China’s economy pays a price as lockdowns
restrict nearly a third of its population.
The country’s zero-tolerance policy for coronavirus
cases has analysts downgrading China economic growth forecasts.
Nearly 400 million people are estimated to be under
some form of lockdown in China.
Alexandra
Stevenson
By
Alexandra Stevenson
April 14,
2022
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https://www.nytimes.com/2022/04/14/business/china-lockdowns-economy.html?searchResultPosition=2
Nearly 400
million people are estimated to be under some form of lockdown in China as
officials try to stop a fast-moving Omicron outbreak that is beginning to weigh
on the world’s second-largest economy.
Hundreds of
thousands of people have been sent to isolation facilities in China, and
millions more have been told to stay in their homes. Officials in dozens of
cities have shut down normal daily life across the country in a race to track
and trace the coronavirus and stamp out China’s worst outbreak since the start
of the pandemic.
The
Japanese bank Nomura has estimated that 373 million people in 45 Chinese cities
are under some kind of lockdown, about a third of the population and accounting
for the equivalent of around $7.2 trillion in annual gross domestic product.
It’s part
of a pandemic strategy that is increasingly at odds with China’s own economic
growth expectations — one that has prompted economists and even the country’s
premier to sound an alarm.
Experts are
beginning to warn that China’s target of 5.5 percent economic growth for 2022
is now unrealistic because so much of daily economic life has ground to a halt.
Li Keqiang, the premier, alerted local officials to the growing economic cost
of each new coronavirus outbreak on Monday, urging authorities to balance
pandemic control measures with a need to encourage growth.
“It is
necessary to coordinate epidemic prevention and control and economic and social
development,” Mr. Li said, according to state media.
China has
reported more than 350,000 locally transmitted virus cases since its latest
outbreak emerged in March. While that may not seem like a big number for any
country that has battled an outbreak of the highly contagious Omicron variant,
China is still pursuing a strategy that aims to eradicate the virus altogether,
driven in part by concerns over its older, unvaccinated population. Some 40
million people older than 60 still have not had a Covid jab.
China’s
response to its latest outbreak is also beginning to have an impact on the
world’s global supply chain, as factories that make iPhones, electric cars and
semiconductors have had to stop operations. Some critical components cannot be
trucked from ports to factories because of roadblocks and stringent Covid test
requirements.
Pegatron, a
major producer of Apple’s iPhone, said this week that two of its factories in
China had stopped production “in response to Covid-19 prevention requirements
from local governments.” The German auto parts maker Bosch and the automaker
Tesla are among other global companies that have had to suspend operations as
truck drivers are required to show negative test results within 48 hours in
order to enter cities like Shanghai.
In some
places without any reported cases, officials have put in place roadblocks,
leading the State Council, China’s cabinet, to tell local authorities this week
not to obstruct major roads, ports and airports.
The efforts
to prevent an outbreak are creating such a big problem that economists have
lowered their expectations for China’s economic output this year. One economist
has gone so far as to predict that China could go into recession in the coming
months.
Beijing has
made a zero-tolerance policy toward the coronavirus and outbreaks a priority,
said Ting Lu, chief China economist at Nomura.
“The
problem is that when you set this kind of policy target, local governments will
compete with each other,” he said. The consequence of this competition is that
local governments will escalate their own pandemic control policies to ensure
they don’t risk an outbreak that is difficult to get under control. For
example, officials Guangzhou, a city of 15 million, began citywide testing
after discovering 20 local cases last week.
“If all
local governments are doing it this way, then the whole economy would be in
trouble,” Mr. Lu said, adding, “The whole system will amplify this zero Covid
strategy.”
Alexandra
Stevenson is a business correspondent based in Hong Kong, covering Chinese
corporate giants, the changing landscape for multinational companies and China’s
growing economic and financial influence in Asia. @jotted • Facebook


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