就業(yè)難每年都在困擾著畢業(yè)生們,然而最大的問(wèn)題不在于工作機(jī)會(huì),而在于這份工作的工資是否能滿足畢業(yè)生們的期待。
測(cè)試中可能遇到的詞匯和知識(shí):
glut(商品)供過(guò)于求;大量[gl?t]
daunting使人畏縮的['d?:nt??]
cohort 一群;步兵大隊(duì)['k??h??t]
mantra 咒語(yǔ)['m?ntr?]
cull from從……中采集
By Tom Hancock
Chinese graduates' salaries have fallen for the second year in a row, according to a large-scale survey, as a glut of degree-holders grows thanks to a massive expansion of higher education.
A record 8m Chinese graduates are due to join the labour force this year, just under half of all workforce entrants and up from about 4m just a decade ago. China has opened hundreds of new universities over the period, while a growing number of parents expect their children to attend university.
But as China's economy has slowed, average monthly salaries for new graduates fell 16 per cent to Rmb4,014 ($590) this year, the second consecutive year of declines, according to a survey by recruitment website Zhaopin.com.
“With such a large graduating class this year, new jobseekers still face a daunting challenge, especially those from less well-known universities outside the top tier,” the survey said.
Xiaoyu Zhang, who will graduate in accounting this year from the Southwestern University of Finance and Economics in Chengdu, said she had submitted 17 applications before securing an accountancy job at a state-owned technology company — with a monthly salary of Rmb4,500.
“I feel unsatisfied with my salary,” she said, adding that she had been attracted by added benefits such as a subsidised accommodation, common in Chinese state-owned companies. “I don't enjoy accounting but I am not competitive in any other area.”
The prospect of a large cohort of university-educated yet unemployed young people worries China's Communist party, which fears the potential for social unrest. In what has become an annual mantra, China's Premier Li Keqiang called last month for “more efforts” in helping graduates find jobs or start businesses.
The government says 3.34m jobs were created in the first quarter of this year, and the Zhaopin data, culled from about 93,000 students who will graduate this year, suggest the quantity of jobs for graduates is less of a problem than their quality.
Although a growing number of students say securing employment is difficult, more than 70 per cent of students set to graduate this year have already received at least one job offer, according to the survey.
Concerns over the low quality of graduate jobs have been highlighted in recent years by the expanding ranks of students enrolled in “internship” schemes in the manufacturing and service sectors, often involving low-paid and menial work such as assembling phones or moving boxes in e-commerce warehouses.
The gap between graduates' expected and actual wages is widening, the survey said, with more than three-quarters of those surveyed paid less than their expectations. Female graduates are worst off: they are paid Rmb750 less than men per month on average, according to the survey.
1.How many graduates are about to work this year?
A.4m
B.8m
C.10m
D.11m
答案(1)
2.How long has the wages of graduate been declining?
A.Two years
B.Three years
C.Five years
D.Ten years
答案(2)
3.What percentage of graduates has received at least one job offer?
A.30%
B.50%
C.70%
D.80%
答案(3)
4.What is the biggest concern over job-seeking?
A.The gap between graduates'expected and actual wages
B.Worried graduates'quality
C.Worse working environment
D.Bad behavior during work
答案(4)
(1)答案:B.8m
解釋:據(jù)統(tǒng)計(jì),今年參加工作的大學(xué)畢業(yè)生人數(shù)大約在800萬(wàn)左右。
(2)答案:A.Two years
解釋:2016年已是中國(guó)大學(xué)生薪資連續(xù)下降的第二年。
(3)答案:C.70%
解釋:盡管面臨著工作難的狀況,仍有70%的畢業(yè)生表示他們得到不止一份的工作機(jī)會(huì)。
(4)答案:A.The gap between graduates'expected and actual wages
解釋:對(duì)于就業(yè)的最大問(wèn)題在于,畢業(yè)生對(duì)于薪資的期待往往與他們實(shí)際獲得的不符。