BEIJING – China said on Sept 17 its youth unemployment rate hit a record in August since publication resumed under a revised calculation in 2024, adding to a recent string of gloomy economic data.
The government’s jobless rate for people aged between 16 and 24 had soared to more than 21 per cent in June 2023, after which the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS)
paused its monthly publication
.
The rate dropped by more than six percentage points when figures resumed for December of that year – though derived from a new methodology that excluded students.
The number has fluctuated over the past year as Beijing sought to breathe new life into a struggling economy that has amplified anxieties in the labour market.
Official NBS data showed on Sept 17 that the youth unemployment rate reached 18.9 per cent in August – the highest level since the change.
The increase marks the latest development in a recent streak of disappointing figures showing strain on the world’s second-largest economy.
Factory output and retail sales rose last month at their slowest pace in around a year, authorities said earlier this week.
NBS chief economist Fu Linghui on Sept 15 acknowledged “weak” demand in the domestic economy, noting that “some enterprises are facing operational difficulties”.
The intensified headwinds come as Beijing confronts a multi-sided battle to ensure stable growth.
A yearslong debt crisis in the property sector, persistent sluggishness in domestic spending and heightened trade tensions with Washington are among the thorny issues facing Chinese leaders.
The NBS announced on Sept 15 that China’s overall unemployment rate last month stood at 5.3 per cent – up slightly from 5.2 per cent in July. AFP
ChinaEmploymentChina economyChildren and youth