Young migrant workers look to defy robots
Yang Lifeng, a 30-year-old foreman in a mechanical processing workshop in the city of Suzhou, east China鈥檚 Jiangsu Province, is adored by his fellow migrant workers, as he foresaw the trend of robot invasion in factories five years ago.
The native from northern Hebei Province arrived in Suzhou and heard Foxconn, the world鈥檚 largest electronics contract manufacturer, cut thousands of jobs in the city to replace them with robots.
Aware of the threat, Yang, with a junior college degree, started to take computer numerical control, or CNC, lessons at his own expense, while working a factory job in the Suzhou Tianze Precision Machinery Co Ltd.
The factory began to introduce automation equipment in 2015, reducing the number of workers to 100 from 500.
Yang鈥檚 foresight to learn CNC not only saved him from being laid off but also provided him with the opportunity to become a mechanic foreman in the Jiangsu factory.
Earning a higher salary than his fellow laborers, Yang bought an apartment in the city last year and settled down like a local, a dream of many struggling migrant workers in China.
Industrial robots are rapidly gaining on human workers in economic powerhouses in eastern and southern regions.
As labor costs rise, industrial employers have become more interested in the efficiency of robots.
According to the International Federation of Robotics, China installed around 138,000 industrial robots last year, accounting for one-third of the global market and representing a 58-percent growth rate year on year. Robot sales are expected to reach 150,000 units in 2018.
鈥淭here is only one way you don鈥檛 lose your jobs to robots 鈥 control them,鈥 Yang often lectured his co-workers, calling on them to acquire more skills.
Yang is not the only one with such forward thinking. China鈥檚 new generation of migrant workers born after 1980 has become mainstream in the workforce.
In 2017, the number of young, rural-urban migrants reached 145 million, surpassing 50 percent of the total migrant workforce for the first time, according to the National Bureau of Statistics.
However, the NBS statistics also showed that 48 percent of the young migrant workers are employed in the service industry, up 1.3 percent, while in the manufacturing and construction sectors, employment rates are down by 0.6 and 0.8 percent, respectively. A labor shortage prevails in these industries.
鈥淐ompared with the older generations, young migrant workers have more job choices, especially in the booming service sector,鈥 said Zhu Tianshu, director of the Kunshan Human Resources and Social Security Bureau in Suzhou.
He said local factories are in need of technicians and engineers. These jobs are largely for the younger generation.
Statistics from NBS showed that in 2017, 10.3 percent of the country鈥檚 migrant workers had a college education, up 0.9 percent from the previous year.
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