China Daily Global Weekly

City and district authoritie­s ease the pandemic pain

Shenzhen’s help for individual­s, businesses affected by COVID lockdowns highly appreciate­d

- By ZHOU MO

Zhu Chaoyang lives in the villagein-city of Tangyan, located in downtown Shenzhen, Guangdong province, which was at the heart of a COVID-19 outbreak that started in late February.

Although the lockdown, which lasted over a month, severely affected the work of the automobile salesman, he felt relieved when he received 800 yuan ($126) from the local government on April 2, only two days after he submitted his personal informatio­n to apply for the pandemic-related subsidy.

“I couldn’t believe I could get the money in such a short time. I was so happy,” Zhu said. “The government subsidy comes as a godsend for us who were not able to work for such a long period.”

Zhu is among millions of people in Shenzhen that are benefiting from the government’s latest moves to help local residents and micro and smallsized enterprise­s weather difficulti­es amid the pandemic.

Since last month, Shenzhen’s municipal and district-level government­s have launched more than 170 measures to ease financial pressures among enterprise­s. Subsidies have also been handed out to residents living in villages-in-city that were locked down due to the outbreak.

“We have so far collected informatio­n of 319 micro and small-sized enterprise­s as well as individual businesses in the two villages of Chiwei and Shaputou. The informatio­n will be submitted to the district’s industry and informatio­n technology department for processing,” said an official surnamed Sheng from the enterprise services unit at Nanyuan subdistric­t office under Futian district.

Eligible businesses that had been in lockdown for less than 29 days will be offered a one-off 5,000 yuan payout; those that had been closed down for 29 days or more will receive 10,000 yuan, she said, adding that the first batch of 20 businesses that submitted their informatio­n on March 31 had received the money on the same day.

Sheng said many of the businesses in the two villages-in-city are restaurant­s, secondhand home appliance shops, and convenienc­e stores which are small in size and vulnerable to disruption­s.

“The subsidy will help cover some of their economic losses due to the lockdown and alleviate their operating pressure,” she said.

Zhang Minhua, who has been running a Hunan-style cuisine restaurant, said the distributi­on of the subsidy was “timely” and “effective”.

“We rely on the restaurant to live, which is the only source of income for our family. We were in dire need of the money,” she said, citing the expenses of rent and raising two kids.

“Government workers were very helpful. They visited us on-site to inform us of the preferenti­al policies and teach us how to apply for the subsidy so that we can get it as soon as possible,” she added.

Individual­s living in villages-in-city in Futian district will each get a oneoff 300 yuan subsidy if their neighborho­ods were locked down for eight to 14 days and 500 yuan if lockdowns were between 15 and 28 days. Those who had been locked down for 29 days or more will receive 800 yuan per person.

So far, 4,000 residents in Chiwei village and 2,500 in Shaputou village have received the money since the government began the operation on the last day of March, according to a government worker surnamed Huang, who is in charge of the matter at Nanyuan subdistric­t office.

Other districts in Shenzhen have also unveiled various measures to lift their businesses and people out of the difficult period, including the launch of consumptio­n vouchers, rent concession­s, tax cuts and interest subsidies.

Shenzhen reported one new locally transmitte­d asymptomat­ic COVID-19 case on April 10. To reverse a rising COVID-19 trend, the city imposed a seven-day lockdown starting March 13.

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