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China Q1 2026 Urban Unemployment Rate Rises to 5.4%, Hitting 13-Month High as Weak Domestic Demand Drags Down Job Market

2026-04-16

Core Overview: China's job market is sounding the alarm once again. According to DataTrack data, China's surveyed urban unemployment rate rose to 5.4% in Q1 2026, further deteriorating from the previous value of 5.3% and exceeding the market consensus expectation of 5.2%. This figure sets the highest record in 13 months, indicating that despite the illusion of stellar overall economic data, the labor market recovery remains bumpy.

Key Details: Deconstructing the unemployment rate structure, the employment pressure on vulnerable groups is particularly prominent. The unemployment rate for the non-local hukou labor force (mainly migrant workers) jumped from 5.0% to 5.3%. In addition, the surveyed urban unemployment rate in 31 major cities nationwide climbed from 5.1% in the previous two months to 5.3%, reflecting that the ability of core tier-1 and tier-2 cities to absorb employment is being severely tested by corporate spending cuts.

In-depth Attribution: The root cause behind the data lies in a macroeconomic structure characterized by "external heat and internal cold." Institutions point out that despite benefiting from export expansion, with China's first-quarter GDP delivering a better-than-expected year-on-year growth of 5.0%, domestic demand remains weak. Retail sales in March merely edged up by 1.7%, far below market expectations, and real estate development investment continued a double-digit decline (down 11.2% YoY). The sluggish domestic demand has led to a shrinking demand for labor in the service and construction sectors, becoming the main culprit driving up the unemployment rate.

Outlook and Risks: Looking ahead, the job market will face even more severe challenges in the short term (1-2 months). It is expected that up to 12.7 million fresh graduates will flood into the labor market this year, and the youth unemployment rate will likely face tremendous seasonal rebound pressure. In the medium term (3-6 months), geopolitical turmoil in the Middle East and potential trade barriers may weaken the growth momentum of China's exports; if external catalysts fade and domestic demand stimulus policies fail to fill the gap in time, economic growth and employment stability in the second half of the year will face significant downside risks.

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