China set to ease COVID curbs further as markets cheer change of tack
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[December 05, 2022]
By Julie Zhu and Ryan Woo
HONG KONG/BEIJING (Reuters) - China is set to announce a further easing
of some of the world's toughest COVID curbs as early as Wednesday,
sources said, as investors cheered the prospect of a policy shift that
follows widespread protests and mounting economic damage.
Three years into the pandemic, China's zero-tolerance measures, from
shut borders to frequent lockdowns, contrast sharply with the rest of
the world, which has largely decided to live with the virus.
The strict approach has battered the world's second-largest economy, put
mental strain on hundreds of millions and last month prompted the
biggest show of public discontent in mainland China since President Xi
Jinping took power in 2012.
Although last month's protests largely subsided amid a heavy police
presence across major cities, regional authorities have since cut back
on lockdowns, quarantine rules and testing requirements to varying
degrees. Top officials have also softened their tone on the dangers
posed by the virus.
The financial hub of Shanghai announced on Monday night that it would
remove COVID testing requirements for people to enter most public places
from Tuesday.
And a new set of nationwide rules is due to be announced soon, two
sources with knowledge of the matter told Reuters, paving the way for
more coordinated easing.
Beijing is also weighing whether to scale down its management of the
virus to reflect the less serious threat it poses as early as January,
the sources added.
More broadly, analysts now predict China may drop border controls and
re-open the economy sooner than expected next year, with some seeing it
fully open in spring.
"Though we are hopeful too, we caution that the road to reopening may be
gradual, painful and bumpy," wrote Nomura chief China economist Ting Lu
in a research note on Monday, adding that China did not appear to be
well prepared for a massive wave of infections.
As infections rise, putting pressure on China's medical infrastructure,
mild and asymptomatic cases should quarantine at home, Feng Zijian,
former deputy head of the Chinese Centre for Disease Control and
Prevention, told The Paper.
Those who have not completed their basic immunisation or obtained their
booster shots should do so as soon as possible, especially the elderly
and vulnerable, Feng told the Shanghai government-backed news outlet in
an interview.
But the patchy loosening over the past week has left some in China
scared of being caught on the wrong side of fast-changing rules.
Yin, who lives in a small city near Beijing, said her in-laws had come
down with a fever and she had a sore throat but they did not want to be
tested for fear of being thrown into government quarantine.
"All we want is to recover at home," she told Reuters, speaking on
condition of anonymity.
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Pandemic prevention workers in
protective suits walk in a street as coronavirus disease (COVID-19)
outbreaks continue in Beijing, December 4, 2022. REUTERS/Thomas
Peter
The yuan jumped to its strongest level against the dollar since
mid-September amid a broad market rally as investors hope the
unwinding of pandemic curbs will brighten the outlook for global
growth.
In another hopeful sign, a source at Apple supplier Foxconn told
Reuters the firm expected its COVID-hit Zhengzhou plant - the
world's biggest iPhone factory - to resume full production this
month or early next.
Economic data underscored the damage done by the curbs, as services
activity shrank to six-month lows in November.
CHANGING MESSAGE
Alongside the easing in different cities, Vice Premier Sun Chunlan,
who oversees China's COVID efforts, said last week the ability of
the virus to cause disease was weakening.
That change in messaging aligns with the position held by many
health officials around the world for more than a year.
In recent days, major cities across China have continued loosening
measures.
Among them, the eastern city of Nanjing dropped the need of a COVID
test to use public transport. So did Beijing, though entry to many
offices in the capital still requires negative tests.
"I can't feel a very noticeable change yet," said Randle Li, 25, a
marketing professional in Beijing. Li said his firm still required
him to test every day to enter the office.
Elsewhere, as testing requirements have eased, official figures of
new infections have also dropped.
Hu Xijin, a prominent commentator and former editor-in-chief of
state-run tabloid Global Times, said in a blog that some official
tallies were likely underreporting the spread of the virus because
of lower testing rates.
While the protests have died down, frustration can still boil over,
as events in the central city of Wuhan, where the virus first
emerged in late 2019, showed this weekend.
On Saturday, people pushed down barriers in an apparent attempt to
break out of a lockdown at a garment industrial park, video clips
posted on Twitter showed.
Then on Sunday, dozens of students stood in the rain outside a
university in the city demanding greater "transparency" in COVID
policies, other videos showed.
Reuters was able to verify that the incidents happened in Wuhan.
(Reporting by Ryan Woo, Bernard Orr and Martin Quin Pollard in
Beijing and Julie Zhu and Kevin Huang in Hong Kong; Writing by John
Geddie and Greg Torode; Editing by Clarence Fernandez and Nick
Macfie)
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