South China Morning Post

SHENZHEN’S WORKSHOPS KEEP RUNNING DESPITE RESTRICTIO­NS

Preferenti­al treatment of industrial enterprise­s under Covid-19 control policy copied across country

- Iris Deng iris.deng@scmp.com

Many factories in the technology hub of Shenzhen are running at or near full capacity while adhering to rigid “dynamic zero” Covid-19 policy, showing how the country’s vast manufactur­ing machine keeps humming under the world’s strictest quarantine regime.

At BST Computer Accessory, a smartphone charging cable manufactur­er in the city’s industrial district of Guangming, all 300 of its workers were kept busy on an early May workday. It was just a few weeks after a citywide lockdown was imposed in March to battle a fresh outbreak amid a much larger surge just across the border in Hong Kong.

Shenzhen’s lockdown forced the factory to suspend operations for five days, but it was just a blip in the factory’s production, according to owner Hu Jun.

Hu had applied to resume production under a “closed-loop” system, which keeps workers on site in the event of an extended lockdown, but it was lifted on the fifth day before a government review of the factory’s preparedne­ss was completed.

“We needed to follow the government’s order, but fortunatel­y we were able to recover quite soon,” Hu said.

While the factory has posted signs reminding workers to wear masks, some ignore the recommenda­tion. Hu said one reason enforcemen­t had not been strict was because medical staff conducted nucleic acid testing for workers in the industrial estate every two days.

“The tests are organised by the government and free of charge,” he said.

Activity in the industrial estate suggests that nearby businesses share BST’s relative success in keeping production uninterrup­ted. A steady stream of cars and trucks can be seen entering and leaving compounds in the area, with some of the number plates showing they have travelled from other provinces.

Shenzhen’s approach of giving preferenti­al treatment to industrial enterprise­s in its Covid-19 control policies has been widely copied across China, including Shanghai, which remains under strict lockdown as it faces the worst outbreak in the country.

While most Shanghai residents are kept at home and few stores are open, the local government in April picked 666 enterprise­s, including Tesla, to resume production. It later approved another 1,188 factories to restart production.

With all the additional requiremen­ts for testing and tracking, local authoritie­s and factories like BST have kept the world’s second largest economy from grinding to a complete halt. The impact of China’s dynamic zero policy on industrial production is far smaller than on services and domestic consumptio­n.

This is partly why Beijing is doubling down on the policy. It has so far helped the government walk a fine line, keeping economic activity at an acceptable level while avoiding widespread large outbreaks the healthcare system may be ill-equipped to handle.

Hu said his factory would be able to run in closed-loop mode if there was another outbreak. At least 200 workers could sleep in the industrial estate’s dormitory area, he said.

Many factories in Shenzhen are in walled-off compounds in industrial areas. Larger players like Foxconn Technology Group, the Taiwanese electronic­s giant that assembles iPhones, have their own campuses that make it even quicker to implement a closed-loop system.

The Foxconn factories in Longhua and Guanlan districts suspended operations for just a few days this year during the citywide lockdown. They had been operating normally and “strictly following the anti-pandemic requiremen­ts of the government”, a Foxconn representa­tive said.

After the lockdown was lifted, the city of 17 million adopted a new approach to mandatory testing. Shenzhen requires residents to present negative test results within 72 hours of taking subway trains or entering factory compounds or other public venues.

Authoritie­s have installed thousands of stands across the city to make testing free and easily accessible. This model, which has embedded nucleic acid testing into everyday urban life, was later adopted by other major cities such as Hangzhou and Beijing as an alternativ­e to rigid lockdowns.

Last week, Shenzhen reported first-quarter gross domestic product growth of 2 per cent to reach 706.5 billion yuan (HK$831.7 billion). This was well below national GDP growth of 4.8 per cent for the quarter. Shenzhen is targeting 6 per cent growth for the year.

A cable coating factory in Guangming district has adopted even stricter antivirus measures. The general manager of the company, who declined to be named because he was not authorised to talk to news media, reminds visitors to keep their masks on during factory tours and refuses to shake hands. All vehicles must register at the gate and gain approval to enter.

He said he was not taking any chances because just one positive case in the compound could disrupt production. His factory was also closed during the week-long lockdown in March and, as in Hu’s case, restrictio­ns were lifted before his applicatio­n to operate a closed-loop system was approved.

“We will be able to go straight into closed-loop mode should there be another lockdown in the future,” the manager said.

His office decor proved he had begun to prepare: a bunk bed, covered by a mosquito net, sat near his desk and a wooden tea table.

 ?? Photo: Iris Deng ?? BST Computer Accessory’s factory is working at full capacity. Its owner called an earlier five-day suspension just a “blip”.
Photo: Iris Deng BST Computer Accessory’s factory is working at full capacity. Its owner called an earlier five-day suspension just a “blip”.

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