They used to work for China’s biggest companies. Now they’re doing manual labor

4 mins read
54 views

Editor’s Note: Sign up for CNN’s Meanwhile in China newsletter which explores what you need to know about the country’s rise and how it impacts the world.

Leon Li used to play a discreet but indispensable part at one of China’s biggest tech giants.

As an administrative officer, she worked around the clock to schedule meetings, prepare documents and provide her bosses with whatever support they needed.

But in February, she quit the company, forgoing a stable career and comfortable salary for
something a little less stressful — cleaning homes.

“Every morning when the alarm rang, all I could see was my dull future,” she told CNN, reflecting on her office job.

Li, 27, is part of a growing base of Chinese workers swapping high-pressure office jobs for flexible blue-collar work.

Many of them used to work for some of the biggest companies in the country.

But these firms are slowly losing their appeal as China’s economy faces headwinds including a property crisis, declining foreign investment and slumping consumption.

China’s economy grew 4.7% year-on-year in the second quarter of 2024, missing economists’ expectations and marking the weakest growth since the first quarter of last year, according to the latest data from the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) released on Monday.

Gruelingly long hours and shrinking resources have prompted employees like Li to rethink whether it’s worth trading their time and health for higher pay.

“I like cleaning up. As living standards improve (across the country), the demand for housekeeping services is also surging with an ever-expanding market,” said Li, who lives in the central Chinese metropolis of Wuhan.

But more importantly, she feels happier.

“The change it brings is that my head no longer feels dizzy. I feel less mental pressure. And I am full of energy every day,” she said.

Li is not the only white-collar worker who has found a better work-life balance by trading an office job for manual labor.

Alice Wang, 30, who is using an alias for privacy reasons, used to work for one of China’s leading live-streaming e-commerce platforms, earning 700,000 yuan ($96,310) per year.

But she resigned in April, moving from Hangzhou, a picturesque tech hub, to the more laidback city of Chengdu, where rent is cheaper, to take up pet grooming.

China’s notorious “996” work culture – the practice of working from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. six days a week that is common among the country’s tech companies, startups and other private businesses – has been a push factor for many employees who call it quits.

Wang recalled feeling physically frail and “very lifeless and stagnant” at her old job, when she used to dedicate most of her time to work.

But she feels different now.

“The feeling of growth is relatively good,” she said, adding that she’s undertaking grooming training and has ambitions to one day open her own store. “That’s the longer-term plan,” she said.

The trend to move from professional to manual jobs comes amid surging demand for blue-collar workers, according to Chinese recruitment platform Zhaopin.

In its latest survey released in June, the platform found that demand for blue-collar
jobs – such as food delivery workers, truck drivers, waiters and technicians – had surged 3.8 times in the first quarter of the year compared to the same period in 2019.

Demand for delivery workers grew the fastest, by 800%, after three years of Covid-related lockdowns that gave rise to a takeout food culture.

And blue-collar workers’ pay has also gone up, attracting more people to jobs they might have previously avoided.

The explosion of online shopping has seen the average monthly salary for a delivery worker surge 45.3% since 2019, from 5,581 yuan ($768) to 8,109 yuan ($1,116), according to the survey.

For some college graduates though, taking a manual job was not their first choice.

As the economy slows, positions for fresh grads have become harder to come by in an increasingly competitive corporate job market.

The survey also found the number of people under the age of 25 who applied for blue-collar jobs in the first quarter of this year surged 165% compared with the same period in 2019.

China’s unemployment rate for 16-to-24-year-olds reached a staggering 21.3% in June 2023, according to the NBS, which subsequently suspended the release of the figure for months while it adjusted its methodology.

The authorities brought back the data in January this year – excluding from the figure some 62 million students, whose main task, they said, should be to study rather than look for jobs.

Wuhan is a major commercial city and the capital of the central Chinese province of Hubei.

In recent months, the jobless rate for prospective workers aged 16 to 24 years old has hovered between 14.2% and 15.3%, according to the NBS.

Economists Larry Hu and Zhang Yuxiao, from Macquarie, wrote in a research report last year that China’s services sector, private companies and small and medium-sized enterprises used to be the major sources of employment for young workers. However, they have been hit hard by sluggish consumer demand.

David Goodman, director of the University of Sydney’s China Studies Centre, said there had
been a mismatch between the kind of graduates that universities churn out and what the market really needs.

He said China’s economy was shifting towards advanced technology, green tech and service industries, while university education still largely focuses on manufacturing and public service, areas that are outdated or saturated.

“(There is) a key problem if the higher education system has not adjusted itself or been
adjusted to meet rapid changes in the structure of the economy,” he explained.

But some wonder if blue-collar work is truly the stress-free refuge people like Li and Wang imagine it to be.

A recent video circulated widely on Chinese social media demonstrated how things could go wrong. The clip showed a barista in Shanghai losing his temper over a customer who threatened to make a complaint against him.

In a fit of rage, he threw coffee powder at her, instantly becoming the center of a cafe drama that sparked an online debate about the challenges workers in the service industry face.

Complaints or bad online reviews can prove disastrous for shops and restaurants in China, as many consumers religiously follow recommendations on popular social media platforms such as Xiaohongshu and Douyin, China’s version of TikTok.

The threat of a bad review puts pressure on low-paid workers to avoid doing
anything that may draw negative attention to the company.

Some internet users denounced the barista’s poor manner. But many more sympathized with him.

“The pay is low to begin with, let alone having to face complaint. May as well just quit (when you are) squeezed both by the company and customers,” one online commenter wrote.

But for Li, who works just six hours a day cleaning houses on a freelance basis, her experience has been positive.

She enjoys bonding with her clients and says each cleaning session makes her feel like more than just a business transaction.

“Customers will carefully pour water for us to drink. When it is time to eat, they will order takeout for us, bring us food, and constantly remind us to drink water and rest,” she said.

So far, she said she has no regrets about quitting her office job.

“After a tiring day, I can go home and eat and do what I like without any extra mental pressure,” she said.

Read the full article here

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.

Previous Story

PDD Holdings: 9X P/E, Strong Growth, High Safety Margin (NASDAQ:PDD)

Next Story

26-year-old won the NYC housing lottery, pays $881/month for a 1-bedroom apartment: How the process works

Latest from Business

Nutter Butter, are you OK?

For the past month TikTok users have been commenting on Nutter Butter’s account. “You good?” asked one. “Nutter Butter are you paying for my