新聞動態 NEWS
| 再見北上廣!畢業生正流向二線城市
《2019年中國大學生就業報告》近日在京發布。
報告顯示,應屆畢業生薪資持續增長,“北上廣深”就業比例持續下降,教育、醫療、信息等民生行業成就業增長點。
College graduates in China are leaving first-tier cities for second-tier ones, according to the annual College Graduates' Employment Report issued on Monday.
報告顯示,2018年,21%的大學畢業生選擇在北上廣深等一線城市工作,比2014年下降4個百分點。
The report said that only 21 percent of college graduates last year chose to work in first-tier cities—Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou and Shenzhen—down 4 percentage points from 2014.
報告稱,2018年,24%的大學畢業生在那里工作三年后選擇離開一線城市,比2014年增加了6個百分點。
Last year, 24 percent of college graduates chose to leave first-tier cities after working there for three years, up 6 percentage points from 2014.
除此之外,求賢若渴的二線城市也出臺了不少優惠政策,開始跟一線城市搶人才。
Second-tier cities have also rolled out favorable policies to attract university graduates, which include preferential treatment to obtain hukou, as well as housing and government subsidies.
二線城市已經推出了吸引大學畢業生的優惠政策,比如戶口優惠,住房和政府補助。
事實證明,這些優惠政策吸引到不少畢業生,杭州,成都,寧波和武漢等二線城市頗受青睞。
在主要的“新一線”城市中,在杭州就業的本科畢業生中外省籍占比(60%)最高,其次為天津(58%),均超過一線城市中的廣州(45%)。
Around 37.3 percent of college graduates who chose to work in one of the top 10 second-tier cities such as Hangzhou, Chengdu, Ningbo and Wuhan were from other regions in 2018, up 9.4 percentage points from 2014, the report said.
2018年,約有37.3%來自其他地區的大學畢業生選擇在杭州,成都,寧波和武漢等十大二線城市之一工作,比2014年增加9.4個百分點。
這份大學生就業報告由麥可思研究院(MyCOS)編寫,由社會科學文獻出版社(Social Sciences Academic Press)共同發布,調查了來自30個省級地區的30.3萬名畢業生,迄今已是第11年發布。
MyCOS創始人王伯清說,由于一線城市交通、環境、物價和戶口問題突出,這些城市對大學畢業生的吸引力正在下降。
Wang Boqing, founder of MyCOS, said large populations, traffic congestion, smog, surging property prices and difficulty in obtaining permanent residence, or hukou, have made life in first-tier cities less attractive for college graduates.
一名從深圳轉到寧波工作的畢業生稱:“在深圳幾乎每天加班到晚上10點才能下班,而現在下午5點就可以回家了。”
"I had to work till 10 pm almost everyday in Shenzhen but after I moved to Ningbo, I can leave work around 5 pm. I feel much more relaxed in Ningbo as it is much cheaper to live there and the city has a much slower pace of life," he said.