Economy
May 28, 2026
Shepherd Jobs Go Viral as China’s ‘996’ Workers Seek Rural Escape
A farm owner in Inner Mongolia posted a simple advert for two shepherds, which went viral on Weibo,…
Lead: A farm owner in Inner Mongolia posted a simple advert for two shepherds, which went viral on Weibo, attracting over 700 applicants and underscoring growing frustration with China’s demanding ‘996’ work culture.
Shepherd recruitment sparks unprecedented response on Chinese social media
Zuo Xiaoyong posted the advert in late April, seeking two shepherds—preferably a couple—to manage 3,000 sheep on a 2,000‑ha pasture. Duties include summer grazing, winter indoor feeding and cleaning at a ranch 300 km from Xilinhot, near the Mongolian border. The post featured a video of sheep in green pastures and quickly amassed around 59 million views on Weibo.
Compensation and applicant numbers reveal wage premium and labor surplus
Monthly pay: 8,000 yuan (≈£880/US$1,180) per shepherd, above the national urban average of ~6,000 yuan.
Applicants: >700 individuals, including recent graduates, factory workers, and white‑collar staff.
Unemployment rates (National Bureau of Statistics, March 2026): overall 5.2 %; youth (16‑24, excluding students) 16.9 %.
Escalating discontent with the ‘996’ culture fuels rural job appeal
The advert tapped into widespread weariness of the “996” regime—9 am to 9 pm, six days a week—prevalent in many Chinese firms. Workers from megacities such as Shanghai and Chongqing cited extreme hours, physical strain, and lack of personal time as reasons for seeking an alternative livelihood.
Potential shift toward agrarian employment could reshape China’s labor dynamics
If similar rural‑focused campaigns gain traction, they may pressure companies to improve urban working conditions or spur policy incentives for agricultural hiring. Zuo already has a shortlist of 40+ couples for future roles, indicating a nascent market for “escape‑the‑city” employment.
#Zuo Xiaoyong
#Inner Mongolia
#996 culture
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