KEY POINTS
  • Since the central government officially released the so-called "double reduction" policy last month, local authorities in several provinces have ordered private businesses to suspend online and offline tutoring classes.
  • The crackdown is harsher than expected, said Alan Wang, an analyst covering education at Beijing-based asset manager Harvest Fund Management.
  • CNBC interviews across the education industry reveal that the new regulations shocked parents and left businesses struggling, as millions of employees braced for job losses.
New Oriental is located at the West Yintai Campus, Hangzhou city, Zhejiang Province, China, on August 2, 2021.

The Chinese government's sudden crackdown on after-school education companies is raising costs for many parents and throwing millions of jobs into uncertainty.

In a country where parents prize a good education — and good grades play an outsized role in determining career opportunities — tens of millions of students across China drown in after-school tutoring courses every year.