Chinese officials said Wednesday that starting this year, the country would for the first time begin to pre-recruit university graduates into military service, in an effort to ease the increasingly tough employment situation amid an economic slowdown.
Military pre-recruitment would be carried out among university students every year, starting in May or June, until graduation a couple of months later, according to a policy paper jointly issued by the Conscription Office of the Ministry of Defense and the Student Department of the Ministry of Education.
This year, only male graduates would be eligible for pre-recruitment into the armed forces -- the People's Liberation Army (PLA) and the People's Armed Police Corps (PAPC), the document said.
Female graduates who wanted to join the military could apply during the winter, the regular recruitment season. If these female students were accepted, they would enjoy the same privileges as their male counterparts.
Pre-recruited graduates could receive subsidies to cover their school costs or repay educational loans.
All male graduates, regardless of their major, would be eligible if they had no problems in their health and political records. Requirements for eyesight and weight would be eased for early recruits.
Those who left college to join the military would be able to resume their studies after completing military service.