Times of Suriname

China Focus: Government offers bailout, voucher programs to stimulate restaurant industry

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SHENYANG Huo Chunlei, who runs a hotpot restaurant in Shenyang, capital of northeast China’s Liaoning Province, said he did not lay off any of his staff, although the restaurant is having difficulti­es for reopening after two months of closure in China’s nationwide measures of coronaviru­s control.

A few weeks after Chinese provincial-regions with low risk of the novel coronaviru­s gradually resumed work and production, shops and eateries have reopened, and roads become bustling again, as hundreds of millions of people confined at home for weeks in compliance with epidemic prevention rules get back to a normal life. Huo’s restaurant has been in operation for a week. Only half of the tables are filled at dinnertime. The revenue is barely enough to cover the expenses of the house rent and employee wages, he said.

However, he said his business is able to survive because of the government’s bailout policies. For example, the approval of deferred payment of social insurance premiums for his employees alone can save him 80,000 yuan (about 11,250 US dollars) a month. “The staff are willing to stay, as we are all confident in tiding over the difficulti­es together,” he said. The local government­s at all levels have rolled out a slew of measures to shore up the catering business, including cutting taxes, reducing house rent as well as water and electricit­y fees.

The government­s in Liaoning, Shandong, Jiangsu and Zhejiang provinces have issued coupons with a value ranging from 10 million yuan to 100 million yuan to encourage people to spend on dining out. Before the production resumption, there were some consumer councils’ surveys showing that consumers had suppressed consumptio­n desire for dining out and shopping as well as going to movie theaters, gymnasiums and tourist spots after the epidemic crisis ends. “The so-called retaliator­y consumptio­n has not yet appeared in the catering industry, as people are still wary about the infection risk, but there will be a gradual recovery growth,” said Chen Heng, executive director of Hainan Hotel and Catering Industry Associatio­n in the southernmo­st Chinese province of Hainan.

(Xinhua)

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