Skip to main content

China's young talent: To stay or to go?

By Steven Jiang, CNN
updated 12:07 AM EST, Wed November 14, 2012
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Despite China's rapid economic growth, some desire life abroad
  • Some say opaque power transition adding more uncertainty to the country
  • 1.5 million Chinese are studying overseas, making it the largest group of foreign students in world
  • Chinese who live overseas and return are called "sea turtles"

Beijing (CNN) -- On the leafy campus of Beijing Foreign Studies University, one of China's most prestigious foreign language schools, graduating senior Gao Yue and her classmates go about their daily routine of studying and playing, showing little sign of anxiety over the impending dive into the real world.

Gao, a 22-year-old journalism major, has long planned her future outside China ever since she spent a month in the United States as an exchange student during high school. Going overseas after college is not a question of if, but when, she says. And it's not about a higher living standard.

"Press control is quite strict in China and we're looking for free speech," she said. "I think critical thinking is one of the most important things I want to pursue abroad."

Analyzing China's leadership change
China's environmental challenges
Chinese activist's family carry scars
An inside look at China's power change

"In China, the kind of education pushes people to think the same way, to drive them to the 'right' answer -- and I think being a journalist, being critical is the most important thing," she added.

Read: Chinese graduates fight to be heard

Gao is hardly alone in preparing to leave China, despite the nation's rapid economic growth during a global slump. As Beijing embarks on a once-in-a-decade leadership change, many observers say the opaque process of power transition is adding more uncertainty to a country already faced with challenges ranging from a widening income gap, a worsening natural environment, to rampant official corruption and the lack of free speech.

Nationwide, the education ministry's latest statistics show that almost 1.5 million Chinese are studying overseas, making China the largest source of foreign students for the rest of the world. The number of Chinese students going abroad has grown more than 20% every year since 2009, according to the government.

Read: Why the Chinese are flocking to U.S. colleges

A likely more worrying trend for the authorities is how billionaire entrepreneurs are moving away, along with their money and talent. Hurun Report, a magazine best known for its ranking of the wealthiest individuals in China, recently surveyed 1,000 super-rich Chinese, finding 60% of the respondents either in the process of immigrating or seriously considering it.

"What we are seeing is a sense of insecurity or, perhaps you want to look at it from another side, looking for a sense of insurance policy," said Rupert Hoogewerf, publisher of Hurun Report. "So they are beginning to quite actively try and get a green card in the U.S., Canada, Australia and Singapore."

The latest wave of exodus, especially among the younger generation, is helping people like Jinbo Xie do brisk business.

Xie founded and runs BeBeyond, a personal development training firm with some 40 employees as well as branches in Beijing and Shanghai. His company prepares thousands of young Chinese like Gao every year to study abroad and charges them as much as $2,500 for a six-week course.

Xie, 45, belongs to a group called "sea turtles" -- a nickname that plays on the sound of the Mandarin word for overseas returnees. When he came back to China in 2001 after studying and working in the United States for eight years, "sea turtles" were all the rage.

It's very exciting here -- a lot is happening. We do have the chance to make some impact.
Jinbo Xie

The phenomenon has tapered off in recent years as China's economic growth -- though still impressive by global standards -- slows. Xie says many returnees also start to find adapting to their motherland much harder than they thought.

"In the past two years, people made up their mind to go abroad again due to the exposure of environmental pollution, food safety and other problems in China," he said.

Xie remains unfazed himself and even did something unthinkable to most Chinese: To focus on growing his company, he gave up his American green card two years ago.

"It's very exciting here -- a lot is happening," he explained. "We do have the chance to make some impact."

"Even though we have a lot of problems, setbacks and whatever, at some point, we'll be there -- that's how I feel," he added.

ADVERTISEMENT
Part of complete coverage on
Check out CNN's latest news, commentary, photos, and videos on our China special section.
updated 3:23 AM EDT, Tue June 18, 2013
Triad attacks. Prostitute calling cards. Illicit money flows. This is the dark underbelly of Macau -- the gambling capital of China and the world.
updated 6:57 AM EDT, Fri June 14, 2013
Check out these old photos of the hair-raising flight path that required pilots to navigate between densely-packed apartments.
updated 7:30 AM EDT, Tue June 11, 2013
On site at the Gobi desert, CNN's Nic Robertson describes the launch of China's fifth manned spacefligh.
updated 8:59 AM EDT, Tue June 11, 2013
CNN's Nic Robertson gains rare access into China's Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center ahead of the country's fifth and longest manned spaceflight.
updated 8:33 PM EDT, Fri June 7, 2013
Henry Kissinger tells Fareed Zakaria that China's new president Xi Jinping wants a new, more stable relationship with U.S.
updated 6:04 PM EDT, Fri June 7, 2013
Chinese first lady Peng Liyuan steals the show on her trip to the Americas. CNN's Patricia Wu reports.
updated 12:03 AM EDT, Thu June 6, 2013
On the next episode of "On China," host Kristie Lu Stout explores China's stance toward North Korea, premiering June 19.
updated 1:40 PM EDT, Wed June 12, 2013
Liu Xiuzhi was branded a prostitute and shipped to a labor camp to "silence" her because she stood up to a powerful neighbor. Will there ever be reforms?
updated 8:54 PM EDT, Thu May 30, 2013
Chances are some of your old electronic junk -- often made in China -- will illegally end up back in China
updated 7:48 AM EDT, Wed May 29, 2013
Wuli, an ordinary village in eastern China's Zhejiang province, has an extraordinary problem: High rates of cancer.
Share with us your photos and videos of life in China-- the everyday China. The best content could be featured online or on air.
ADVERTISEMENT