Chinese make travel plans as Beijing dismantles zero-COVID rules
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[December 27, 2022]
By Joe Cash and Sophie Yu
BEIJING (Reuters) -Chinese people, cut off from the rest of the world
for three years by stringent COVID-19 curbs, flocked to travel sites on
Tuesday ahead of borders reopening next month, even as rising infections
strained the health system and roiled the economy.
Zero-COVID measures in place since early 2020 - from shuttered borders
to frequent lockdowns - last month fuelled the Chinese mainland's
biggest show of public discontent since President Xi Jinping took power
in 2012.
His subsequent abrupt U-turn on the curbs, which have battered the
$17-trillion economy, the world's second-largest, means the virus is now
spreading largely unchecked across the country of 1.4 billion people.
Official statistics, however, showed only one COVID death in the seven
days to Monday, fuelling doubts among health experts and residents about
the government's data. The numbers are inconsistent with the experience
of much less populous countries after they re-opened.
Doctors say hospitals are overwhelmed with five-to-six-times more
patients than usual, most of them elderly. International health experts
estimate millions of daily infections and predict at least one million
COVID deaths in China next year.
Nevertheless, Chinese authorities are determined to dismantle the last
vestiges of their zero-COVID policies.
In a major step towards freer travel - cheered by global stock markets
on Tuesday - China will stop requiring inbound travellers to go into
quarantine from Jan. 8, the National Health Commission (NHC) said late
on Monday.
"It finally feels as if China has turned the corner," AmCham China
Chairman Colm Rafferty said of the imminent lifting of the quarantine
rule.
There are no official restrictions on Chinese people going abroad but
the new rule will make it much easier for them to return home.
Travel platform Ctrip's data showed that within half an hour of the
news, searches for popular cross-border destinations had increased
10-fold. Macau, Hong Kong, Japan, Thailand and South Korea were the most
sought-after, Ctrip said.
Data from Trip.com showed outbound flights bookings were up 254% early
on Tuesday from the day before.
China's National Immigration Administration said on Tuesday that it
would resume processing passport applications of Chinese nationals
seeking to travel abroad and approving visits of mainland residents to
Hong Kong.
China will also resume the implementation of a policy allowing visa-free
transit of up to 144 hours for travellers. The extension or renewal of
foreigners' visas will also be restored, the immigration administration
added.
Shares in global luxury goods groups, which rely heavily on Chinese
shoppers, rose on Tuesday on the easing of travel restrictions. China
accounts for 21% of the world's 350-billion euro luxury goods market.
Ordinary Chinese and travel agencies, however, suggested that a return
to anything like normal would take some months yet, given worries about
COVID and more careful spending because of the impact of the pandemic.
Separately, once the border with Hong Kong reopens next month, mainland
Chinese will be able to take BioNTech-made mRNA vaccines, seen as more
effective than the domestically-developed options available on the
mainland.
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Travellers stand by their luggage at
Beijing Capital International Airport, amid the coronavirus disease
(COVID-19) outbreak in Beijing, China December 27, 2022. REUTERS/Tingshu
Wang
'GREAT PRESSURE'
China's classification of COVID will also be downgraded to the less
strict Category B from the current top-level Category A from Jan. 8,
the health authority said, meaning authorities will no longer be
compelled to quarantine patients and close contacts and impose
lockdowns.
But for all the excitement of a gradual return to a pre-COVID way of
life, there was mounting pressure on the healthcare system, with
doctors saying many hospitals are overwhelmed while funeral parlours
report a surge in demand for their services.
Nurses and doctors have been asked to work while sick and retired
medical workers in rural communities were being rehired to help,
state media reported. Some cities have been struggling to secure
supplies of anti-fever drugs.
"Some places are facing great pressure at hospital emergency wards
and intensive care units," NHC official Jiao Yahui told reporters.
While the Chinese economy is expected to see a sharp rebound later
next year, it is in for a rough ride in the coming weeks and months
as workers increasingly fall ill.
Many shops in Shanghai, Beijing and elsewhere have closed in recent
days with staff unable to come to work, while some factories have
already sent many of their workers on leave for the late January
Lunar New Year holidays.
"The concern of a temporary supply chain distortion remains as the
labour force is impacted by infections," JPMorgan analysts said in a
note, adding that their tracking of subway traffic in 29 cities
showed that many people were restricting their movements as the
virus spreads.
Data on Tuesday showed industrial profits fell 3.6% in
January-November from a year earlier, versus a 3.0% drop for
January-October, reflecting the toll of the anti-virus curbs in
place last month, including in major manufacturing regions.
Authorities said they would step up financial support to small and
private businesses in the hard-hit catering and tourism sectors.
The lifting of travel restrictions is positive for the economy, but
strong caveats apply.
Japan Prime Minister Fumio Kishida said his country would require a
negative COVID test for travellers from mainland China. The
government would also limit airlines increasing flights to China, he
said.
"International travel ... will likely surge, yet it may take many
more months before volumes return to the pre-pandemic level," said
Dan Wang, chief economist at Hang Seng Bank China.
"COVID is still spreading in most parts of China, greatly disrupting
the normal work schedule. Loss in productivity is significant."
(Reporting by Beijing and Shanghai bureaus and Chen Lin in
Singapore; Writing by Marius Zaharia and Sumeet Chatterjee; Editing
by Lincoln Feast, Robert Birsel and Frank Jack Daniel)
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