Advertisement
Hong Kong economy
Hong KongSociety

‘I kept crying’: Hong Kong grads struggle to find jobs as AI takes over

Graduates are applying for hundreds of positions only for dozen or so firms to show interest, as entry-level roles vanish and AI changes job market

4-MIN READ4-MIN
12
Listen
Students at the University of Hong Kong. The unemployment rate for those aged 20 to 29 stood at 6.8 per cent between February and April, compared with the overall rate of 3.7 per cent. Photo: Jonathan Wong
A job fair at MacPherson Stadium in Mong Kok. Photo: Dickson Lee
Hong Kong’s wealth management sector is expanding. Photo: Jelly Tse
Some firms have relocated their regional headquarters from Hong Kong to Shanghai. Photo: AFP
Ambrose Li

Hong Kong graduate Ivan Cheung has filed more than 200 job applications since March, and he is hoping that out of the dozen or so companies that have asked him to interview or take a written test, one will eventually hire him.

But the data science and analytics graduate from Polytechnic University is in a slightly better position than some of his peers, as he works part-time, giving him a small financial cushion as he tries to find a permanent role.

Cheung said that those around him who had managed to find a job considered themselves lucky, as the previously predictable transition from university to career had become rife with uncertainty with the advent of AI.

Advertisement

“Artificial intelligence literacy is perhaps the most important skill to have to be able to secure a job now,” he said, adding that it was important to learn how to give AI specific and directed prompts to generate information that could help address business pain points rather than general answers.

Cheung is among tens of thousands of fresh graduates facing the gloomiest employment market since 2021 in Hong Kong.

Advertisement
The South China Morning Post earlier reported that job vacancies in 2025 numbered 30,798, the fewest in the past five years and down by 55 per cent over the 68,728 recorded in 2024, according to the Joint Institution Job Information System, an online job information system run by the city’s eight public universities.
Advertisement
Select Voice
Select Speed
1.00x