CNN wrote that China has an employment problem because the jobless rate for 16 to 24 year olds in urban areas hit 21.3% last month, a record high.
When read uncritically this sounds pretty bad, and CNN relies on the fact that the readers will not analyze this statement further. Let’s take a look at how absurd the argument in the article actually is.
First, why are they counting from 16 years old. I realize that child labour is being normalized in US right now, but in civilized countries kids don’t work and they go to school. A serious unemployment statistic wouldn’t include children.
Second, the article presents this as an abnormal situation, but is it actually.What is the situation like in Europe for example?
https://www.statista.com/statistics/613670/youth-unemployment-rates-in-europe/
Turns out that it’s pretty comparable, yet we don’t see CNN writing sensational articles about a youth unemployment crisis in Europe.
To sum up, CNN created a story out of whole cloth that relies on the readers not being curious enough to read it critically.
This is what much of reporting in western media looks like. Yet, a lot of people genuinely think that the media they consume is factual and unbiased allowing it to shape their views of the world.
Decades ago when not everyone could afford to send their kids to study, many would drop out early to work and support their family.
Nowadays there are so many university students as more families can afford to, the competition for jobs amongst them is fierce.
So by this article’s standards, being poor and destitute, and working multiple low wage jobs to scrape by is the way to go. Of course if this were still the situation we’d get an article on how education is only a privelege for the elite and the poor plebs have to scrape away in a failed gommie state.
Basically this quote from Parenti