So concern has shifted to China's countryside, where 56 percent of the country's 1.3 billion people reside:
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- The average income for Chinese farmers is about $690 a year -- less than a third of what is paid in urban areas.
- The shortage of well-paying jobs explains why as many as half of the laborers in Bamboo Pole, population 50,000, decided to seek factory jobs -- and why their return is so problematic now.
Many of the jobless migrant workers will stay in cities to try their luck, possibly at smaller salaries. - But for those who go home and stay, rural life will come as a shock. Now that they have lived in the big city, their expectations are a lot higher. Sichuan province started offering $11 million in training vouchers, at $73 a person, to teach workers new skills.
- An estimated 15 job training centers for returning migrants have been set-up in Jintang, and there are already over 2,000 workers receiving the courses.
But China's growing unemployment could strain U.S. relations over trade matters as the United States seeks China's help to deal with North Korea's nuclear program. If unrest grows, China could become more belligerent internationally.
Source: Calum MacLeod, "Return of jobless migrants strains China," USA Today, February 17, 2009.
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http://content.usatoday.net/dist/custom/gci/InsidePage.aspx?cId=dailytribune&sParam=34167386.story
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