During the Spring Festival, I believe many people are annoyed by questions from relatives and friends. In addition to marriage, work is undoubtedly the most concerned topic, especially when it comes to civil servant admissions.
I think Zhang Xuefeng's remarks are very important.
If you don't have solid skills and abilities, then becoming a civil servant is a job that hits the ceiling for you.
There may still be people who scoff at civil service positions, but this is a precious talent. Only those who have truly experienced the work of the outside world will find out how comfortable life is to work in a civil service position.
Of course, there are many people who don't want to work hard. However, once you enter the civil service, you may face a reality that is even more difficult than the outside world. Working outside the home may require alcohol, as well as entering the civil service; Overtime is the norm outside the home, and the same is true for entering the civil service; Driving for the boss outside the home, and entering the civil service is no exception; 996 overtime outside the home, entering the civil service may also be encountered. Want to "lie flat"? Want to "swing rotten"? It doesn't matter, you will be transferred to a more demanding place in the future.
However, the level of effort is different between the two. You can't have both fish and bear's paws.
Working for the country, although the salary is small, it is stable and dignified. Working under a small boss, it's okay to talk about a good boss, but when you meet an unreasonable boss, you will feel like a slave who is being worked hard to earn money. Although the salary of civil servants is low, they usually eat cheaply or even for free, and they can also receive subsidies and shopping coupons on holidays, and social security, medical insurance, and provident fund are all paid by the unit, and the unit will take care of individuals who are sick. Working hours are stable, weekends and holidays are the norm (although there are also units that need to work overtime, but it is better than 996). As long as no mistakes of principle are made, civil servants can remain stable.
Of course, I suggest that the public *** should be limited to those over 30 years old and have at least 5 years of grassroots work experience. Only those who have experienced 5 years of social life will understand the beauty of civil servant positions. They will cherish the job more and work harder. And those who have just graduated and entered the civil service have not experienced the cruelty of society at all.
They are always staring at the high-paying jobs outside, and their hearts are itching. The restriction of the examination to those over 30 years old is also due to the fact that after five years of social experience, capable people have already established themselves in society, and they do not need and will not be interested in entering the civil service. Those who have no skills and have little future may be admitted, because after five years of hard work, they will cherish their work as civil servants even more.
What you can't get is the best. There is an old Chinese saying that "you can't have both fish and bear's paws". For ordinary people, stability and high salaries are inherently a pair of contradictions. The high-paying jobs you see also require a lot of hard work, and work that doesn't require too much effort naturally doesn't pay well.
As for the so-called "leisure" of civil servants, those who can really enjoy leisure are either "backstage" or old clerks in their forties and fifties, and there is no chance of promotion. Like really busy departments, such as the two academies, the organization department, the discipline inspection commission, etc., work pressure is the norm, and young people working overtime is commonplace.
Those positions that can be openly competed for will not be easy. Truly idle jobs will not be placed within the scope of open competition.
Therefore, for ordinary people, although it is not easy for civil servants, the stability alone and the related benefits are already quite good. Those who can be admitted to the civil service should be given priority to the civil service examination.