Jiang argues that Chinese employers no longer rate graduates of American colleges especially highly, which weakens a purely economic explanation for studying in the United States.
Topic brief
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Employers
Dave asks Jiang what he is missing.
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Topic Scope And Freshness
Dave asks Jiang what he is missing.
Key Notes
He says China currently spends large sums retraining new college graduates for two to four years because employers find them unprepared for the workplace.
Timestamped Evidence
"...explain this because you're right i mean like right now chinese employers don't look so fair really on graduates of american colleges because like..."
"...college and enters the workforce. And the reason why is that employers find that fresh college graduates don't have the skills they need to..."
"...seen this pattern before. Whereas an empire declines, it starts these employers wars overseas that do not benefit itself in the long term. But..."
"...scratch. Right? Because of the expertise provided to him from his employer. So technically, it should belong to HP. Right. But they came to..."
"...right? So if you work in China, your work unit, your employer has told you. So we've received a notice from the foreign ministry..."
"...going to like chinese universities right and isn't it shifting where employers view them more favorably now uh within"
"...to work hard. Because let's just say that you are an employer and you want to be like, okay, I'm going to pay people..."
"...that you were free to do any job you want and employers were free to hire anyone they wanted. And this system is obviously..."
"...Um, you know, you, you look at companies that treat their employers with respect, um, you know, companies like Google and Apple and, and..."
Relevant Lectures And Readings
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The Protestant Reformation begins as liberation from priest, pope, and ritual.
A June 2024 lecture arguing that the next American civil war will not repeat 1861.
The interview begins with a familiar Western panic: Shanghai tops PISA again, so maybe the future belongs to China.
Jiang begins with a vocabulary problem and turns it into a civilizational one.
Related Topics
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