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TechnologyFriday, July 3, 2026

AI skills required for four in ten graduate jobs in China as training hours surge

Rapid adoption is reshaping work globally, but official statistics struggle to capture the shift, prompting US lawmakers to push for better data collection.

The share of graduate job postings in China requiring artificial-intelligence skills has risen to four in ten, while average employee training hours in Hong Kong have climbed to a 14-year high of 19.4 hours per year, as companies across Asia scramble to adapt their workforces. The Beijing-based recruitment portal Maimai reported that nearly 40 per cent of vacancies for new graduates in the first five months of 2026 were AI-related, up from roughly 30 per cent a year earlier. In Hong Kong, a survey by the Hong Kong Institute of Human Resource Management covering 127 firms and nearly 80,000 full-time staff found training hours rose 6.8 per cent from 2024, driven by a dual emphasis on AI and soft skills.

Yet the economic picture remains stubbornly opaque. In Washington, a bipartisan group of senators introduced a bill in June that would require the federal government to produce an annual report on AI’s effect on the workforce, after researchers documented the difficulty of measuring the technology’s spread in real time. The US Census Bureau has been asking businesses about AI use in a fortnightly survey since 2023, but estimates of adoption vary sharply depending on how questions are framed. A Goldman Sachs analysis projects that 9 per cent of the US workforce—roughly 15 million people—will be displaced, though the bank’s economists argue that history shows new positions reabsorb displaced workers. MIT’s Neil Thompson notes that capability is only the first step: an AI system also needs access to the right data and must be cheap enough to run, hurdles that slow adoption well below what the technology can technically do.

Across economies, the mismatch between AI’s potential and the readiness of institutions is widening. A survey of more than 12,000 executives, cited in Brazilian business coverage, found that 99 per cent expect AI to reduce headcount within two years, with the largest gains coming from redesigning work and developing competencies. In Stockholm, a Microsoft Sweden report shows over half of workers now perform tasks they could not do a year ago, yet only one in five AI users say their managers provide clear leadership on the technology. In Brazil, teachers are adopting AI to cope with heavy workloads without systemic support from school networks. In Paris, mastery of AI has become a hiring criterion for executive assistants, whose proximity to strategic decisions and confidential data makes the role particularly sensitive. In Moscow, recruitment platforms report a 24 per cent rise in IT CVs but 93 per cent of companies say candidates lack necessary skills, pushing employers towards practical assessments and skills-based hiring rather than relying on résumés.

The push for better measurement is now colliding with efforts to make AI itself more reliable. Laboratories including Anthropic, Google DeepMind and OpenAI are investing in confidence calibration, teaching models to estimate their own uncertainty and, when appropriate, to say they do not know rather than produce a convincing but incorrect answer. The US Senate bill, sponsored by Democrat Mark Kelly, marks the next concrete milestone in the data-collection effort; its progress will determine whether policymakers gain the tools they argue are essential to respond before the effects become entrenched.

Divergence — who tells it how
8%Low
3 blocs · positions from 0.00 to +0.20
CriticalFavorable
ATLEURRUS
Divergence between press blocs
Atlantic / Anglosphere press+0.20neutral
Continental European press0.00neutral
Russian & CIS press+0.10neutral
Chinese press outlets are not present in this cluster.
Atlantic / Anglosphere press+0.20
Voice

The Atlantic bloc sees AI as a lever for productivity, but warns that human skills remain crucial.

Mechanismuniversalizzazione

Universalization: extends the Chinese case into a global discourse on AI, minimizing local specificities by focusing on universal workforce challenges.

Omission

Does not mention the role of the Chinese state in driving AI adoption through industrial policy and education reform.

PragmatismSkepticismSplit voices
Continental European press0.00
Voice

Continental Europe reads the Chinese data as confirmation that slow growth is the real problem.

Mechanismriproiezione

Reprojection: projects the Chinese case onto its own internal debate about growth, treating it as a mirror for domestic policy needs.

Omission

Does not consider the social implications of job displacement or the specific Chinese policy context.

PragmatismDetachment
Russian & CIS press+0.10
Voice

Russia registers the data as a signal of structural change.

Mechanismdistacco analitico

Analytical detachment: presents the fact as an objective data point, avoiding value judgments or direct comparison with Russia's own situation.

Omission

Does not compare with Russia's own AI skill gap or labor market policies.

PragmatismDetachment

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Upd. 01:29 PM6 languages · 11 outlets
11 outlets|6 languages|3 min read
Friday, July 3, 2026

AI skills required for four in ten graduate jobs in China as training hours surge

Rapid adoption is reshaping work globally, but official statistics struggle to capture the shift, prompting US lawmakers to push for better data collection.

The share of graduate job postings in China requiring artificial-intelligence skills has risen to four in ten, while average employee training hours in Hong Kong have climbed to a 14-year high of 19.4 hours per year, as companies across Asia scramble to adapt their workforces. The Beijing-based recruitment portal Maimai reported that nearly 40 per cent of vacancies for new graduates in the first five months of 2026 were AI-related, up from roughly 30 per cent a year earlier. In Hong Kong, a survey by the Hong Kong Institute of Human Resource Management covering 127 firms and nearly 80,000 full-time staff found training hours rose 6.8 per cent from 2024, driven by a dual emphasis on AI and soft skills.

Yet the economic picture remains stubbornly opaque. In Washington, a bipartisan group of senators introduced a bill in June that would require the federal government to produce an annual report on AI’s effect on the workforce, after researchers documented the difficulty of measuring the technology’s spread in real time. The US Census Bureau has been asking businesses about AI use in a fortnightly survey since 2023, but estimates of adoption vary sharply depending on how questions are framed. A Goldman Sachs analysis projects that 9 per cent of the US workforce—roughly 15 million people—will be displaced, though the bank’s economists argue that history shows new positions reabsorb displaced workers. MIT’s Neil Thompson notes that capability is only the first step: an AI system also needs access to the right data and must be cheap enough to run, hurdles that slow adoption well below what the technology can technically do.

Across economies, the mismatch between AI’s potential and the readiness of institutions is widening. A survey of more than 12,000 executives, cited in Brazilian business coverage, found that 99 per cent expect AI to reduce headcount within two years, with the largest gains coming from redesigning work and developing competencies. In Stockholm, a Microsoft Sweden report shows over half of workers now perform tasks they could not do a year ago, yet only one in five AI users say their managers provide clear leadership on the technology. In Brazil, teachers are adopting AI to cope with heavy workloads without systemic support from school networks. In Paris, mastery of AI has become a hiring criterion for executive assistants, whose proximity to strategic decisions and confidential data makes the role particularly sensitive. In Moscow, recruitment platforms report a 24 per cent rise in IT CVs but 93 per cent of companies say candidates lack necessary skills, pushing employers towards practical assessments and skills-based hiring rather than relying on résumés.

The push for better measurement is now colliding with efforts to make AI itself more reliable. Laboratories including Anthropic, Google DeepMind and OpenAI are investing in confidence calibration, teaching models to estimate their own uncertainty and, when appropriate, to say they do not know rather than produce a convincing but incorrect answer. The US Senate bill, sponsored by Democrat Mark Kelly, marks the next concrete milestone in the data-collection effort; its progress will determine whether policymakers gain the tools they argue are essential to respond before the effects become entrenched.

Divergence — who tells it how
8%Low
3 blocs · positions from 0.00 to +0.20
CriticalFavorable
ATLEURRUS
Divergence between press blocs
Atlantic / Anglosphere press+0.20neutral
Continental European press0.00neutral
Russian & CIS press+0.10neutral
Chinese press outlets are not present in this cluster.
Atlantic / Anglosphere press+0.20
Voice

The Atlantic bloc sees AI as a lever for productivity, but warns that human skills remain crucial.

Mechanismuniversalizzazione

Universalization: extends the Chinese case into a global discourse on AI, minimizing local specificities by focusing on universal workforce challenges.

Omission

Does not mention the role of the Chinese state in driving AI adoption through industrial policy and education reform.

PragmatismSkepticismSplit voices
Continental European press0.00
Voice

Continental Europe reads the Chinese data as confirmation that slow growth is the real problem.

Mechanismriproiezione

Reprojection: projects the Chinese case onto its own internal debate about growth, treating it as a mirror for domestic policy needs.

Omission

Does not consider the social implications of job displacement or the specific Chinese policy context.

PragmatismDetachment
Russian & CIS press+0.10
Voice

Russia registers the data as a signal of structural change.

Mechanismdistacco analitico

Analytical detachment: presents the fact as an objective data point, avoiding value judgments or direct comparison with Russia's own situation.

Omission

Does not compare with Russia's own AI skill gap or labor market policies.

PragmatismDetachment

This story appeared in

11 outlets · 6 languages

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