Wuhan Reopens - podcast episode cover

Wuhan Reopens

Apr 24, 202024 min
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Episode description

The first coronavirus epicenter is coming back to life, but not as anyone knew it.

Hosts: Carol Massar and Jason Kelly. Producer: Doni Holloway.

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Transcript

Speaker 1

Hi. I'm Carol Masser and I'm Jason Kelly. This week's cover story. It's all about life in Wuhan post virus. Carol, It's an amazing read. It is an amazing read, Jason. It's been described as a letter from the future to describe life, as you said, after the coronavirus, and for that we do look to Wuhan. It's the city in China where it all began. It's now also taking its first steps towards normalcy. And what's interesting, Jason, they are

hesitant steps right as a city reopens. Some might say those steps are taking on a dystopian field with temperature checks, masks, social distancing, and eating divided and alone in company cafeterias. It's a story it's by Sharon Chen and Matthew Campbell that raises a lot of questions, some scary questions for those of us outside of Wuhan, thinking about what our lives maybe like as things returned to some semblance of normal. Check it out. Wuhan reopens, the city where it all

began takes its first hesitant steps toward normalcy. By Sharon Chen and Matthew Campbell with Claire Shay and Sarah Chen. Every work day at Lenovo's tablet and phone factory on the outskirts of Wuhan, Arriving employees report to a supervisor for the first of at least four temperature checks. The results are fed into a data collection system designed by staff.

Anyone above thirty seven point three degrees celsius is automatically flagged, triggering an investigation by an in house anti virus task force. Daily routines at the facility, which reopened on March after stopping for over two months because of the coronavirus pandemic that began in this central Chinese city, have been entirely

re engineered to minimize the risk of infection. Before returning to the site, staff members had to be tested both for the virus and for antibodies that indicate past illness, and they had to wait for their results in isolation at a dedicated dormitory. Once cleared, they returned to work to find the capacity of meeting rooms built for six reduces to three, and the formerly communal cafeteria tables partitioned off by vertical barriers covered in reminders to avoid conversation.

Signs everywhere indicate when areas were last disinfected, and robots are deployed wherever possible to transport supplies so as to reduce the number of people moving from place to place. Elevators, too, are an artifact of the before times. Everyone now has to take the stairs, keeping their distance from others all the way. Presiding over all these measures, one Sunday in mid April was Chi Yeah, head of Wuhan operations for

Beijing based Lenovo Group. Chi, who's forty eight with closely cropped hair and a sturdy frame, had been visiting his hometown of Tianjin in China's north when the government sealed off Wuhan from the rest of the country on January. It had taken him until February ninth to get home, and he was only able to make it by buying a train ticket to chang Shah further down the line and begging the crew to let him get off in Wuhan.

His up was now to bring the factory slowly back to life, while emphasizing vigilance compared with keeping the virus out of the plant, He said, how much production we can deliver comes second. G is one of millions of people in Wuhan trying to figure out what economic and social life looks like after the worst pandemic in a century.

In some respects, they're in a decent position. The outbreak in Hubei Province peaked in mid February, and according to official statistics, there are now almost no new infections occurring, though other governments have cast out on China's figures, but scientists warned that the novel coronavirus is stealthy and robust, and a resurgence is still possible until there's a reliable vaccine.

How to balance that risk against the need to reignite an industrial hub of more than ten million people is a formidable dilemma one governments around the world will soon be facing. So far, Wuhan's answer has been to create a version of normal that would appear utterly alien to people in London, Milan, or New York, at least for

the moment. While daily routines have largely resumed, there remains significant restrictions on a huge range of activities, from funerals to hosting visitors at home, Bolstered by China's powerful surveillance state. Even the simplest interactions are mediated by a vast infrastructure of public and private monitoring intended to ensure that no

infection goes undetected for more than a few hours. But inasmuch as citizens can return to living as they did before January, it's not clear after what they've endured that they really want to Shopping malls and department stores are open again, but largely empty. The same is true of restaurants. People are ordering in instead. The subway is quiet, but autos are selling. If being stuck in traffic is annoying, at least it's socially distanced. Chief figures he's probably on

the right side of this economic rebalancing. Tablets are in high demand as schools around the world switched to remote learning, and companies contemplating a work from home future aren't likely to skimp on technology budgets. Since restarting operations, he's hired more than one thousand workers, bringing the on site total above ten thousand, and production lines are running at full capacity.

He said he was painfully aware, however, of how quickly work would stop if even one employee contracted the virus. In my meetings with my staff, I always tell them no loosening up, no loosening up. We can't allow any accidents. More than eight percent of China's almost eighty four thousand confirmed cases of COVID nineteen and more than of the roughly confirmed deaths have been in Hubei, of which Wuhan

is the capital and largest city. Controlling the outbreak there after a series of mistakes by President Shi Jimping's government, which initially downplayed the risk of human to human transmission and failed to prevent widespread infection of medical personnel, required

a herculean effort. More than forty thousand doctors and other medical staff were dispatched from other regions to reinforce existing facilities and operate field hospitals built in the space of ten days, and car and electronics companies were pressed into making protective gear. People suspected of having the disease were required to move into dormitories and hotels repurposed as isolation facilities, and allowed to go home only after they'd been declared

infection free. Who Bay was the last region of China to resume daily life, with curbs on movement lifted progressively from late March until April eight, more than three months after the epidemic began. The government presented the Moment as a decisive victory, part of a comprehensive effort to rewrite the narrative of the virus as a Communist party triumph

in contrast to its catastrophic spread in Western democracies. Late on the night of April seven, crowds began arriving at wu Chang station, one of three large railway hubs in Wuhan. The first outbound train in weeks to guang Jo was scheduled to leave at twelve fifty a m, followed by a dense schedule of departures to many of China's major cities. Wuhan's position at the junction of several major rail and road routes, along with its industrial heft, has invited frequent

comparisons to Chicago. Police in black uniforms and medical masks seemed to be everywhere. Scan your code, they shouted at travelers approaching the departure gates. The public private health code system that China developed to manage COVID nineteen, hosted on the Alley pay and we chat apps but deeply linked with the government, assigns one of three viral risk statuses, red, yellow, or green to every citizen. It's a powerful tool with

clear potential for abuse. A green QR code, which denotes a low risk of having the virus, is the general default, while coming into contact with an infected person can trigger a yellow code, and a mandatory quarantine red is for a likely or confirmed case. Travel between cities requires a green code, and while Tung Shao twenty two had hers and felt fine, she was nervous about making her train.

There's still a chance I'll be stopped if my temperature is too high, she said as she neared the departure z own. Before going to the station, Sung had checked repeatedly for a fever, worried that being even a little bit warm would prevent her from getting to guang Jo, where she works as a teacher. I haven't seen my cat in almost three months, she said. She didn't have to worry. Her temperature scan was normal, and she was

soon able to board her train south. Another passenger leaving on the first day, Chin Chin on twenty six, had been stranded since the lockdown began. He'd been on vacation in Wuhan when Hubei was cut off, and no amount of pleading with officials could get him on a train out. By mid February. He was living off online loans. I was eating instant noodles for every meal, he said. He ended up getting a bed in an austere dormitory constructed

by the local government for people who couldn't leave. He also found work doing odd jobs at leshan Shan Hospital, one of the temporary infirmaries built to handle coronavirus patients. He'd lost his regular job at a company in Jangsu Province that makes robots because he couldn't get back, and was now headed to Guangdong to look for another one and see his family. He hadn't told his parents where he'd been all this time. As far as they knew he was away working, I will not tell them I

was in Wuhan, Chin said. When dawn broke, Wuhan came cautiously back to life. Hairdressers were some of the first businesses to fill up. The roads were noticeably busier, and workers flowed back into office towers in the city center. But these new freedoms felt distinctly provisional. At the entrance to every mall or public building, guards stood sentry with temperature scanners, ready to turn away anyone whose reading was

too high. Green codes required even to ride the subway have become the city's most precious possession, and one that's easy to lose is Merely visiting a building around the same time as a person later found to be infected can turn them yellow. And apartment compounds still reserve the right to bar residents from leaving if cases are reported there,

as they did during the lockdown. Even in the first city to confront the virus, following a containment effort as intense as any in the history of public health, the danger remains acute. Asymptomatic cases and imported cases are still risks. Wang Xinghuan, the president of one of the city's major hospitals and of the LEA shan Shan Facility, told reporters at a press conference before the latter's closing, and many

residents are still susceptible. Wang's hospital gave antibody tests to all thirty six hundred of its staff, and fewer than three percent came back positive, a result that shows there's no herd immunity in Wuhan. There's only one way to durably protect the population, he said, a vaccine. Wuhan's businesses are nevertheless hoping for a safe but speedy return to conspicu was consumption. In the days before the city fully reopened for business, the sales team at a local Audi

dealership gathered for their daily meeting. The twenty or so salespeople were all dressed in dark suits and face masks, standing well over a meter apart in neat columns as a manager briefed them on the day's plans. A colleague made his way through the group, spraying everyone with disinfectant

as they spun around to ensure full coverage. Customers may not be kind enough to tell you if they don't feel well, so try not to bring them into the store, the manager said, just talk to them at the entrance if possible. After reopening on March twenty three, the dealership had been selling about seven cars per day, on pace

with last year, despite all the restrictions. Most were relatively low end vehicles, such as the A three, which retails for about two thousand u n Twenty eight thousand dollars, the kind of car often bought by families to complement a bigger, fancier model. People are not willing to take public transport and on, said the marketing director, who asked to be identified by only his surname Pan, and they don't dare commute by de D, the ubiquitous ride hailing app.

The focus now, Pan said, was on following up with people who had expressed interest in an Audi in the past but hadn't bought one. They might be ready to bite. The dealership was looking to expand its current staff of about one fifty and employees would soon receive the pay they'd missed during the lockdown. Another salesperson added, it's like a boom for many other businesses in Wuhan, though it's

anything but. Benny Shao is director of international operations at Wuhan Boyan Paper and Plastic, which produces the kind of unremarkable but essential goods that still form the backbone of Chinese industry. In his case, their disposable cups, which Buoyan sells to US airlines and Japanese retailers, among other clients.

Shall works from an office inside a dilapidated residential compound, and wearing a battered gray blazer over a green button down, he didn't quite look the part of an international dealmaker, but he beamed with pride as he showed off a glass cabinet in his office stuffed with examples of his craft, from thin plastic vessels for economy class soda to a sturdy tumbler he'd tried unsuccessfully to sell the Starbucks. The first months of the pandemic were challenging for Shaw, as

they were for everyone in Wuhan. His wife, now retired, spent her career as a doctor at Chehe Hospital, one of the first to report cases of what was later identified as the coronavirus, and she'd begun hearing from colleagues in mid January about the impending crisis. Sick residents were lining up outside Scheh at ten pm in the freezing cold, many of them older people who could barely make it.

Shall recalled patients were really desperately looking for help. He and his wife had stocked up on food before the lockdown began, but three weeks in they started to run out. Unlike in Europe and the U S, Wuhan's contained measures made it difficult for people to leave their buildings even to buy groceries, forcing them to rely on delivery apps, government drop offs, and neighbors who wrangled permission to go out.

At one point, Chao had to spend twenty six u n almost four dollars for a single cabbage, more than triple the usual price. Some of the vegetables provided by local officials were barely edible. He returned in late March to a company in severe trouble. Orders in the first half of the year were headed for a fifty percent drop, with demand from food deliveries failing to offset the calamitous

decline in air travel. The government had made some financial help available, but chall wasn't sure he'd be able to avoid layoffs back in January and February. I was expecting things to come back to normal in April, he said. Instead, I was just calling the bank this morning to tell them that I can't repay the interest on our loan. For a country that's experienced an essentially uninterrupted boom throughout the living memory of anyone younger than fifty, broad based

economic pain is deeply unfamiliar. The Chinese economy shrank six point eight percent in the first quarter of the year, and the International Monetary Fund estimates it will grow just one point two percent in twenty twenty, the slowest pace of expansion since nineteen seventy six. Urban unemployment a widely scrutinized indicator of overall joblessness rose to a record six point two percent in February, before pulling back slightly in March.

And it's not clear what China's business model will look like in a world where Europe, the U S, and other key markets for its goods are flirting with a depression. Chao is sixty four, part of a Chinese generation that had seen more than its share of history even before the coronavirus emerged. But he struggled to recall anything in his experience that was more dramatic, save perhaps the famine of the Great Leap Forward when he was a young child.

This is the biggest crisis of my lifetime, he said. The entrance to Wuhan's Byan dan Shan Cemetery is marked by an impressive stone gate with the pagoda style roof and a frieze of a ferocious looking dragon, but in recent weeks it's been partly hidden behind a series of bright yellow crowd control barriers, surrounded by temporary metal fencing and watched carefully by police. Almost no one is permitted to enter until April, and even then access is likely

to be strictly controlled. Officially, no patients in Wuhan are still dying from COVID nineteen, but the treatment of those who did pass away remains an extremely sensitive subject. On Tomb Sweeping Day in early April, when Chinese families traditionally gather to pay respects to their ancestors, Wuhan's cemeteries were

kept closed. Funerals have been banned until at least the end of the month, and family members of the dead have reported pressure from government officials to mourn quickly and quietly. According to the government, these measures are purely a matter of public health because family gatherings are a potential vector for infection, but the restrictions also help Beijing avoid having funerals come a venue for people to vent anger about how the epidemic was handled, or to ask uncomfortable questions

about subjects such as China's true death toll. Whatever the reasons for maintaining the band, some mental health providers in Wuhan have expressed fears that the inability to properly mourn loved ones will have deep and enduring psychological consequences. The city's residents were the first to undergo the unprecedented social shutdown that's been repeated around the world, and it seems certain to mark many of them for a long time,

especially if it's compounded by a prolonged economic slump. Yeao John is among those struggling to move on the petit. Fifty year old is the founder and general manager of Wuhan Well Held Photoelectric, a manufacturer of welding helmets and protective masks that exports to France, Germany and the US. She came back to work on March thirteenth after waiting through approvals from four layers of government, including her local neighborhood committee, which took fifteen days to assess well hells

of city to prevent infections. We can't afford to have a single one, Yow said in an interview at her factory. Every day the production line can run is crucial. Well Hell was trying to catch up on orders that hadn't been able to complete in the first few months of the year. Even as Yew wasn't sure her customers in lockdown overseas markets would be able to take the deliveries, she had no idea when more business would come in given what's happening to the global economy. Despite the uncertainties.

She was trying to focus on work rather than what the city had just gone through. I can't see news about medical workers without crying, Yow said, choking back tears and rubbing a jade key chain attached to her phone. She was having trouble sleeping as she turned over the stories of doctors and nurses who had succumbed to COVID nineteen again and again in her head. I don't know these people, but if someone tells me what happened to them,

it's devastating. These deaths aren't just numbers or strange names to me, their vivid lives. She leave that many of her neighbors and colleagues were experiencing similar emotions but might not be willing or able to talk about them. Many other people are traumatized but can't recognize the problem or express their feelings. She said. The pandemic was causing Yao to rethink her life. She spent almost half of last

year on the road, often visiting clients overseas. Now, she said she wanted to spend much more time at home, keeping her family close. Her son was supposed to return to Australia for university in February, but he was unable to get there. For obvious reasons. Yow didn't want him to go back. Even after seemingly world shattering events, human

behavior has a way of reverting to the mean. In the weeks after September eleven, commentators predicted the end of globalization, of the skyscraper of irony, which all needless to say, persisted. Within a couple of years of the global financial crisis, banks and homebuyers were back to arranging risky mortgages, and the very wealthy we're back to and then well beyond pre two thousand eight levels of excess. It's reasonable to

think this time will be different. Hardly anyone alive today has endured a pandemic this severe, and the basic problem it's created that anyone, whether friend, family, or stranger, might be a vector for lethal infection is uniquely corrosive to the daily interactions that keep countries and economies going. An effective vaccine could be at least a year off, and given what the world has learned about how quickly a novel pathogen can shut everything down, even that might not

return things to the way they were. Wuhan was the first place to traverse both sides of the COVID nineteen curve and how it changes or doesn't in the diseases aftermath will say a lot to the rest of us. Many of the city's methods won't be universally applicable. Few other governments could assemble the all seeing anti viral surveillance China is trying to put in place, even if they wanted to. Fewer still probably have populations that would tolerate it.

But whatever the tactics, the key lesson of Wuhan could be that the price of beating the virus is never ending vigilance and a reordering of priorities that will be hard for many to accept. At a Starbucks in one of Wuhan's fancier shopping districts, ma Ren Wren, a thirty two year old entrepreneur who runs a small marketing agency, talked about how he was sorting out these questions for himself. The store was open, but only serving drinks to go,

with customers permitted to sit at outdoor tables. Security guards were keeping a close eye on things, interrupting conversations to tell patrons to keep their masks on in between SIPs and not sit too close together. Ma who was wearing fashionably oversized glasses, a black baseball cap, and of course, a light blue medical mask, had gone to stay at his parents apartment on Januar, intending to help take care of them, but soon he began to suspe act that he might be sick. It was a time of greatly

heightened emotion. No one knew the true fatality rate, and people in Wuhan were seeing reports on social media of appalling conditions in overwhelmed hospitals. I wrote my last words one night and decided to say farewell to my parents and go to the hospital alone. The next morning, Ma recalled, I knew that if I went, I couldn't necessarily expect to come back. He changed his mind at the last minute and eventually felt better, though the psychological effects lingered.

He began having panic attacks, his breath short and his heart pounding. After looking up the symptoms online, he concluded that he was experiencing post traumatic stress experiences like his MA thought would make many people more introspective and more focused on those closest to them. We will put aside more time for ourselves and our families, and for the other relationships that seemed truly worth holding onto during the crisis,

he said, misfortune tests the sincerity of friendship. Ma was now trying to get his company back on its feet. The government had recently sent him a tax rebate as part of its stimulus measures, but this would help only so much. Tourism has collapsed and few potential clients have much money for promotion. There's nothing to do but move on, he said. Ma had inevitably lowered his ambitions, and for the time being, he was all right with that. We

worked NonStop for years, chasing every opportunity, he said. Now everyone I know has one goal for it's to survive with assistance from Gau Yen, huts Fen and Jin Chen Hong. And that's this week's cover story by Sharon Chen and Matthew Campbell, all about life in Wuhan, Carol And To read more on this story and other stories in the magazine this week, go to Bloomberg dot com and also be sure to check out our daily Bloomberg Business Week radio show and podcast wherever you download your podcasts.

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