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For centuries, Beijing has symbolized the pinnacle of ambition in China. From imperial capital to the political heart of modern China, the city has long attracted those seeking a better life.

In medieval times, scholars traveled here to sit imperial exams. In recent decades, graduates, entrepreneurs, and migrant workers flocked to the capital as China's economy boomed.

Wang Lei, 29, was one of them. Born in neighboring Hebei province, he vividly recalls his first visit to the capital as a child. "When we arrived at Beijing Railway Station, my friend and I spotted a towering skyscraper for the first time," Wang recalled. "I told him when I grew up, I would stand on top of it."

He moved to the city in 2020 and found work in real estate, then one of China's most lucrative sectors. Like millions before him, Wang arrived hoping his hard work would be rewarded.

Six years later, those dreams lie in tatters — and Wang believes his future now lies beyond the city that once enthralled him.

The country's economic miracle was built on one of the largest migrations in human history. Hundreds of millions left villages and smaller cities for booming urban centers, driving decades of extraordinary growth.

Few places symbolized that transformation more than Beijing. Its population has almost doubled since 1990, from about 11 million to nearly 22 million. For many from remote areas, simply having a Beijing address has long been seen as a symbol of success.

But in recent years, there's been a shift. China's seemingly unstoppable double-digit growth has slowed to a pace not seen for decades. The double whammy of a crisis in the real estate sector – once a key pillar of economic growth – and the coronavirus pandemic dealt a blow to business and consumer confidence.

Families who invested the vast majority of their savings into property watched home prices sink and suddenly felt poorer. COVID-19, and the restrictions that followed, taught people they could never be too careful about saving for a rainy day.

People weren't spending, and businesses stopped expanding. The job market tightened.

Wang Lei's plan to make it big in Beijing quickly unraveled. "The real estate market was in a very bad state," he said. "The pressure was immense, so I decided to quit."

Today he works as a freelancer while co-owning a small bar with friends. The work offers greater flexibility, but the financial reality remains challenging.

"Many people around me – including my colleagues and friends – are under this same kind of stress," he said. "Their salaries simply don't match their expenses. If you add dating, rent, and the occasional trip into the mix, the money just isn't enough."

On Chinese social media, posts under the hashtag "escaping Beijing" have gained widespread attention, with young people sharing their decisions to leave the capital.

Many cite the same reasons: expensive housing, intense competition, and uncertainty about career prospects. For Wang, the question is increasingly practical.

"If I spent the same amount of money in another city, I might enjoy a better quality of life," he says. That doesn't mean the decision is easy. Wang acknowledges a stigma attached to leaving, one which implies failure and "loss of face."

But he says the mindset is changing, especially among younger generations. They're starting to reject a system where the cost of success has, in their opinion, become too high.

For years, China's "996" work culture (working from 9am to 9pm, six days a week) was seen as a necessary sacrifice for those who wanted to get ahead. The concept was celebrated by the likes of Jack Ma, the billionaire founder of Chinese tech giant Alibaba.

Older generations in China speak proudly of their ability to "chi ku" or "eat bitterness" to survive and thrive. But slowing economic growth and increasingly fierce competition have changed the calculus and given rise to the phenomenon of "tang ping," or "lying flat."

The term emerged in 2021 to describe young people who reject intense competition and choose a simpler lifestyle rather than endlessly pursuing higher salaries or traditional markers of success.

It's a choice that sounds increasingly appealing to Wang, who has seen a number of friends already leave the capital. "I've come to realize that the people who left Beijing to live in other cities are happier than I am," he said. "They face far less pressure and anxiety. My own life is nowhere near as relaxed or free as theirs."

He rejects the idea that leaving means abandoning ambition. "Sure, there are young people who don't want to work hard, but there are plenty who do. We just need to adapt to the realities of today."

For Wang, leaving Beijing would mean accepting that his childhood dream has changed. He was raised to believe that success meant reaching the top of China's biggest cities. Now, he says, it means finding somewhere he can finally breathe and building a life which feels sustainable.

Source: www.aljazeera.com