Sinica Podcast

The Highest Exam: Jia Ruixue and Li Hongbin on China's Gaokao and What It Reveals About Chinese Society

20 snips
Jan 21, 2026
Jia Ruixue, a professor at UC San Diego, and Li Hongbin, an economist at Stanford, dive deep into the complexities of China's Gaokao, the crucial college entrance exam. They discuss how it serves as a formidable gatekeeper for social mobility, the intense pressure families face, and the limited alternatives within the labor market. The guests share personal stories that highlight how the exam system endures despite its flaws, and why reform efforts often fail. They illuminate the intersection of education, inequality, and economic growth in contemporary China.
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ANECDOTE

Rural Upbringing Shaped The Lens

  • Ruixue recounts growing up in a rural Shandong village and only later seeing systemic inequality among peers at college.
  • Her rural background and later political-economy study shaped viewing exams as governance tools.
ANECDOTE

Luck, Timing, And Access To College

  • Hongbin describes schooling during the Cultural Revolution's aftermath and how chance landed him in college.
  • He contrasts that big-equality era with today's unequal access shaped by family wealth.
INSIGHT

Exams As Political Stabilizers

  • The exam functions politically by giving hope and assigning responsibility to individuals, sustaining stability.
  • Success or failure is framed as individual merit, reducing blame on institutions.
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