A snapshot of the overworked middle class

Daniel Zhou (not his real given name) paused, trying to remember his son's age.
While it might seem shocking to some, his situation is far from unique among members of Shanghai's middle class, many of whom can't easily recall their children's birthdays or what grade they are attending at school. They simply do not have the time to spend with their families.
Zhou, a department director with a media company in Shanghai who asked that his Chinese name not be published, said he does not feel happy even though he has a 300,000-yuan (45,000 euros) annual income, a well-decorated downtown apartment and a high-end car.
The 37-year-old said an intensive workload, little leisure time and pressure from almost all facets of life have eroded his happiness.
"But we can't complain," he said. "At least we are better off than migrant workers."
Shanghai's middle-class families are the least happy, according to the White Book of Happiness of Middle Class Families released by Manulife-Sinochem early this year.
The book was based on surveys of more than 100,000 people from 35 cities in 10 provinces and municipalities.
Even in the happiest provinces, such as Jiangsu, Sichuan and Fujian, more than half of middle class families said they are "not happy".
But the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences (CASS)' Social Policy Research Center Secretary General Tang Jun said the government should continue to strive to bring a third of the population into the middle class during the 12th Five-Year Plan (2011-2015). The middle class should become society's backbone and should shoulder its responsibility, he said.
About 23 percent of Chinese are middle class, and the proportion could increase to 40 percent by 2020, CASS researcher Lu Xueyi said.
But Jessica Hu (not her real name), a 33-year-old administrator of a foreign pharmaceutical company in Shanghai, said: "Middle-class families are often too weak to support themselves."
Hu said she often feels overwhelmed.
"I have to work very hard because I can't lose my job," she said.
"I need money to pay the mortgage, to give my son a better education and to support myself after retirement in a couple of decades."
Hu said most of the family's savings will go to her son's education.
The distribution of education resources is unfair, she said, but all she can do is save enough to pay for better schooling for her son.
The family also feels pressure from the increasing prices of many goods and services, she said.
"The only thing that hasn't gone up is our household income," Hu said.
"And we have to pay high taxes on almost everything - even birthday cakes."
The 12th Five-Year Plan (2011-2015) requires income growth to keep pace with economic growth. It also requires the fair allocation of public education resources, the expansion of social security coverage and the gradual removal of social security barriers.
"Government policies will certainly change people's feelings, but people need to adjust their mentalities, too," Zhou said. "In the rat race that is keeping up with the Joneses, people forget about the most precious parts of life, such as spending time with family."
But it will take a long time, perhaps longer than five years, for an entire demographic to become more mature and sensible about making money and shouldering social responsibilities, he said.
"People want to be both rich and responsible. But they crave money more than anything else, including responsibility, until they feel financially secure," Zhou said.
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