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US-China relations may be worsening, but young Americans still welcome the chance to work in world's No 2 economy

Kush Davidd, a third-year student at the University of California, knows about the coronavirus lockdowns in Shanghai and China's political friction with the United States. But the 20-year-old American is studying Mandarin, and would still consider a job in China if offered.

"I'm sure Covid will clear up," said Davidd, who is double majoring in economics and computer science at the university's Berkeley campus. He imagines taking a computer science job in China that pays one and a half times more than one in the US.

"China in the future - although not better overall, the opportunities there are better than in the US."

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His outlook on employment in China is shared by others across his campus of 45,000 students. They say they would go for the pay, the travel perks and the adventure of living in a country unlike their own.

Their interest could rekindle the flow of young white-collar Westerners that poured into China in the two decades before the coronavirus. Since then, the pandemic has motivated expatriates to leave and restricted others from entering due to quarantine periods of up to three weeks.

In Shanghai, the country's commercial hub, the number of expatriates fell more than 20 per cent from 2011 to 2021, to around 163,000, American Chamber of Commerce Shanghai president Ker Gibbs said last year. Shanghai has been locked down since early April and is expected to fully restore mobility and manufacturing by the end of May.

The number of foreigners in Beijing fell more than 40 per cent from 2010 to last year, ending around 63,000, Gibbs said.

Multinationals will still need the help of educated, Mandarin-speaking foreigners as China's economy recovers, said Jimmy Ho, vice-chairman at the Hong Kong office of US-headquartered management consulting firm Korn Ferry.

Luxury brands, for example, will want employees who understand digitisation, intellectual property and the brand's home markets in Europe or the US, Ho said. Comfort in liaising with bosses overseas would be another plus.

"All these [positions], to be honest, are still looking for the best person with domain knowledge," he said. "Luxury brands will not compromise."

Those brands are likely to rebound in China after the pandemic, he said, though tech and hospitality might offer fewer jobs for foreigners.