
Early employment listings for the first quarter of 2025 — a key hiring period for new graduates entering the workforce — recorded only around seven thousand nine hundred full-time openings, marking a collapse of more than half from the same period in the previous year and significantly below even pandemic-era levels.
The plunge has been driven by contraction across sectors that traditionally absorbed large numbers of graduates.
The customer service category, encompassing retail, hospitality and tourism roles, saw vacancies collapse by over ninety per cent.
Education, information technology, research and development, marketing and financial services also registered double-digit declines in positions year-on-year, with many falling more than fifty per cent.
These sharp reductions in advertised roles have raised concerns among employers and career advisers alike about the prospects for the city’s newest workforce, who now face more intense competition for scarce openings and must navigate a market that has contracted beyond previous downturns.
At the same time, employers told analysts that while vacancies have fallen, there is still selective demand for specific skill sets and better-offered salaries for those roles that remain, suggesting a divergence between overall volume of positions and targeted recruitment needs.
The stark reduction in available graduate positions comes amid broader employment trends characterised by cautious hiring strategies and a shift in organisational priorities amid economic uncertainties.
As Hong Kong continues to position itself as a regional hub for business and finance, the shape of the job market for new graduates is being closely watched by policymakers, universities and corporate leaders seeking to align talent development with evolving industry demands.







































