China Scraps 12,000 Degree Courses, Mainly In Arts And Humanities, To Prepare For AI Age

Even as the rest of the world is grappling with how education will change in the AI age, China has already acted based on how it believes the wind is blowing.

China has axed over 12,000 undergraduate degree programmes in the past four years, a sweeping overhaul that affects more than 30 per cent of all university courses in the country. The cuts, confirmed by Ministry of Education data cited by state media Xinhua, fall most heavily on arts, humanities, foreign languages, and management — fields Beijing now considers either oversaturated or out of step with where the economy is heading.

Between 2021 and 2025, Chinese universities revoked or suspended 12,200 programmes while introducing 10,200 new ones. The replacements are almost entirely tech-focused, aligned with what Beijing calls “future industries” — areas like robotics, semiconductors, and AI integration into the real economy. Nine universities have already added new majors in embodied intelligence, which feeds directly into China’s national push to accelerate humanoid robots and next-generation AI.

The restructuring is happening against a backdrop of serious labour market strain. Youth unemployment in China has hovered between 15 and 19 per cent in the 16–24 age bracket, and record numbers of graduates are entering a job market that increasingly has little use for the degrees many of them hold. More than 12.7 million students were set to graduate in 2026 alone. For years, universities have expanded enrolment faster than the economy could absorb graduates — a mismatch that has now become politically untenable.

The jobs crisis has also been sharpened by AI itself. Programming, accounting, editing, and sales — roles that China’s graduates have historically targeted — have seen sharp declines in postings since 2018. Chinese workers are already navigating an AI-disrupted labour market in ways that feel nothing like the gradual transitions Western economists tend to model. The pressure is immediate and visible.

What makes this restructuring notable isn’t just the scale — it’s the speed. Cutting 12,200 programmes and standing up 10,200 new ones in four years is a pace that few education systems anywhere in the world could manage. Whether the new graduates produced by these programmes actually find work will be the real test.

There are reasons to be sceptical. Reorienting curriculum doesn’t automatically reorient the job market. China’s AI sector is growing fast — and Chinese AI labs have emerged as genuine global contenders — but the demand for AI talent, while surging, is also narrower than policymakers tend to assume. Producing large numbers of graduates in AI-adjacent fields doesn’t guarantee absorption, particularly if the economy’s broader structural issues remain unresolved.

The debate over what AI will do to employment is not settled. Some argue that AI will generate new categories of work faster than it eliminates old ones; others, including Geoffrey Hinton, have been considerably more blunt about the consequences. China’s government appears to be betting on the former — and restructuring its entire higher education pipeline to reflect that bet.

What’s clear is that Beijing has decided the cost of inaction is higher than the disruption of overhauling an education system at scale. Degrees in public relations, classical literature, and general foreign languages are being cleared out not because they lack intellectual value, but because China has decided it cannot afford to graduate millions of young people into roles that either don’t exist or are rapidly disappearing. Whether that calculus proves correct will take years to know. But the direction is now unmistakable.

Posted in AI