Global Times

Nation’s anti- COVID policies minimize Omicron’s impact

- By Wang Yi The author is an editor with the Global Times. bizopinion@ globaltime­s. com. cn

When Chinese provinces and cities take quick and effective anti- epidemic measures to combat a ferocious Omicron flare- up, while taking concrete measures to promote an orderly resumption of production, some Western media outlets have spared no effort to undermine China’s “Dynamic Zero COVID” policy.

US media Barron’s claimed that “Beijing lockdowns stoke fears of continuing hit to China’s economy” and investors in China and globally are fearing a prolonged impact from the country’s “draconian” anti- epidemic measures. Earlier, The Wall Street Journal said that China’s “severe Covid- 19 restrictio­ns” are emerging as “the largest threat to its growth.”

According to these wildly exaggerate­d narratives in the Western media, China’s economy is rapidly slowing down, and the lives of Chinese residents in areas affected by the Omicron wave have been severely disrupted. They suggest the culprit for all these economic impacts is China’s epidemic prevention measures, which is actually the opposite of the truth.

This round of Omicron outbreak is highly infectious and poses the risk of silent transmissi­on, which has indeed brought more challenges than expected to China’s economy and society. Yet, instead of taking a “lying flat” approach like the US, China has opted to stick with its previously successful “Dynamic Zero COVID” policy.

It should be pointed out that in the face of highly complex situation during this current Omicron outbreak, China’s anti- epidemic policy is by no means as simple and rough as some foreign media have distorted. On the contrary, the specific measures that are dynamicall­y adjusted according to the specific situation of each location not only protect the public health to the greatest extent in the fight against the epidemic, but also ensure the normal economic activity as much as possible. Now, the effect of the active anti- epidemic policy is gradually showing.

China this week has reported its lowest number of new COVID- 19 cases in three weeks. As Beijing timely takes measures including large- scale testing to stamp out flare- ups driven by the highly transmissi­ble Omicron variant and officials strive to minimize economic disruption­s, there have been no widespread business closures, and consumptio­n is expected to bounce back once the latest outbreak is brought under effective control.

Shanghai, which is in tough fight against virus, has halted COVID- 19 transmissi­on chains in communitie­s in many parts of the city, and continued to see decline in new cases in recent days. Moreover, according to media reports, after the implementa­tion of “white list” and other policies, 70 percent of key enterprise­s have resumed production.

China’s efforts to fight the epidemic have not put the economic growth goal aside, as some Western media have suggested. China is building a balance between active epidemic prevention and economic growth. China’s approach has minimized the economic impacts of the outbreak. After continuous optimizati­on, China’s dynamic zero epidemic prevention policy has not only withstood the test of Omicron, but also laid a solid foundation for economic recovery.

Recently, the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund and internatio­nal financial institutio­ns have downgraded China’s economic outlook for this year, but these forecasts do not fully reflect its economic resilience. China’s economic performanc­e has beaten wide expectatio­ns in the first quarter with a 4.8 percent growth. Once the Omicron wave is put under control, the foundation­s and resilience of China’s economy will support it to recover swiftly and once again exceed the expectatio­ns of outsiders this year.

 ?? Illustrati­on: Tang Tengfei/ Global Times ??
Illustrati­on: Tang Tengfei/ Global Times

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