Why China’s Economy Faces a Perilous Road to Recovery
Years of lockdowns took a brutal toll on businesses.
Now, the rapid spread of Covid after a chaotic reopening has deprived them of
workers and customers.
Keith
Bradsher
By Keith
Bradsher
Keith
Bradsher reported from Yangjiang and Guangzhou, China.
Jan. 2,
2023
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/01/02/business/china-economy-covid.html
Three weeks
after Xi Jinping, China’s top leader, tried to reinvigorate China’s stalled
economy by abruptly abandoning his stringent pandemic restrictions, he struck
an upbeat note in his annual New Year’s Eve address. “China’s economy has
strong resilience, great potential and vitality,” he said.
But that
optimism is hard to find in downtown Guangzhou, the commercial hub of southern
China. Nearly three years of “zero Covid” measures have crushed businesses.
Streets are lined with shuttered stores and workshops. Walls are plastered not
with “help wanted” signs, but with notices from entrepreneurs putting their
businesses up for sale. Roads and alleys once packed with migrant workers are
now mostly empty.
China’s
reversal of its Covid restrictions in early December was meant to help places
like Guangzhou. But the chaotic approach has contributed to a tsunami of
infections that has swept across the nation, overwhelming hospitals and funeral
parlors. In many industries, truck drivers and other workers have quickly
fallen ill, temporarily stretching staff and slowing operations.
Now, faced
with an unpredictable — and uncontrolled — epidemic and financial uncertainty,
people and companies are spending cautiously, suggesting that the road to
recovery will be uneven and painful.
China is also
confronting broader challenges beyond its borders. The global economy is
slowing, dragged down by high inflation, an energy crisis and geopolitical
turmoil. As American and European shoppers tighten their budgets, China
increasingly faces a double blow of slumping demand both at home and abroad.
Weak
spending is further depressing the already razor-thin or nonexistent profit
margins of many of the small private businesses that power China’s economy.
In
Guangzhou, Tony Tang, the owner of a fifth-floor workshop that makes women’s
clothing, said his sales had plunged by two-thirds in the past year.
Competition among small factories in China and overseas is fierce, pushing down
the wholesale price he can charge for a woman’s jacket with no brand name from
$14 to $11.30 apiece.
Mr. Tang’s
work force has shrunk from 30 to 10, but there is no shortage of labor. When he
needed a worker to help sew an order of halter tops, he went out on a street
corner with a handmade cardboard sign and hired one within several minutes, for
one-sixth less than he paid about a year ago.
The
problem, Mr. Tang said, is a lack of orders. His workshop has “a lot of
workers, but we don’t have work to do,” he said.
China’s
factory activity contracted further in December as rapidly spreading infections
grounded workers, snarled deliveries and dampened demand, according to a survey
of manufacturers that the government released on Saturday. For service
industries like restaurants, the same survey found, business was almost as bad
as in early 2020, during the nearly nationwide lockdown that followed the first
Covid outbreak in the city of Wuhan. Eateries and other businesses closed last
month as customers stayed home to avoid infection or because they were sick.
“The
epidemic has had a great impact on the production and demand of enterprises,
the attendance of personnel, and logistics and distribution,” the National
Bureau of Statistics said in a statement that accompanied its release of the
survey data.
Manufacturing
had already been in decline in November, when many cities and regions in China
imposed lockdowns on residents in a futile bid to contain outbreaks. Car
dealerships are crammed with unsold cars. Stores have little need to order more
for their shelves when they are already full of unsold merchandise.
A deserted
wholesale fabrics and accessories market in Guangzhou.Credit...Gilles Sabrié
for The New York Times
Nio, an
electric car manufacturer in east-central China’s Anhui Province, said that
Covid outbreaks had affected its supply chain and reduced its car deliveries in
December. Tesla suspended the production of cars at its factory in Shanghai for
the last week of December, a move that Yale Zhang, managing director of
Automotive Foresight, a consultancy in Shanghai, saw as a sign of flagging
sales in China and elsewhere, partly because other automakers are introducing
more electric cars.
But even as
many cities and provinces are in the throes of deadly outbreaks that have
silenced once-busy streets, in other places, there are early signs that
economic activity is resuming. In a few cities in northern China like Beijing,
which saw widespread outbreaks that have since peaked, people have been going
out again in recent days.
The lifting
of quarantine rules has helped drive sales of airline tickets ahead of the
Lunar New Year holiday later this month. The removal of onerous Covid
restrictions like daily P.C.R. testing on people and imported goods has saved
time and money for companies and workers.
Xu Zeqiang,
a truck driver in Yangjiang, a city in southeastern China that is a hub of
knife and scissors production, said that he and his driving partner could now
complete a round trip from Yangjiang to the ports at Shenzhen, 200 miles away,
in a day, instead of two or three days.
“In the
past, we could be stopped for P.C.R. test results and health code checks — now,
it’s not required anymore, you can come and leave any time,” he said.
Many
European manufacturers in China have been forced to operate with about half
their usual staff for two to three weeks, affecting output somewhat, said Klaus
Zenkel, the chairman of the chamber’s South China chapter. As a precaution
against lockdowns, many companies had accumulated spare parts in warehouses
before the Covid wave and have relied on those to keep running.
But to save
on costs, a few small suppliers of specific components have stopped operations
early for the Lunar New Year holiday, which starts on Jan. 21. “Everyone
managed a way to continue somehow, to keep the damage at a minimum,” Mr. Zenkel
said.
The damage
that “zero Covid” inflicted on China’s once-unbeatable attractiveness as a
manufacturing hub could be hard to repair.
Lockdowns
and closed borders slowed or disrupted deliveries of goods and prevented many
companies from sending buyers to factories. Some global retailers, seeing risk
in overreliance on China, have turned instead to other countries for supplies.
Walmart, for example, plans to ramp up imports from India to $10 billion a year
by 2027.
Even
Chinese exporters are trying to diversify.
In
Yangjiang, Velong Enterprises, a Chinese manufacturer of knives, grilling
thermometers and other kitchenware for Walmart, Ikea, Target, Carrefour and
other retailers, is expanding its operations in Cambodia, Vietnam and India. It
has shrunk its work force in Yangjiang from 1,700 to 1,200 through attrition
and is considering potential factory sites from Mexico to Turkey, said Jacob
Rothman, a co-founder and co-chief executive.
Companies
like Velong find some savings when they venture out. The company pays workers
in Cambodia half as much as its workers in Yangjiang.
But China’s
strengths in industrial prowess and labor, even in the midst of a raging
epidemic, are hard to beat.
A fifth of
Velong’s remaining factory workers in China are now out sick. But the company
has been able to avoid missing deliveries by hiring temporary workers from
among the large pool of workers in Yangjiang with knife-making experience, said
Iven Chen, the company’s other co-founder and co-chief executive.
“Our
employees can be trained in five to eight days, and the skilled ones need less
than one day,” said Ye Yuanqiang, a factory production manager at Velong. “I
have worked in Cambodia, and sometimes I can’t train them well in two months.”
The
pressure on exporters has only intensified in recent months. China’s exports
fell in November compared to a year earlier, led by a 25 percent plunge in
exports to the United States. Households in the West had spent heavily on
exercise equipment and other manufactured goods from China during the first two
years of the pandemic, but are now more budget-conscious as prices rise.
The
Communist Party has pledged to spur domestic demand to revive growth. But
convincing people to spend after three years of stop-start activity and
punishing lockdowns will be tough. Many Chinese workers are now looking for
ways to rebuild their savings, even as the Lunar New Year holiday approaches, a
time when families used to splurge.
“The
overall wages are quite low, you can’t make much money,” said Gong Shuguang, a
garment worker in Guangzhou who plans to stay in the city for the holiday
instead of returning to his hometown in Sichuan Province for a family reunion.
He lost two months’ wages during a Covid lockdown in the autumn.
“I want to
find more work to do,” he said late last month. “I have worked here for seven
or eight years and this year is the worst.”
Li You
contributed research.
Keith Bradsher is the Beijing bureau chief for The Times. He previously served as bureau chief in Shanghai, Hong Kong and Detroit and as a Washington correspondent. He has lived and reported in mainland China through the pandemic. @KeithBrad
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário