indushek
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Ok that makes more sense now, damnWhat they are doing is try to fudge data by trying to pull a fast one.
Because it will not make sense if you count the entire youth population (which is at 96 million) and then represented the denomination of the 6 million youth that can't find work and then proceed to say the % is low because it's 6/96 = 6%, because either the entire youth population would have to be employed and not studying, or you have to count studying as an employment.
You cannot mix a denomination base into a true/filtered figure, it does not represent the data set nor it subset. That's however, is the most common way to fudge data, because they hope you don't process what they say.
I was scratching my head, as to why they would even attempt to mix up students into employment data.
Did you notice that, the person responding says that, the data is based on some survey and out of 3,40,000 households surveyed (in 31 provinces) 2,50,000 households are in Urban areas. This means very few rural areas are surveyed.
Two more curious things I found
The employment pressure of young people is still high, there is a shortage of high-skilled personnel, and "difficulties in job hunting" and "difficulties in recruiting workers" coexist, so as to promote the balance of total employment supply and demand and the structure of employment. Reasonable, but still needs to be strengthened.
This seems like word play, I mean every Chinese poster here has been saying that, Chinese students don't want to get employed in jobs that don't require their level of qualification. Here this man says there is shortage of high skilled personnel !! Then also goes onto say difficulties in job hunting exists lol. WTF
There are so many conflicting details in this one report