7 reasons why foreigners are leaving china

Recently it seems that an increasing number of China expats are considering leaving China. This trendency can be found in many expats` online articles, which talk about their experience and the reasons why they leave China. Here is a list of 7 main reasons:

1. Number of dissatisfied and unconfident Chinese growing

Three decades of economic reform and development have greatly benefited a majority of the Chinese population, raising the average standard of living to levels that were simply unimaginable to the previous generations. Yet, at the same time, China’s primary model of development has been increasingly questioned and challenged by various social strata and interest groups within the country, while the number of “dissatisfied” in each social strata, believing that the government is not doing enough to take care of them, has been increasing as well.

A majority of China’s “dissatisfied” come from either the disadvantageously positioned grassroots groups or the urban middle class, China’s rich and powerful lack confidence in China’s system of social contracts, and the disadvantageously positioned grassroots groups express voice such dissatisfaction through individual or group petitions and protests. And the China expast can only choose to simply leave the country—colloquially referred to as “voting with one’s feet”.

2. Unwritten rules

The so-called “unwritten rules” run in Chinese society behind the curtains, often greatly obscuring or perverting its “formal rules” in the process. With 30 years of reforms have also seen many rounds of government administrative reforms, but the people still do not have confidence or trust in the government.

To witness such “unwritten rules” in effect, one must look no further than trying to deal with one of the basic administration processes seen in pretty much any government department, viewed by most of the population as shockingly arbitrary, despite whatever the formal rules may mandate.

3. Unscrupulous materialism

What makes foreigners unhappy and even “leave” also includes the rapidly economically developing social environment. Over 30 years of development, Chinese people’s material standard of living has greatly risen. But simultaneously one of the consequences it has brought is a money-centric “materialism”. This is a pervasively materialistic society. This high-speed development has environmental destruction and substandard quality as its costs. Materially-rich, spiritually-poor, lacking in ethics and values.

4 Poor education system

Another factor leading foreigners to leave is the quality and nature of China’s education system. First, despite reforms, primary education opportunities in China are still incredibly unequal, with many children, particularly those in impoverished and rural areas, still unable to regularly attend school for a variety of economic and organizational factors.

The domestic Chinese lower education system does not educate. It is a test centre.The curriculum is designed to teach children how to pass them. Each year, a new batch of students, who’ve already spent a majority of their lives taking “admissions tests” to move up the educational ladder, push themselves even further to pass the gaokao test needed to attend a Chinese university. And for those students fortunate enough to get in to a university, most quickly discover that the quality of teaching at the university level is simply unable to match the quantity of students.

5. Environmental pollution

Pollution in China is inescapable. Showcase cities like Beijing and Shanghai are regularly enveloped in smog and just one percent of the country’s 560 million urban residents breathe air considered safe by the European Union. Industrial pollution has made cancer the country’s leading cause of death. Close to half the population lacks access to clean drinking water and in some places water quality is so low that it cannot be safely used for bathing.

6. Food safety and quality

Scandals involving tainted food make headlines every week, striking rich and poor without prejudice. The most famous example, involving tainted milk, caused the death of six babies and affected an estimated 300,000 people in 2008.

7. Always being seen as a foreigner

It gets old getting stared at all of the time, hello shouting, and just almost always feeling like you are an outsider in China no longer how long you have been here.

7 Responses

  1. Matthew says:

    Living in China more than 10 years, one of my best decisions was leaving China for good. I can surely say China is just becoming a country like North Korea or Afghanistan. All kinds of human freedom, civil rights and democratic values are disappearing and crushed in China. If you still have a foreign passport in China, just leave ASAP! You’re so lucky not to be a Chinese citizen living in China.

  2. Peter says:

    I have been living in China for more than 5 years, highly fluent in the language, married with one child and haven’t had any issues up until now. I am considering leaving due to bureaucracy, administrative issues and employment reasons.

    The lack of coordination and organization at my workplace has made life difficult. Its also impossible to get any career progession here (however if its a foreign company, there is some opportunity). So I am considering that maybe this could be my last (or second to last year) here.

    If youre a Chinese, China is great, I dont have any issues with the political system and I think its beneficial for China’s rise but if youre a foreigner, life is a series of entanglements and unnecessary hurdles that dont exist if you are a Chinese. I wish luck to all foreigners that want to stay

    • Kevin says:

      I’ve lived in China since 2006, and for the later part of those years I’ve been finding China increasingly unattractive to stay in. It was once a great place to be as a westerner, but that’s ancient history. Tons of foreigners have been leaving since before the covid pandemic broke out, but after covid it just totally collapsed. So many rules and regulations, bureaucratic red tape, internet blockage, political issues, etc. It’s impossible now to access any foreign website without a vpn. They change the visa policy all the time deliberately making it more and more difficult to stay. I heard from other foreign friends they know many other foreigners who are also planning to leave. So yeah, I think I’ve had my fill with things here and it’s time to go elsewhere.

      • Peter Wang says:

        Yes, it is time to leave. You can live better life in other parts of the world. As I know, many foreigners have left China after the covide pandemic.

  3. Joshua Hernandez says:

    The fact that the Internet is constantly being blocked and even the VPNs aren’t working as well as they once did is my reason to call 2020 my last year in China. I am from the USA and rely on outside news, YouTube and radio too much to stay in China.

  4. Henry says:

    After Hong Kong errupted, I left china after 15 years.

  5. A. Day says:

    8:). China is an autocratic society and continues to move towards a modern Feudal society run by a Emperor whose illusions of grandeur will ultimately destroy the country. China went through this before and was left broken. It appears they are about to do the same thing and have begun alientating more people and countries. as they strive for World Dominance. It’s time to leave before you can’t.

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