© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: People walk on a street during morning rush hour in Wuchang District, after the government gradually eased restrictions to control the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), in Wuhan, Hubei Province, China, December 9, 2022. Reuters/Martin Pollard
By Martin Quinn Pollard
WUHAN, China (Reuters) – Infection has brought a fresh impetus to many small businesses in the central Chinese city of Wuhan, despite the easing of tougher restrictions last week.
With the sick and those who fear infection staying at home, hopes for brighter prospects after the lockdowns end are evaporating, at least for the time being, with few signs of the government stepping in to help.
“I can’t go on with it,” said Zhou Zhongping, 60, looking around his empty restaurant, serving regional cuisine in the city of 11 million, where the COVID-19 pandemic began three years ago.
“I lose money every day, a thousand yuan a day.”
The challenge for small businessmen like Zhu highlights how Beijing’s shift away from strict COVID policies, with the promise of an economic recovery next year, is instead likely to curb growth over the next few months as infections surge.
And, he added, working on a busy food street, where most restaurants were closed or empty last Saturday, is the worst it has been since Zhu first opened its doors to customers 30 years ago.
He said the outlook after the “no COVID” situation eases, following unprecedented protests, is more bleak than during the city’s 76-day lockdown in 2020, because this year his landlord is not offering a discount on his rent.
Rent subsidies and consumer vouchers were among the measures taken by local authorities to support businesses at the time, but there are few such signs this year.
“This street is considered a landmark in Wuhan,” Zhou added. “Now there is no one around. You can imagine other locations are worse.”
The only line was several hundred meters outside a pharmacy, where people waited to stock up on medicine to treat COVID symptoms.
“My business is struggling to stay afloat,” said the owner of a bag shop on nearby Hancheng Street, home to one of China’s largest clothing wholesale markets and the site of a major anti-lockdown protest last month.
“We have to see what happens next year…” added Liang, 48, and his surname. “We’ll have to see what the turnout will be like. If things stay the same next year, the sellers will have to leave.”
Many other shopkeepers told Reuters simply that they had no work or “no work”.
The scarcity of customers is having a negative impact on other industries, hurting growth even further as China struggles with an economic downturn this year.
“There are not many new stores opening and not many new businesses starting, so our business can’t start and we are facing layoffs,” said Huang, an advertising company owner who asked to be named only.
People don’t have much money anymore, said a Wuhan taxi driver, whose surname is Sun, adding that the subsidies made the 2020 lockdown more manageable than this year’s measures.
“With all these lockdowns, I haven’t earned anything for weeks,” he said. “Now, it’s a little better, but I can only make enough to pay the company’s monthly cab rental fee.”
Surveys showed factory activity contracted in November amid widespread COVID restrictions, while exports and imports fell at their sharpest pace in at least two-and-a-half years, adding pressure to the slowing economy.
Qiu Chen, a professor of finance at the University of Hong Kong, said he feels the authorities hope the infection will generate sufficient immunity within three or four months, allowing small and medium-sized businesses to rebound.
“Of course, during this process, the country will suffer from shock therapy,” he added.
I hope they can handle the shock.”