Taipei [Taiwan]: A silent revolt is brewing among young workers in China, which largely escaped the world's notice due to China's stringent control over all social media platforms, according to a media report.
The year 2021 saw the initial stirrings of a silent revolt among young workers in the country, signalling that a major pillar of economic competitiveness, may be weaker than they seem.
This protest started in August this year with the 'Workers Lives Matter' movement that lamented the exploitative work practices common across the country's biggest companies.
This movement brought to light the infamous 996 work schedule that has persisted in Chinese companies for years despite ongoing public outcry. Despite ample support for the movement, references to it on social media disappeared off the internet.
According to Taiwan News, the dissatisfaction with jobs in China has revealed how unhappy young people in the country really are. Popular trends on social media like "involution," "lying flat," and "sang culture" show young Chinese people's dissatisfaction.
Oxford University anthropologist Xiang Biao has described involution as single-minded market competition becoming a way of life, a fundamental method for organizing society, and a way of allocating resources.