Second- and third-tier cities compete to attract talents
![]() |
| Graduates throw their caps in the air in front of the library in Southeast University in Nanjing, Jiangsu province, on June 14, 2017. [Photo/VCG] |
Many second- and third-tier cities in China have rolled out a slate of favorable policies to attract university graduates, dubbed the latest wave of talent grabs, chinanews.com reported.
A survey carried out by Zhaopin.com, one of China's leading recruitment websites, shows 37.5 percent of China's new university graduates in 2017 want to work in second- and third-tier cities — metropolises besides Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou and Shenzhen.
These fresh graduates have become the chasing targets of second- and third-tier cities. To attract as much talent as possible, cities exert themselves to implement policies and provide benefits, which are appealing to the university graduates.
Though the policies vary from city to city, they generally focus on major issues concerning graduates, including preferential treatment for permanent residence (called hukou in Chinese), housing and government subsidies.
- 9 trapped in Heilongjiang building collapse, rescue operation ongoing
- Large-scale marine research infrastructure platform starts construction in Shanghai
- China's defense ministry sends delegation to Europe for institutional dialogues
- Internet Media Forum explores the future of content creation
- Confidence high among Taiwan people on mainland under new 5-year plan
- About 550,000 Chinese sturgeon released into wild
































