(Bloomberg) — As China staggers into a slowdown caused by Donald Trump’s trade war, a hobbled jobs market is impairing the resilience Beijing needs to battle it out against the US.

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Trump’s 145% tariffs on China’s goods are threatening to obliterate its access to the world’s biggest economy, with Goldman Sachs Group Inc. (GS) estimating that up to 20 million people — or about 3% of the labor force — may be exposed to US-bound exports. A full economic divorce would roil a workforce already drained by widespread salary cuts and layoffs.

On top of an uncertain business outlook, productivity gains from China’s adoption of artificial intelligence and automation likely contributed to slowing demand for employment despite an uninterrupted economic recovery during the first months of the Trump presidency.

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Helped by government support deployed in late 2024, growth barely slowed in the first quarter to stay above 5% from a year earlier, according to most economists, outpacing the target set by Beijing.

By contrast, a measure of job openings compiled by Paris-based QuantCube Technology plunged nearly 30% from a year ago over the past two months, based on a data set that tracked online postings from over 2,000 companies.

An index of future hiring plans fell in March to a six-month low, according to results of a poll of mostly private companies surveyed by the Cheung Kong Graduate School of Business, or CKGSB. The employment sub-gauge of China’s non-manufacturing purchasing managers’ index is also in decline.

“The fourth quarter stimulus hasn’t translated into the labor market yet,” said Duncan Wrigley, chief China economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics. “Companies want a more certain economic outlook before ramping up hiring.”

Chronic weakness in the jobs market is a major obstacle for a campaign to revive consumption, a priority for China’s leadership as it tried to engineer a turnaround in the face of a prolonged property crisis.

Employment has been under pressure from challenges both at home and abroad, according to Wang Xiaoping, minister of human resources and social security. She spoke last month on the sidelines of the annual session of China’s legislature, which set the goal of adding more than 12 million urban jobs in 2025.