In China, both a labour shortage and unemployment have emerged as problems in recent years. The number of university students scheduled to graduate in June 2014 is 7.27 million, increasing by 280,000 from 2013. Following 2013, at the time considered the most difficult year for jobseekers in history, 2014 is expected to be even harsher.
Problems in the labour market in China, a key region for Japanese companies advancing overseas, are also attracting attention in Japan. This paper provides a few perspectives on the Chinese labour market, which combines a labour shortage with challenges for jobseekers.
High unemployment amid a labour shortage
Although a nationwide labour survey did not include unemployment rates, we will look at the Chinese labour market using statistics from job placement services. According to the latest statistics on job offers and applications, as of the January-March quarter of 2014, there were 1.293 million young jobseekers who graduated in the last year or earlier but had yet to find a job through employment agencies in 102 major cities.
As the population of these major cities accounts for approximately 46.7 per cent of the total population of large and mid-size Chinese cities, we can estimate that the number of young jobseekers who have graduated, but have yet to find a job, totals more than two million.
Using data from the survey, I also tried to estimate the unemployment rate in those 102 major cities. I employed data on the working population in major cities and the number of job seekers who have not found employment (newly graduated unemployed persons and rural immigrant job seekers) based on the international standard set by the International Labour Organisation (see Figure 1).
Figure 1. Unemployment rate in major Chinese cities
Source: Calculated by the author from statistics on job placement services in China.
The unemployment rate, including rural migrants in major cities in the first quarter of 2014, is 8.7 per cent; excluding them is 6.9 per cent. Unemployment rates before the first quarter of 2014 are also close to these numbers, suggesting that the high unemployment rate has continued.
The unemployment rate is high not because unemployed people lack the ability to work. Looking at the age distribution of all job seekers in these 102 major cities (of whom 96.0 per cent are unemployed), workers aged 45 or younger account for 89.9 per cent of the unemployed, indicating a large population of young workers. In addition, 54.7 per cent of job seekers have specialist or vocational qualifications. Regarding the type of job, 44.1 per cent of job seekers look for technical jobs, while 25.8 per cent seek marketing, sales, or service jobs. Abundant, high-quality labour in the Chinese labour market still exists.
Job offers still buoyant
The high unemployment rate cannot be blamed for the sluggish job offers. Despite the slower economic growth, job offers from companies are still buoyant. As indicated in Figure 2, the job-offers-to-seekers ratio in the first quarter of 2014 was 1.1, showing that there are still more job offers than job seekers.
Figure 2. Job-offers-to-seekers ratio in China
Source: Statistics on job placement services in China (http://www.chinajob.gov.cn/) and CEIC Database
With regard to the buoyant job offers, I demonstrated in my recent book that labour productivity is the most persuasive of the factors that have an impact on the job-offers-to-seekers ratio in China.
As shown in search theory, the larger the income earned from a job, the larger will be the rate of return gained from job creation for companies, which will result in more job offers. Given that productivity in developing countries will improve through not only technological innovations on their own but also through their efforts to catch up with developed nations, a higher rate of increase in productivity can be expected. For that reason, even if the economy slows down somewhat, buoyant job offers are likely to continue because of the support for higher productivity.
Reasons why a labour shortage coexists with high unemployment
So why do labour shortage and high unemployment co-exist in China? I analysed this in my book. I explored the matching efficiency in the labour market by estimating the matching function between job offers and job seekers in urban labour markets in China based on search and matching theory.
Figure 3 shows the values of matching efficiency on the vertical axis. From the figure, we see that matching efficiency in China declined sharply from the late 1990s to the 2000s.
Figure 3. Matching efficiency in the Chinese labour market
Source: Liu (2013 a, b)
* A conceivable cause of the sharp decline is the increase of the inflow and outflow of workers into and out of companies, reflecting the establishment of new companies and the disappearance and downsizing of old state-owned enterprises following economic and corporate reforms, which led to friction in the labour market. This decline was also attributable to imperfect information between job offers and jobseekers.
* I also found that a rise in productivity has a significant negative impact on matching efficiency and showed that a mismatch has arisen between unemployed persons and companies seeking highly-skilled workers.
* Lastly, although it was not dealt with by quantitative analysis in the book, a skill mismatch and a geographic mismatch have some bearing on this phenomenon.
For example, the job-offers-to-seekers ratio for security maintenance staff is surprisingly high in Nanjing at 4.0, while it is only 0.2 in Shanghai.
One way to improve matching efficiency is through employment agencies, as I find that the matching efficiency is very high in areas where there are many employment agencies. As employment agencies are organisations that provide information mainly on job offers and job seekers, they are useful for increasing matching efficiency by correcting imperfect information. Although it is, of course, difficult to increase substantially the number of employment agencies in a short period of time, it would be beneficial for companies to put more efforts into recruiting activities in order to bring many job seekers and secure the labour force.
Although the coexistence of unemployment and labour shortage is seemingly contradictory, it is observed in labour markets not only in China but also in many other countries. Even though it is impossible to eliminate imperfect information in the actual economy, there is room for improvement. If the matching efficiency in the labour market increases, it seems possible to lower both the labour shortage and the unemployment.
This article was originally published at VoxEU.org. Reproduced with permission.