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China is open for business, but COVID concerns still keep many home

In Beijing, officials are working to calm the public and prevent the medical system from being overwhelmed by a rampant COVID-19 outbreak after China lifted many of its strict controls on Dec. 7. 

China’s reopening has been touted as an opportunity to rekindle economic growth, revitalize society, and reintegrate with the world after three years of extreme internal controls and isolation. Yet China’s abrupt abandonment of its “zero-COVID” strategy is creating its own challenges. Many restaurants, malls, and movie theaters in the capital reopened this month only to sit deserted, as staff absences halt businesses and many people hunker down at home. Still, experts predict brighter days await the country later next year. 

Why We Wrote This

China’s economic revitalization largely hinges on whether the government, which has long touted the dangers of COVID-19, can meet the test of a mass outbreak and assuage public anxieties as controls lift and cases rise.

How China grapples with the next three to six months will prove a major test of the country’s health and governance systems, shaping how strongly it emerges from its COVID-19 endgame. 

In terms of economic growth, “we will see things getting worse before they are getting better,” says Larry Hu, chief China economist for the Macquarie Group Ltd., in Hong Kong.

Meanwhile, Li Ang, deputy director of the Beijing Municipal Health Commission, advised people on Tuesday to manage their fears, quoting a Chinese idiom: “Don’t blanch at the mention of a tiger.”

As a sandstorm and frigid winds swept Beijing this week, parents bundling infants in blankets and leading small children by the hand lined up outside a fever clinic. Down the block, other lines formed outside pharmacies, where people made quick purchases and hurried away, gripping bags of herbal medicine.

Scenes like this are playing out across China’s capital in an atmosphere more subdued than celebratory as a COVID-19 outbreak runs rampant following the lifting on Dec. 7 of many of the nation’s strict controls. Restaurants, tea shops, malls, and movie theaters have reopened for business, only to sit deserted. 

The unfolding health crisis in the capital underscores how China’s abrupt abandonment of its “zero-COVID” strategy risks creating significant short-term social and economic disruptions, as the country is unprepared for a wave of cases that local experts estimate will impact 840 million people. Indeed, just as the intrusive COVID-19 lockdowns curtailed economic growth and sparked large-scale protests, China’s reopening is causing its own setbacks, as staff absences halt businesses and many people hunker down at home.

Why We Wrote This

China’s economic revitalization largely hinges on whether the government, which has long touted the dangers of COVID-19, can meet the test of a mass outbreak and assuage public anxieties as controls lift and cases rise.

Still, experts predict brighter days await the country later next year. China’s reopening offers opportunities to rekindle economic growth, revitalize society, and reintegrate with the world after three years of extreme internal controls and isolation. But how China grapples with the next three to six months will prove a major test of the country’s health and governance systems, shaping how strongly it emerges from its COVID-19 endgame.

In Beijing, officials are working to calm the public and prevent the medical system from being overwhelmed by what they call an exponential rise in patients. They are opening hundreds of new clinics and appealing to residents not to call the emergency 120 phone line unless the need is dire, after calls surged sixfold last week.

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