Business World

Migrant worker evictions tear at Beijing’s backbone

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THEY FUELED their nation’s dramatic economic rise, toiling in jobs far from home, but China’s migrant workers are now finding themselves increasing­ly unwelcome as authoritie­s try to cap the population explosions in key cities.

Lin Huiqing moved to Beijing to look for work when his children were still in diapers.

For the last 18 years, he has seen his family just once a year, the rest spent doing the hard labor most Beijingers would prefer to avoid.

The 50-year-old is one of hundreds of millions of migrants who moved from the countrysid­e to the cities, a colossal demographi­c shift that made China’s ascent possible.

But last month Lin was evicted from the village where he lived on the capital’s outskirts, another victim of a city-wide demolition plan to limit Beijing’s population to 23 million by 2020 — a target that could come at the cost of its economy.

“If I go home, I have no way to support my wife and kids,” Lin lamented.

According to the Communist Party mouthpiece People’s Daily, the city plans to demolish 40 million square metres of “illegal” structures.

Many are the homes and shops of low-income migrants like Lin.

When he first arrived in Beijing, Lin and his friends pooled their money and took out loans to purchase delivery trucks.

He made a living hauling the wares of small-scale shopkeeper­s and traders, but the moving business has taken a hit as the city condemns buildings en masse, evicting tens of thousands into the winter cold.

“Our customers are commoners like us,” he said. “With their small businesses shut down, there’s no stock for us to move. We’re basically unemployed now.”

Authoritie­s say the campaign, which kicked into high gear after a fire in an illegal structure killed 19 in November, is needed to clean the city up once and for all.

But it is also removing vibrant chunks of Beijing’s economy, such as retail and small scale manufactur­ing, and throwing into chaos other sectors like delivery, the bedrock of the booming e-commerce trade. —

 ??  ?? BUILDINGS demolished by authoritie­s in a migrant housing area on the outskirts of Beijing.
BUILDINGS demolished by authoritie­s in a migrant housing area on the outskirts of Beijing.

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