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By 2025, at least 70,000 food delivery drivers in China held master's degrees. Over 20 percent of drivers at Meituan and Ele[dot]me had college degrees. Starting in 2012, China built a national narrative around a deal: work hard, sacrifice now, and the future belongs to you and through you, to the nation. The 9-9-6 schedule, 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. six days a week, was common in tech and logistics. Exam prep started in kindergarten. Parents and grandparents pooled savings for tutoring. Everyone was making deposits into a system that was supposed to pay out. Then property prices in major cities hit 25 to 40 times average annual income. By June 2023, youth unemployment for ages 16 to 24 hit 21.3 percent. Then the government stopped publishing the number. The National Bureau of Statistics came back months later with a new methodology that excluded current students. A Peking University economist named Zhang Dandan calculated the real figure, including about 16 million young people who'd withdrawn from the labor market entirely, could be closer to 46 percent. In national surveys before 2014, a majority of Chinese respondents said inequality came from individual failings. By 2023, a majority described it as structural: unequal opportunities, corruption, a slowing economy. The sacrifices hadn't changed. What changed was the story people used to interpret them. Deposits started looking like losses. That's the thing about any system that runs on sustained sacrifice, whether it's a nation, a company, or a career. The sacrifice is purchased with a story, and the story is purchased with a track record. When the track record breaks, you can't put the story back together. You can only build a different one, and the people you're building it for now know the last one was a story.
By 2025, at least 70,000 food delivery drivers in China held master's degrees. Over 20 percent of drivers at Meituan and Ele[dot]me had college degrees. Starting in 2012, China built a national narrative around a deal: work hard, sacrifice now, and the future belongs to you and through you, to the nation. The 9-9-6 schedule, 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. six days a week, was common in tech and logistics. Exam prep started in kindergarten. Parents and grandparents pooled savings for tutoring. Everyone was making deposits into a system that was supposed to pay out. Then property prices in major cities hit 25 to 40 times average annual income. By June 2023, youth unemployment for ages 16 to 24 hit 21.3 percent. Then the government stopped publishing the number. The National Bureau of Statistics came back months later with a new methodology that excluded current students. A Peking University economist named Zhang Dandan calculated the real figure, including about 16 million young people who'd withdrawn from the labor market entirely, could be closer to 46 percent. In national surveys before 2014, a majority of Chinese respondents said inequality came from individual failings. By 2023, a majority described it as structural: unequal opportunities, corruption, a slowing economy. The sacrifices hadn't changed. What changed was the story people used to interpret them. Deposits started looking like losses. That's the thing about any system that runs on sustained sacrifice, whether it's a nation, a company, or a career. The sacrifice is purchased with a story, and the story is purchased with a track record. When the track record breaks, you can't put the story back together. You can only build a different one, and the people you're building it for now know the last one was a story.

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