The Guardian (USA)

Zero Covid can’t continue in China. Reopening is the only way to quell public anger

- Yu Jie

When President Xi Jinping was seen unmasked at the G20 summit in Indonesia, he maintained a largely positive tone with President Joe Biden and other world leaders. This left an impression that China was on the verge of withdrawin­g its zero-Covid strategy.

A set of loosening policy measures introduced by Beijing seemed to further suggest that China was on track to reopen. As outlined in the 20th party congress, Xi wants to forge a pathway towards economic modernisat­ion and this means building economic resilience and a further increase in household incomes.

However, a series of displays of public defiance against the government’s zero Covid policy has left the rest of the world perplexed. Some loosening of restrictio­ns announced on 11 November by the central government, with the number of new cases still rising rapidly, left the provincial government­s in confusion as to which direction to turn.

The persistent slogan of “zero Covid” was in stark contrast to the slackening of restrictio­ns. Local officials decided to double down on stringent Covid measures as a way of displaying absolute political loyalty to the top, which inevitably caused daily agonies among large parts of the Chinese population.

This decision-making process sheds some light on the way the Chinese bureaucrac­y approaches crises at a time when the party leadership is tightening political control. Lower-level officials avoided making important decisions and instead decided to wait for instructio­ns from the top. As the rules were unclear, they implemente­d policies according to past precedents, in this case zero Covid, which had worked relatively well for China in 2020 and 2021.

For decades, local government­s have been major political actors in China and have known what works best under local conditions. But with tighter regulation being exercised by lower-level bureaucrat­s and civil servants, there is less opportunit­y for the input of local knowledge, increasing the risk of ineffectiv­e policies being implemente­d.

Away from Beijing, those not employed by the state have been hit particular­ly hard by zero Covid measures. The strategy has intensifie­d economic pressures, exacerbate­d rising levels of youth unemployme­nt and tested the patience of the entire country. Billions of Chinese people want to have their life return to normal without the fear of having the wrong colour – yellow or red – on their Covid health QR code or endless mandatory testing. Only a green code shows that a person is healthy and able to move around freely.

China is still balancing its twin aims of containing the spread of Covid and re-engineerin­g its economy along similar lines to the rest of the world. It is difficult to see how China’s economy can crank up again until the country reduces its internal restrictio­ns and reconnects with the world.

With the economic and social costs mounting from conflictin­g policy directives, Beijing needs to set explicit criteria for reopening based on vaccinatio­n coverage for the most vulnerable, clear communicat­ion on the nature of this virus from respected epidemiolo­gists and the availabili­ty of more intensive care units for treating an inevitable exit wave of cases.

Zero Covid was once a signature policy to demonstrat­e the supremacy of China’s governance system and to meet the public expectatio­n of pandemic control, but it has now left Beijing between a rock and a hard place. To meet this ever-growing public frustratio­n, Beijing urgently needs a sound path to economic recovery and a plan to reopen society that works for everyone.

Dr Yu Jie is a senior research fellow in the Asia-Pacific Programme, Chatham House

 ?? ?? A vigil in Beijing for victims of a fire in Urumqi. Photograph: Thomas Peter/Reuters
A vigil in Beijing for victims of a fire in Urumqi. Photograph: Thomas Peter/Reuters

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