The most significant event in China was the gaokao — the annual two-day national exam to qualify for college. Anxious parents wait while their children go through the nine-hour ordeal. Those with younger kids sift through the test questions — published once the exams are over — preparing their offspring for the inevitable. As for couples considering starting a family, just imagining the gaokao for theirs can be a pretty effective contraceptive.
The exam questions are almost designed to fail you. For instance, the closed-book essays in the Chinese language test demand a near-encyclopedic knowledge of history, classic literature and even current events. This year, one question was on the naming of a pavilion in the classic 18th century novel “Dream of the Red Chamberâ€; another queried strategies for the game of Go; a third requested an 800-word critique of a mini-documentary produced by the state-owned CCTV for the 100th birthday of the Communist Youth League.
Once through the gaokao — which translates as “high-level exam†— the 18-year-olds are almost guaranteed a university spot. In recent years, the acceptance rate has edged above 80%, doubling that in the mid-1990s when I took the test. A college education has almost become a right, not a privilege.
As such, most teenagers will give gaokao a shot. This year, a record 11.9 million are expected to take — or retake — the exam. China has roughly 15.9 million 18-year-olds.
This is creating a big social problem. A record 10.8 million college seniors are expected to graduate this summer, but China does not have enough good jobs for them. As of April, youth unemployment for those aged 16 to 24 was already 18.2%, due in part to Covid lockdowns. By July, the rate could easily exceed 20% once college graduates enter the workforce. As of April, fewer than half received job offers, according to online recruitment platform Zhaopin Ltd.
It’s no longer clear a college degree brings financial benefits. According to the same Zhaopin survey, the average starting salary for those who got job offers will be 6,507 yuan per month ($974). By comparison, a delivery worker for the likes of Meituan could earn as much as 10,000 yuan.
To make matters worse, with more than 10 million jobseekers on the street, employers are getting choosier. Many openings now require a postgraduate degree. Last year, at one high school, three of the four biology teachers it hired held PhDs.
As a result, this labor oversupply has prompted college seniors to delay their entry into the workforce. At the end of 2021, 4.6 million took the postgraduate entrance exam, an increase of about 21%. Graduate school still carries some weight. Last year, Chinese universities handed out about 8.3 million bachelor’s degrees; they graduated only about 773,000 with a masters and above. None of this makes gaokao any easier, however. The acceptance rate for the so-called Project 985 schools — China’s most prestigious universities — was 1.7% last year. For Harvard University’s class of 2025, it was 4%. Rather, it’s the bottom of the pyramid that has expanded. The number of institutions that grant university degrees soared from just around 1,000 in the mid-1990s to above 2,700 in 2021.
—Bloomberg