Numbers of those rushing to work and live abroad double to 9.3 million in 2 decades
Overseas shores are luring Chinese citizens in ever-increasing numbers, according to a major annual report.(here "a major annual report" refers to Annual Report on Chinese International Migration (2014). )
The number of Chinese going abroad to work or study has doubled in two decades, from 4 million in 1990 to 9.3 million in 2013, according to the report by the Center for China and Globalization released on Wednesday.
The number of foreign migrants arriving in China has also risen, but on a lesser scale, from 370,000 to 848,000 since 1990.
The top four destinations for Chinese are the United States, Canada, Australia and New Zealand.
The work ethic and law-abiding reputation of Chinese people meant that countries were increasingly ready to offer them opportunities.
"Chinese workers are welcomed worldwide for their hard work and honesty," said Wang Yaohui, director of the center.
Work opportunities are the driving force in attracting Chinese abroad, but education also plays a major role.
Last year, China Merchants Bank and management consulting firm Bain & Company jointly published the China Private Wealth Report, showing that about 77 percent of all respondents said they would consider, or were planning, to live overseas for their children's education.
The center's report said that in 2012 Chinese students were granted 399,000 visas to study overseas, a 10-fold increase on 2000.
The number of Chinese citizens going overseas purely for work rose by more than 13 percent year-on-year in 2012.
In 2012, a total of 850,000 Chinese workers, mostly in the manufacturing, construction and health sectors, went abroad to work, according to the Ministry of Human Resources and Social Security.
With the European economy beginning to show signs of recovery, Wang said this continent will become the next "hot" destination.
The general trend is set to continue, as many developed countries are facing labor shortages. The US is poised to triple the number of visas granted to technology specialists to 500,000 by 2018. Demand will also rise for those with basic skills, such as plumbers.
The center's report said that more than half of employers in Australia and New Zealand had difficulty in recruiting in 2012, while in Japan more than 80 percent of bosses said they had been unable to fill a shortfall in skilled labor.
Liu Guofu, a professor from the Law School at the Beijing Institute of Technology, said: "Compared with its total population, China's emigration figures are not that high.
"Rather than saying that we are losing talent, I'd prefer to believe that those Chinese who go overseas will contribute to the development of China by returning with much-needed skills."
The center released statistics last year showing that the number of Chinese returning home, especially those with good educational backgrounds, has been increasing since 2004 and will surpass the number of those leaving the country within the next five years.
Permanent residency was granted to 148,000 Chinese citizens in foreign countries in 2012. In China, 1,202 foreigners received permanent residency status in that year.
Given that China has close to 1.4 billion people, those holding green cards represent a tiny percentage. The comparable figure in the US is about 5 percent.
Qi Lixin, chairman of the Beijing Entry and Exit Service Association, said: "The big gap between the two indicates that China should be more open to the world. The immigration law in China is not that friendly to foreigners."
Under the law, at least four kinds of green card are available in China: For those who have invested at least $500,000 in the country; technical personnel, such as deputy managers and associate professors; people with special skills, or those "needed by the State"; and for spouses, provided they have been married for five years or more and have lived in China for at least nine months each year.
For foreign students in China, obtaining a Chinese work visa directly after graduating is quite complicated.
Yamagjchi Akio, a Japanese student studying international trade at the University of International Business and Economics in Beijing, said he hopes he can stay in China after graduation.
"I like China and I believe that if I stay here there will be more opportunities for my future career than in Japan," he said in fluent Chinese.
Foreign students in China have to return home to change a study visa into a work visa, involving a significant amount of time and paperwork.
Zhao Xinying and Matt Hodges in Shanghai contributed to this story.
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