Job Recruitment Website - Immigration policy - I want to be a village head. I graduated from high school. I want to go to Tibet, Xinjiang or other poor places. Where is the poorest anyway? What should I do?

I want to be a village head. I graduated from high school. I want to go to Tibet, Xinjiang or other poor places. Where is the poorest anyway? What should I do?

Basically, the only way I know is the examination for university student village officials, but this requires a bachelor's degree in party member, and if it is Tibet, it needs a Tibetan student. Not only that, being a village official may not necessarily be a village head.

There are plans for western volunteers to come to Tibet, but it seems that they need college education or above. Tibet is not poor as a whole, but it has a high altitude and difficult working conditions.

If the landlord wants to support the frontier, he can directly come here to find a job in a poor place, but there is no guarantee that he can find anything. I am in Tibet, and I heard that there is no electricity in hard places in Tibet, and the water in some places is not drinkable, which will make people feel bloated and unable to eat. Tibetans in hard places may not speak Chinese, so communication is a problem. If you are a girl, you may be bullied.

If the landlord just wants to have a job, it is recommended to stay in the mainland. The high altitude in Tibet makes many people suffer from cardiovascular diseases. Not if you are in poor health. I have a relative who just came to work in that song and died of a slight cold. The reason is that a cold can easily cause pulmonary edema at high altitude. Working in Tibet is equivalent to trading your life for money. A healthy body is more important than anything else!