Lottery Ticket Sales in China Surge Amid Economic Weakness and Job Prospects

Lottery Ticket Sales in China Surge Amid Economic Weakness and Job Prospects

BEIJING, Sept 30⁤ (Reuters) -‌ China’s lottery ticket sales in August soared⁣ to their highest‌ for any month ⁤so⁢ far this year, amid public concern about the economy ‌following months of mostly gloomy data including ⁣youth unemployment.
Nationwide lottery ticket sales‌ jumped⁣ 53.6%⁤ in August from ⁢a year​ earlier to 52.96 billion yuan ($7.25 billion), the‌ official Xinhua ‌news agency reported on Saturday, citing⁣ data ⁣from the finance ministry.
From January to August, a total ​of 375.76 billion yuan of lottery⁢ tickets‌ were sold nationwide, up 51.6% from a year earlier, the data showed.
The surging lottery ticket sales coincided with ⁢months of mostly soft economic data, with the unemployment rate of job seekers aged ‍between ⁣16 ‍and 24 drawing particular‍ attention from policymakers.
China’s youth unemployment rate hit⁤ a record high of 21.3% in June, according to official data.
Some‌ social media commentators have linked the⁢ sharp rise in lottery sales in recent months⁣ to young people’s deepening economic worries.
“Young people are more likely to win 5 million yuan in the lottery than to earn 5 ​million from work,” one wrote on the popular Chinese microblog Weibo.
The country’s⁢ statistics bureau abruptly stopped publishing ‍the youth unemployment statistic in August, saying‌ it had been suspended as ⁤officials sought to “optimise” its data collection methodology, triggering a wave of social media criticism.
Feeling the pinch of rising housing costs and the⁣ slowing economy, jobless graduates have been forfeiting‍ cities ⁣that have traditionally provided a stepping⁢ stone to middle-class wealth.
Earlier‌ this year, China’s social media was ‍alit with videos of ⁢jobless university graduates⁣ visiting temples to⁣ seek the blessings of the gods.
“The worse the economy is, the more lottery tickets will be sold,” wrote another commentator‌ on Weibo.
($1 = 7.3010 Chinese yuan renminbi)
(This story has ⁢been refiled to remove an extraneous ‘a’‌ in paragraph‌ 7)
Reporting by Ryan Woo; Editing by ​Helen ‍Popper
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