, and reducing the number of degree spots would probably be incredibly unpopular.

But even if more people getting university degrees than the economy right now needs is one factor, there’s probably more at play that just that. Another possible factor is that too many people are moving to big cities after graduation, maybe because of unrealistic expectations of job opportunities in places like Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou, and people who are the first in their family or village to get a university education probably feel a lot of pressure to make full use of that degree. And the high cost of living in big cities is due in large part to high house prices, made worse by a possible housing bubble that has been partly fueled by government politics and the way in which the stimulus package was spent. Or maybe, like people here would likely say, 中国人太多了, and this kind of situation is inevitable in a country that has so many people.

Either way, I have nothing but respect for how hardworking Chinese people of my generation are, and I’m very grateful that I don’t need to buy an apartment in a Chinese mega-city just yet.

Printed from: http://www.fourseasashome.com/2009/12/the-ant-generation/ .
© Your Name Here 2012.

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