HomeNewsBusinessEconomyHuì xué zhōngwén: I want to learn Chinese, say Indians as demand for the language picks up after lockdown dip

Huì xué zhōngwén: I want to learn Chinese, say Indians as demand for the language picks up after lockdown dip

There may be tons of trouble at the border and Chinese apps may have been booted out unceremoniously, but Mandarin remains the most popular foreign language in India. Reason: it opens up job opportunities for teachers, translators, businessmen, lawyers and finance professionals

September 11, 2020 / 12:14 IST
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Pratik Salve, who works with a multinational electronics firm in Pune, was to travel to Singapore in March 2020 for a one-year project but the Covid outbreak led to this being postponed to March 2021. Salve is using the time to take a year-long course in Mandarin so as to be able to converse better with Chinese clients. “Earlier, the plan was to hire translators who would work with me. However, my company is watching costs and I thought this was an opportunity for me to learn Chinese,” he explained.

Bhaskar Satpathy, a private Mandarin tutor in Kolkata, used to teach his students in a classroom environment. However, the lockdown put paid to all that and enrolment dwindled. Satpathy quickly pivoted to teaching the language online. “I started taking classes via video conferencing in May. While students were apprehensive in the first few weeks, enrolment started picking up by June. Now, I have 80 students studying under me,” he added.

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Mandarin is the most popular foreign language in India, due to the job opportunities it provides teachers, translators, businessmen, lawyers and finance professionals. There are around 100 institutes teaching the language across the country.

As with other courses, the closure of physical classes due to the Covid-19 lockdown impacted Mandarin learning. Institutes imparting training in the language across India told Moneycontrol that enrolment had taken a hit. Yeh China Education, an institute with a 1,500-1,800 annual batch size, has seen a 30-40 percent decline this year. Inchin Closer, which provides certificate Mandarin courses to around 300 students every year, has seen a nearly 30 percent drop in class strength.