Zero-Covid pivot puts Shanghai’s small businesses on emotional roller-coaster as curbs loosened, infections surge
- Beijing’s efforts to soften its anti-pandemic approach work like a double-edged sword for small businesses as infections temper optimism
- Failure to tackle the pandemic in the coming months can deliver a fatal blow to businesses, CEO of a printing material firm says
Some owners in China’s main commercial hub believe they will soon be able to restore manufacturing and commercial activities to pre-lockdown levels in 2019, while others fear customers will shun public venues like eateries and malls in the coming months.
“It is a do-or-die moment for us,” said Han Haifeng, chief executive of Shanghai New Era Printing, which currently produces 60 per cent of its normal annual output of packaging materials. “We will have to cut jobs further, if the country cannot overcome the pandemic in the next one or two months.”
The State Council last week issued more guidelines to soften its anti-pandemic approach, scrapping daily mass testing, health codes and centralised quarantine requirements for most cases. Investors have helped lift the value of local stocks by US$11 billion since an earlier directive on November 11 fuelled so-called reopening bets.