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Tencent billionair­e Ma voices frustratio­n during China’s slowdown

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BEIJING: Tencent Holdings Ltd’s billionair­e co-founder Pony Ma shared a viral opinion piece on the economic costs of China’s strict Covid-zero measures, in a rare show of frustratio­n after his company struggled to grow during the first quarter.

Ma, usually reluctant to step into the spotlight, re-posted the column on his semi-public Wechat feed over the weekend.

From the long piece – which called out economists, academics and even average Internet users for dismissing the economic impact of Beijing’s harsh Covid measures – Ma extracted a short segment that accused Chinese Internet users of taking online service providers like Tencent for granted, saying netizens would rather see those businesses go bankrupt than conduct layoffs or let their staff work overtime.

“This is a really vivid descriptio­n,” the Tencent chief commented, according to a screengrab of a Wechat post that Bloomberg News verified with people in Ma’s Wechat circle.

He went on to quote the article: “But of course, if their meal orders come 10 minutes late, they would be cursing the delivery guys.”

Ma lifted that quote from a long opinion piece originally posted May 20 by history author Zhang Mingyang, entitled “Apart from Hu Xijin, no one else cares about the economy.”

That column referred to comments by Hu, the influentia­l former editor-in-chief of the nationalis­t tabloid Global Times.

Hu had previously suggested that the economic costs of containing the virus shouldn’t exceed the public-health benefits.

Ironically, the former newspaper editor had also commented on Zhang’s column after it was widely shared across the Chinese social media sphere – he called it sensationa­list clickbait.

China’s top leaders this month warned against questionin­g President Xi Jinping’s Covid-zero strategy. The Politburo’s supreme seven-member Standing Committee pledged to “fight against any speech that distorts, questions or rejects our country’s Covid-control policy,” state broadcaste­r China Central Television said.

Ma expressed no further judgment on the overall article himself. But the fact that the boss of China’s most valuable company shared the post made waves on the Chinese Internet.

Representa­tives for Tencent didn’t respond to requests for comment.

Tencent reported revenue growth all but evaporated in the three months ended March, walloped by sweeping government restrictio­ns as well as lockdowns across the country.

Executives warned that the current quarter could be even worse, as a quarantine covering much of Shanghai – China’s media and finance hub – hammered commercial payments and ad spending. — Bloomberg

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