The Mercury News

China slumps with `zero COVID' policy

Forecaster­s predict growth in current quarter will be low

- By Joe Mcdonald

BEIJING >> China's leaders are struggling to reverse an economic slump without giving up anti-virus tactics that shut down Shanghai and other cities, adding to challenges for President Xi Jinping as he tries to extend his time in power.

The ruling Communist Party has declared its “zeroCOVID” goal of preventing all infections takes priority over the economy. It is a decision with global implicatio­ns and comes despite warnings by experts including the head of the World Health Organizati­on that the goal might be unattainab­le.

“We don't think it is sustainabl­e,” the WHO directorge­neral, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s, said Tuesday.

China kept infection numbers low until early this year with a strategy that shut down cities, but entailed soaring costs. Beijing has switched to “dynamic clearing” that seals buildings or neighborho­ods if infections are found. But with thousands of new cases of the highly infectious omicron variant reported every day, that keeps most of Shanghai's 25 million people at home. Big parts of Beijing and other cities with tens of millions of people also are closed.

That is disrupting manufactur­ing and hampering the global flow of goods from smartphone­s to iron ore, increasing inflation risks in the United States and Europe. Consumer spending is weak, chilling Chinese demand for imports.

The ruling party is promising tax refunds and other aid to struggling entreprene­urs that Beijing counts on to create jobs and wealth. Premier Li Keqiang, the No. 2 leader, warned last week the employment situation is “complex and grim.”

On Wednesday, Li called during a Cabinet meeting for officials to focus spending and credit policies on preventing job losses, state TV and the official Xinhua News Agency reported. They gave no details of possible new initiative­s.

Despite promises of aid, forecaster­s say economic growth in the current quarter will fall as low as 1.8% over a year ago from an anemic 4.8% in the last quarter. Growth for the full year is

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