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From fear to self-reliance: Behind China’s COVID-19 shift

As Beijing’s leaders make an abrupt shift towards relaxing COVID-19 controls, official messaging around the pandemic has started encouraging self-reliance.

“In the past three years, the virus has weakened but we have grown in strength,” the Communist Party mouthpiece People’s Daily said in a commentary on Thursday, a day after authorities rolled out a new, 10-point COVID-19 plan. These measures mark the biggest nationwide easing of the “zero-COVID” strategy yet, giving people greater leeway to decide if and when they get tested, and to care for themselves if they become ill.

Why We Wrote This

Until this week, China’s COVID-19 policy was based on frightening citizens into accepting tight restrictions. Now, it’s the citizens’ responsibility to decide many things for themselves. The switch from fear to self-reliance, while broadly welcomed, comes at a cost.

Overnight, people are being advised not to worry and, essentially, to fend for themselves – a head-spinning change for a population living in a steady state of anxiety from mass testing, constant health surveillance, and the ever-present risk of draconian lockdowns. 

The change comes with greater uncertainty, particularly about the future of China’s large and vulnerable elderly population, but many embrace the new responsibility.

“The adjustment is a bit of a sharp turn,” says Mr. Tian, a construction company worker in Beijing who asked to withhold his first name. “This is not as scary as what [Chinese experts] exaggerated before.”

Until last week, China’s leaders and propaganda machine were using fear-provoking, militaristic language to frame the country’s strict, “zero-COVID” strategy, vowing to “annihilate” the epidemic, win the war, and save the nation from an “unimaginable” death toll. Armies of pandemic workers in white hazmat suits – party cadres, police, medical staff, and volunteers – performed heroic feats each night on television news, protecting residents and meeting their every need.

But as Beijing’s leaders this week made an abrupt shift towards relaxing COVID-19 controls amid rising popular discontent, their message has changed dramatically from one of fear to self-reliance.

“In the past three years, the virus has weakened but we have grown in strength,” the Communist Party mouthpiece People’s Daily said in a commentary on Thursday, a day after the country rolled out a new, 10-point nationwide easing policy. “We have survived the hardest period!”

Why We Wrote This

Until this week, China’s COVID-19 policy was based on frightening citizens into accepting tight restrictions. Now, it’s the citizens’ responsibility to decide many things for themselves. The switch from fear to self-reliance, while broadly welcomed, comes at a cost.

Overnight, people are being advised not to worry and, essentially, to fend for themselves – a head-spinning change for a population living in a steady state of anxiety from mass testing, constant health surveillance, and the ever-present risk of draconian lockdowns. But many embrace the newfound responsibility.

“The adjustment is a bit of a sharp turn,” says Mr. Tian, a construction company worker in Beijing, which is currently facing its biggest outbreak ever. Overall, he welcomes the change as what he calls a belated acknowledgement of science and tamping down of unwarranted fear.

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