@inbook{da71065b2f0a4d4ca3f0245753d33c73,
title = "Why are China{\textquoteright}s Unemployed Graduates Comparing Themselves to Lu Xun{\textquoteright}s Character?",
abstract = "According to Communist Party discourse, China{\textquoteright}s {\textquoteleft}New Era{\textquoteright} began when Xi Jinping was anointed Party boss in 2012. The shape of this New Era became eminently clear in 2023 when Xi commenced his third five-year term as General Secretary of the Party, a fortification of one-man authoritarian rule unprecedented in post-Mao China. Under Xi, the Party has expanded its influence over government, the economy and society. The Party-State is now more Party than State. The year 2023 saw other {\textquoteleft}new eras{\textquoteright} for China as well. Despite initial optimism sparked by the end of COVID-19 restrictions in late 2022, the Chinese economy in 2023 was buffeted by continuing property sector woes, record unemployment, and an unfolding local government debt crisis. Globally, China adopted a series of new and ambitious diplomatic initiatives to woo the Global South and amplify its voice on the world stage. The China Story Yearbook 2023: China{\textquoteright}s New Era provides informed perspectives on these and other important stories that will resonate for years to come.",
author = "Ren, \{Annie Luman\}",
note = "{\textcopyright} 2024 ANU Press",
year = "2024",
doi = "10.22459/CSY.2024.04B",
language = "English",
isbn = "9781760466336",
series = "China Story Yearbook",
publisher = "ANU Press",
number = "2023",
pages = "103--112",
editor = "Ben Hillman and Ren, \{Annie Luman\}",
booktitle = "China's New Era",
address = "Australia",
}