China’s universities are undertaking one of the most significant academic overhauls in recent memory, revoking or suspending thousands of traditional degree programs while rapidly introducing new, technology-focused majors aligned with Beijing’s push for high-tech self-reliance and economic transformation.
Between 2021 and 2025, higher education institutions across the country eliminated or paused 12,200 undergraduate programs and launched 10,200 new ones, meaning more than 30% of all university programs underwent adjustments, according to Ministry of Education data reported by Xinhua.
According to Hong Kong Post, the changes are heavily concentrated in fields now viewed as oversaturated or outdated, arts, humanities, foreign languages, and management, while new offerings emphasize emerging technologies such as embodied intelligence, advanced AI applications, and other strategic sectors prioritized under national development plans.
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This massive reshuffling reflects two pressing realities: the need to align higher education with Beijing’s “AI Plus” and “future industries” initiatives, and the urgent challenge of addressing a severe graduate employment crisis. With youth unemployment hovering above 16% and millions of young people struggling to find work matching their qualifications, universities are under pressure to produce graduates with skills relevant to an economy increasingly driven by artificial intelligence, advanced manufacturing, and technological innovation.
The University of Shanghai for Science and Technology, for example, halted admissions for its product design program this year. A recent graduate from the program, speaking anonymously due to the sensitivity of the topic, linked the decision directly to AI’s disruptive impact.
“The rapid development of AI has hit product design hard. Many core tasks, such as modelling and rendering, can now be handled by AI,” the student said.
At the prestigious Communication University of China in Beijing, a media-focused institution, officials merged its cinematography program with film and television production. Alumni described the move as a practical response to industry shifts. Song Song, a videographer who graduated in 2012, noted how the transition from film to digital, and now to short videos and live streaming, has fundamentally changed skill requirements.
“With the rise of live streaming and short videos, the requirements for a cameraman are completely different from traditional television news shooting. Changes in education are absolutely necessary,” Song said.
Many of the new programs introduced are closely tied to national priorities. Nine universities have added majors in embodied intelligence, supporting Beijing’s drive to integrate next-generation AI into the physical economy. Other additions focus on semiconductors, quantum technologies, new energy, and advanced materials — areas where China seeks to reduce dependence on foreign technology.
A Response to Structural Challenges
The reforms come as China’s higher education system has expanded dramatically, producing record numbers of graduates into a job market transformed by automation and digitalization. Many traditional degrees no longer guarantee employment, prompting universities to adapt quickly — sometimes at the expense of program stability.
Senior researcher Chu Zhaohui at the National Institute of Education Sciences pointed out that some of the recently cut programs were themselves only a few years old, part of an earlier wave of adjustments.
Chu advocated for a more flexible approach rather than repeated wholesale swaps, saying: “This would allow them to select courses based on their personal interests, unique strengths, and their demand for different career paths, ultimately building their own distinctive intellectual profile.”
Parents and students are also adapting their expectations. Vincent Zhao, a 48-year-old media production company owner in Beijing, encouraged his daughter to pursue statistics and data governance when she started university last year.
“We focused on choosing a broad direction that aligns with what she likes and excels at, leaving room for either future postgraduate studies or employment. The old path — where you study one specific major, find a perfectly matched job, and stay in it stably for a lifetime — simply does not exist any more,” he said.
The AI Factor and Long-Term Adaptation
The drive is part of Beijing’s broader “AI Plus” initiative, which sets ambitious targets of 70% AI adoption across key sectors by 2027 and 90% by 2030. While this promises productivity gains and industrial upgrading, it is also accelerating job displacement in certain fields. Analysts warn that the speed of AI-driven change is outpacing the creation of new opportunities, particularly for young workers.
Some companies are already measuring AI adoption internally. At one major tech firm, employees are ranked by token usage, a proxy for AI engagement, with the metric factored into performance reviews and promotions.
“It is relatively forced. One should not use AI for the sake of it. I still can’t shake the feeling that I’m getting closer to being replaced,” A big data engineer there said, describing the pressure.
In entertainment, the shift has been particularly abrupt. Micro-drama studios have slashed staff as AI-generated actors and sets replace traditional production roles. A 22-year-old producer who was let go in February said her department shrank dramatically.
“We had 30-40 people in our production department. After the transition to AI, each group was cut down to about 10 people, with only two remaining for live-action filming,” she said.
A Necessary but Imperfect Transition
China’s higher education reforms reflect a recognition that the old model, specialized degrees leading to stable, lifetime careers, is no longer viable in an era of rapid technological disruption. The challenge lies in managing this transition without exacerbating social instability or youth disillusionment.
While the current wave of program adjustments provides a short-term response, experts like Chu argue that deeper structural changes, greater curriculum flexibility, stronger industry-academia links, and lifelong learning pathways will be essential for long-term success.
For now, the overhaul signals Beijing’s determination to steer the next generation toward fields it believes will drive China’s future competitiveness. The quiet but sweeping changes underway in lecture halls and administrative offices across the country are reshaping not just what students learn, but the very purpose of higher education.



