By Ji Beibei and Lin Meilian
A list of graduate millionaires published recently
has attracted media attention and also public controversy.
The List of Richest College Graduates with their Own
Business was jointly issued by the Chinese University Alumni website and 21st
Century Report on June 24, with the average fortune of the 100 rich college
graduates on the list amounting to 2.6 million yuan (380,380 U.S. dollars),
local Beijing Times reported Tuesday. Most enterprises on the list are
small-scale start-up companies and are in their initial stages, with no
competitiveness with mature large companies in terms of scale and capital, the
newspaper said.
The IT industry is the favorite choice when graduates
decide to start their own businesses. 40 percent of the enterprises on the list
are IT-related. Among the top 10, eight are in the IT industry.
Regarding funding, 90 percent of those listed raised
funds by themselves and 10 percent obtained financial aid from their parents.
Research findings show that 20 percent received venture capital from foundations
or banks.
Of those on the list, 79 are of the post-1980s
generation, 20 the post-1970s generation and one the post-1990s generation.
Jin Jin and Ding Shiyuan stand out on the list. Jin
set up one of the largest web-games enterprises in Zhejiang Province and ranks
No. 1 on the list with a total wealth of 1 billion yuan. Ding owns a
culture-related company in Shenzhen, Guangdong Province and he is the only one
born in the 1990s on the list.
Jin, a new IT industry
engine
Jin Jin, 25, who founded games company Ferry Network
in Hangzhou, Zhejiang Province, tops the list. He turned an initial investment
of 5,000 yuan (731 U.S. dollars) into one billion within two years, China News
Service reported.
When he was a boy, Jin adored online games so much
that his parents always knew where to find him - in the game room. Yet he is
different from other game lovers, and was always thinking about how to make
money from playing games.
Established in 2005, Ferry Game has set up 11 offices
all over China, its self-developed 3D online games are the favorites of millions
of young people in major Chinese cities.
"My friends and I had an agreement at high school
that we would set up our own on-line game publisher after graduation. Now we've
made it earlier than that," Jin told China News Service.
Jin said he and his company are both "made in
Hangzhou." "It is Hangzhou that helps to make it possible," he said.
The city's development of the creative industry, including online games, is an eye-catching trend. In 2008 alone, the economic output by its cultural and creative industry increased by about 58 billion yuan, according to People's Daily.