BEIJING – In cities across China in early 2026, the ultimate financial fallback plan for millions of out-of-work citizens has hit a breaking point. Squeezed by a prolonged economic slowdown and a fiercely competitive job market, an unprecedented wave of workers has flooded the delivery and ride-hailing sectors, leading to a massive and unsustainable oversupply of labor.
Two new reports highlight the severity of the crisis: roughly 20 million people are now competing for just 4 million delivery jobs nationwide, while in Shenzhen, over 400,000 ride-hailing drivers averaged fewer than five trips a day this past April. Local officials have started issuing public warnings about saturated capacity, signaling a historic market collapse that leaves regular citizens wondering where to turn next for survival.
For years, zipping through traffic on an electric scooter with a bright yellow or blue delivery box was the easiest way to make a quick buck in China. If a factory closed or a tech company downsized, workers knew they could sign up for gig platforms like Meituan or Ele.me and start earning money the very same day.
That is no longer the case. According to recent labor market tracking data, the delivery driver industry is severely oversupplied. Current consumer demand across the country supports around 4 million full-time delivery roles. Yet, a staggering 20 million individuals have signed up and hit the streets looking for work.
This creates a brutal supply-to-demand ratio of five to one. The consequences on the ground are stark and visible. On street corners in Beijing, Shanghai, and Guangzhou, dozens of drivers can be seen sitting on their parked scooters for hours, staring at their phones and waiting for a single order to pop up.
When an order does appear, the algorithms that govern these platforms distribute the work so thinly that no one makes a decent living. Drivers who used to seamlessly make 50 to 60 deliveries a day are now lucky to secure 10 or 15. Because drivers are paid per completion, this drastic drop in volume means their daily take-home pay has plummeted well below minimum wage standards in many major urban centers.

The Ride-Hailing Squeeze in Shenzhen and Beyond
The crisis is just as severe behind the wheel. Ride-hailing, another traditional refuge for the unemployed, is experiencing an identical supply glut.
Shenzhen, a massive tech hub in southern China known for its bustling economy, has become the poster child for this oversaturation. In April 2026, the Shenzhen Transport Bureau reported shocking figures: each of the city’s roughly 400,000 registered ride-hailing drivers completed fewer than five passenger trips per day on average.
To put this into perspective, a driver usually needs to complete between 15 and 20 trips just to cover the daily baseline costs of vehicle rental, charging or fuel, and insurance. Dropping below five trips is not just unprofitable—it is financially devastating. Many drivers are currently operating at a net loss, spending up to 14 hours on the road in the hopes of catching a ride to the airport or a busy train station, only to return home empty-handed.
Why Is This Happening Now?
You might be asking how things got this bad so fast. The current gig economy collapse is the result of several overlapping economic pressures reaching a boiling point in 2026.
Here are the primary factors driving the massive influx of gig workers:
- Corporate Downsizing: Major tech firms, real estate conglomerates, and tutoring companies have spent the last few years trimming their workforces. White-collar professionals with no other immediate options have turned to gig work to pay their mortgages.
- Manufacturing Slowdowns: As global export demand shifts and factory automation increases, traditional manufacturing jobs are becoming harder to find. Blue-collar workers who once lived in factory dormitories are migrating to city centers to drive cars and scooters.
- Cautious Consumer Spending: The people who usually order takeout and hail cars are tightening their belts. With economic uncertainty looming, citizens are cooking at home more and taking public transit, directly shrinking the revenue pie for gig workers.
- Zero Barriers to Entry: Unlike starting a business or finding a traditional corporate job, becoming a driver requires almost no interviews, background checks, or specialized skills. It is the path of least resistance for anyone desperate for cash.
The Psychological Toll on the Workforce
Beyond the cold, hard numbers lies a deeply human crisis. The gig economy has always been a high-stress environment, governed by strict algorithmic rules and relentless ticking clocks. But the current lack of work has shifted the stress from “working too hard” to “waiting too long.”
Labor researchers note that the psychological impact of sitting idle for 10 to 12 hours a day, constantly anxious about making enough money to buy groceries, is breaking the morale of the workforce. Drivers report feeling a profound sense of isolation and depression. In previous years, a busy shift left little time to dwell on the negative. Today, the endless waiting has turned driver rest areas into hubs of shared anxiety.
The situation has become so dire that local governments are actively stepping in to stop the bleeding. Recognizing that the market simply cannot sustain any more drivers, several major municipalities have begun issuing formal, unprecedented warnings.
Cities like Shanghai, Chengdu, and Guangzhou have published public advisories urging residents not to blindly jump into the gig economy. They explicitly warn citizens not to quit their current jobs, and more importantly, not to take out high-interest loans to buy or lease ride-hailing vehicles.
Some local transit authorities have even taken the drastic step of temporarily suspending the issuance of new ride-hailing vehicle permits, effectively closing the door on new entrants. According to reports from regional economic planners, these regulatory moves are meant to protect the drivers who are already on the road from further wage dilution. However, for the millions of people looking at the gig economy as their absolute last resort, these closed doors feel less like protection and more like a trap.

A Missing Safety Net for Everyday Citizens
What makes this market collapse so historic is what it represents. In many Western countries, unemployment benefits and robust social safety nets help cushion the blow of job loss. In China, the gig economy has effectively served as that safety net for the past decade.
If you lost your job, you didn’t panic; you downloaded an app and started driving. It was a stressful life, but it kept food on the table and the rent paid.
Now that this fallback option has been neutralized, the anxiety among regular citizens is palpable. Without the ability to pivot to delivery or ride-hailing, millions of families are facing an unprecedented loss of income. Social media platforms are flooded with videos of drivers lamenting their empty order screens, and community forums are filled with anxious questions from parents wondering how they will afford next month’s bills.
Economists suggest that the current pressure cooker environment requires a structural shift in how labor is managed and supported. The old model—relying on the sheer scale of the consumer internet to soak up excess labor—is officially broken.
Creating more sustainable, high-quality jobs in emerging fields like green energy, advanced manufacturing, and healthcare is essential. But these macroeconomic transitions take years to materialize, and families need to eat today.
In the immediate term, labor advocates are pushing for gig platforms to take more responsibility. There is a growing chorus calling for platforms to guarantee a minimum hourly wage for their workers, regardless of trip volume, or to cap the number of active drivers on the app at any given time. However, the platforms themselves are facing fierce market competition and are reluctant to voluntarily absorb those costs.
For now, the harsh reality of 2026 remains largely unaddressed. The streets of China’s biggest and brightest cities are packed with idle drivers. They sit on scooters and behind steering wheels, watching their screens, hoping for a digital ping that increasingly never comes.
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