Global Times

Shanghai to reopen as infections drop

City is picking up economic capacity with malls, supermarke­ts set to restart in phases

- By Xie Jun and Du Qiongfang

With supermarke­ts, shopping malls and convenienc­e stores in Shanghai scheduled to reopen from Monday, flights between Shanghai and some other cities to be resumed, and as companies like Tesla and SAIC Volkswagen resume production and even exports of their vehicles, the city with a population of about 25 million is picking up its economic capacity again.

The market resumption, coming after nearly two months of business suspension, shows the government’s determinat­ion to strike a balance between the epidemic control and the economic recovery.

Shanghai is set to restart business and services activities in phases from Monday, with shopping centers, supermarke­ts, pharmacies, wet markets, catering and hairdressi­ng services to resume offline operations in an orderly manner, Chen Tong, deputy mayor of Shanghai, announced at a press briefing on Sunday.

According to Chen, the number of commercial outlets in operation in the city has increased to 10,625 now from the lowest number of fewer than 1,400, with the daily number of delivery orders reaching 5 million.

A vendor surnamed Lin selling meat products at a grocery store in Minhang district told the Global Times on Sunday that the grocery store has obtained the permit as a supplier of daily necessitie­s and will reopen on Monday.

“I hope the epidemic can be contained and the lockdown be lifted as soon as possible since my fellow vendors and me have no sound sleep at the shabby store premises at all and we have to eat either instant noodles or foods shared by nearby residents, which is rather tough,” Lin said. He has been sleeping at the store for the past two months.

As the city releases the “pausing button” and expands the scope of business resumption, it particular­ly has an eye on helping companies involving trade businesses to restart operation. Gu Jun, director of Shanghai Municipal Commission of Commerce, said at the press conference that Shanghai has worked out a business resumption guidance for key foreign trade companies and has released two batches of “white lists” for 704 leading foreign trade companies, which cover retail, services, foreign company ▶ headquarte­rs and

port services.

Reopening in phases

“Pausing the “trade button” in Shanghai for too long will not only bring disruption to global supplies, as Shanghai is a leading global logistics center, but also poses the risk of supply chains moving out of China. If that happens, it definitely is much harder to get those industries back even after the coronaviru­s is under control,” Xi Junyang, a professor at the Shanghai University of Finance and Economics, told the Global Times on Sunday.

Companies are actively coordinati­ng with the government’s arrangemen­ts on work resumption.

South Korean cosmetic giant Amore Pacific, for example, told the Global Times via a written statement that the first batch of employees have gradually returned to the company’s factory in Shanghai’s Jiading district to resume work.

“The COVID won’t sway our confidence in developing in China in the long run,” said Mike Hwang, President of Amorepacif­ic China.

Tesla is also reportedly to export the second batch of vehicles amounting to about 4,000 to overseas markets, after it already shipped about 4,700 electric cars following work resumption on May 11, a report of kankanews. com noted on Sunday.

Apart from trade companies, many industries are gradually coming back to normal business after a standstill for some time.

Shanghai- based Spring Airlines and Juneyao Airlines will resume services from Monday amid gradual decline in the number of daily new positive infections in the city.

Juneyao Airlines told the Global Times that it would resume flights between Shanghai Pudong and Fujian’s Longyan starting from Monday, the company’s first domestic passenger flight starting from Shanghai since the city’s closed- loop management.

The manufactur­ing sector in Shanghai is speeding up the pace of work resumption. In general, nearly 50 percent of Shanghai’s 9,000 above- scale industrial companies had resumed work, a local government official said on Friday.

Turning point

The quickened pace to guide Shanghai’s business activities back to normal operation is a reflection of the government’s eagerness to prevent domestic economic growth from slowing further, as the Chinese financial and logistics hub’s economic suspension has dragged down growth in the Yangtze River Delta, and is expected to exert some impact on China’s general economic growth as well.

“As Shanghai and the Yangtze River Delta are important production bases in China, economic standstill in those regions will be a big drag on China’s industrial and production performanc­e,” Cong Yi, a professor at the Tianjin University of Finance and Economics, told the Global Times on Sunday.

This has already shown up in recent economic statistics. For example, many cities in East China’s

Jiangsu and Zhejiang Provinces saw double- digital year- on- year drops in government revenue in April, including Suzhou, Hangzhou and Ningbo.

China’s export growth in April, which stood at 3.9 percent, was also lower than market expectatio­ns.

Therefore, the resumption of economic activities in Shanghai could bring about a turning point in the recent economic downward trend, as China’s economy is expected to rebound in late- May or June, experts said.

“Shanghai’s work resumption is a signal that the government is taking steps to offset the impact of the COVID- 19 situation on the second quarter economy,” Cong said, forecastin­g that second- quarter GDP growth should be around 4 percent, compared with 4.8 percent in the first quarter.

CITIC Futures predicted in a report released on April 30 that the second quarter GDP would increase 4.2 percent year- on- year.

Economists proposed a number of suggestion­s at the 2022 Tsinghua PBCSF Chief Economists Forum held in Beijing on Saturday. Yu Yongding, a scholar of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, said that China should consider expansiona­ry fiscal and monetary policies to stimulate domestic demand and spur imports, as well as increase imports of commoditie­s and strategic goods.

Guan Tao, global chief economist at BOC Internatio­nal, also said that with China’s large economic size, ample policy space and leeway, China should have the confidence, capability and conditions to cope with the current challenges.

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