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Number of job seekers sets a record (eastday.com) Updated: 2005-04-15 09:17 A record number of job
seekers visited the Shanghai Job Placement Center or its Website during the
first quarter of this year, where a record number of employers had set up help
wanted ads, according to a recent government employment report.
According
to the report, which was released by the Shanghai Labor and Social Security
Bureau yesterday, more than 335,000 people applied for jobs offered through the
center during the first three months of this year. That represents a 10.5
percent increase from the same period last year.
The number of employers
who used the center to recruit workers rose 13.3 percent from last year to
6,000. Those companies listed 328,000 job vacancies during the first
quarter.
The report said there was 0.98 vacancies for every job seeker
who visited the center by the end of March, about the same ratio as reported
during the first quarter of last year.
The center's Website
(www.12333.gov.cn) was busy during the first three months of the year, with
traffic increasing 20 percent from the same period last year. The number of
people visiting the center in person dropped 4 percent during the
period.
Zhang dezhi, the center's director, attributed the rising number
of job seekers using the Internet service to the number of upcoming university
graduates looking for jobs.
"As university graduates are always veteran
Internet users compared with other job-hunting groups, their strong employment
intention will undoubtedly give rise to the booming online job market," Zhang
said.
Meanwhile, positions in government departments or agencies were the
most popular among local job applicants with at least a college degree owing to
the high social status and preferential welfare policies such positions offer,
center officials said. The report indicated that more than 32 percent of
local university graduates this year said their first choice was to work for
government.
That is up from just 24 percent in 2003 and 27 percent last
year, according to the center.
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