Global test of governance is on
By Chen Qingqing and Zhao Juecheng
With more European countries and US states planning to
reopen the economy as the coronavirus pandemic has taken a heavy toll on their
economies, the world is now entering a global test of governance in which China
is now a leader in work resumption. However, Chinese experiences have not been
taken by the West, which adopts more aggressive policies, which mean more risks
and could lead the world to a more dangerous place.
For China, consolidating the phased results of epidemic
control and accelerating business resumption is a daunting task, as the
reopening criteria is much stricter in China compared to that in the West. This
will be a competition that China can't lose, analysts said.
China had paid a heavy social and economic price in the past
three months in its fight against COVID-19. Multiple systematic advantages,
including top-down effective governance and ability to mobilize social
resources, have helped the country get through the most difficult time and
gradually back to normalcy. China was the first to reopen society as the
pandemic continues globally and set the example for other nations, but
political and ideological bias, intensified by a US-led public opinion war
against China, would hinder Western nations from taking Chinese experiences as
reference in cautiously resuming business activities amid a resurgence of
sporadic cases, analysts said.
Nevertheless, China is steadily moving forward and will be
the ultimate winner of this test, and such collective confidence of winning
this battle stems from the actual strengths and fundamentals of Chinese
society.
‘Decision must be
made’
When some economic advisers of US President Donald Trump
highlighted the importance of resuming business in some states on Sunday, as
part of the White House’s major push to reopen the US economy, countries across
Europe are easing their lockdowns after about two months of travel restrictions
and a halt in commercial activities. British Prime Minister Boris Johnson urged
Britons to get back to work as he released a three-step roadmap to recovery
from the coronavirus, according to a speech aired on Sunday. And France has
taken its first steps out of confinement measures. Starting on May 11, shops in
the country will reopen and people would be allowed out of their homes, media
reported.
However, countries are reemerging from the COVID-19
cautiously as the pandemic continues to ravage communities, and the rate of
infection remains far too high for the wider opening of facilities like
schools. Germany and South Korea, among some countries, are facing resurgence
in infection cases, raising concerns over whether reopening society would
trigger a potential second or third wave of the outbreak before a vaccine is
available.
“The curves of infections in some European countries are
downward, and reopening their economies is the key issue for countries across
the world, as the world is likely to experience multiple waves of outbreaks in
the coming months,” Chen Xi, an assistant professor of public health at Yale
University, told the Global Times on Monday, May 11.
When infection cases do not stand at peak points and the
situation improves, policymakers could come up with more measures to support
the revival of economic activities, Chen said, noting that when they relax
restrictions, the infection rates might go up.
“Those measures should be flexible enough to be timely
adjusted,” he added.
Though some analysts said it is not the right time for
Western countries to lift restrictions, especially if they follow China’s work
resumption criteria - the strictest one in the world - they are not even close
to being ready for safely lifting the lockdowns. The policies of resuming
production in order to save economies is a decision that officials in Europe
and the US have to make, either for their own political careers or for upcoming
elections, a vivid example of how politics in the West serves interests of a
few elites, not well-being of the general public.
In comparison, the Chinese government has to make sure to
fulfill those two tasks - prevent infection and resume work - “which would be
more challenging,” Wang Yiwei, director of the Center for European Union
studies at the Renmin University of China in Beijing, told the Global Times on
Monday.
“While the recovery is gaining pace, China is likely to be
the only country in the world to see positive growth this year. Europe and the
US are rushing to reopen their societies to mitigate economic costs - a
decisive factor for capitalism - as governments serve vested interest groups,
not the people,” Wang said.
Faced with a record 20.5 million lost jobs in April -- the
largest single month of job losses since the government began tracking the data
in 1939 - according to CNN, US President Trump is expected to be more eager to
work on economic issues rather than health matters with the November election
looming. And the president’s economic team prevailed with a simple message:
Reopen the country as soon as possible, as the report said.
However, the poor performance of some Western countries in
fighting the pandemic has largely increased the risks of a resurgence of the
outbreak, and such rash and reckless policies could make the anti-virus battle
a protracted one, and those ambivalent policies are also heavily weighing on the
global recovery, posing a severe threat to the resumption of trade activities
and people-to-people exchanges, analysts said.
“The result of blindly reopening society and resuming
economic activity for political reasons would be unimaginable as it would not
only lead to an infection resurgence but also directly drag down the global
fight against the epidemic,” Diao Daming, an associate professor at the Renmin
University of China in Beijing, told the Global Times on Monday.
Some analysts also noted that the irresponsible decision of
some Western countries could hurt China in the post-pandemic recovery.
The IMF predicted in a report published in April that the
COVID-19 outbreak in most countries will peak in the second quarter and then
subside in the second half of the year, according to media reports. It also
expects global growth in 2021 to rebound based on that assumption. But the
recession could go deeper and last longer for lack of global coordination.
Winning the
competition
While more countries and regions join the ranks of those
resuming work and production, some analysts see it as a subtle competition to
explore the restart of the economy. The US and China are also believed to be
two countries affected most by this process. One is recording the highest
infection numbers and deaths, while the other is carefully striking a balance
between reopening its economy and fending off risks of a second wave, in
addition to an extra task: The mad and absurd blame game that Washington has
launched to undermine Beijing.
Wuhan, the capital city in Central China's Hubei Province
and the first to report a COVID-19 case in the country, reported six new
infection cases from Saturday to Sunday, ending the record that the province
had no new cases reported for 35 consecutive days. And the National Health
Commission (NHC) also said on Monday that in the past 14 days, seven provinces
and regions reported new domestically transmitted cases, raising the risk of
domestic clusters infection.
Authorities have been urged to identify the sources of
infection and transmission paths, properly track, conduct isolation treatment
and medical observation, and cut off the transmission chains, Mi Feng, the
spokesperson of NHC said, which are all part of rigorous prevention and control
measures China has been undertaking during the process of reopening society.
The battle has been a major test of the national governance
system and capacity and the Chinese society has been facing unprecedented
challenges, and has been urged to remain on high alert while further
accelerating work resumption in the coming months, according to the timeline.
More efforts are being made to create synergies in helping
enterprises regain growth momentum while coming up with more favorable
policies, as GDP growth in the first quarter of 2020 fell 6.8 percent, casting
a shadow on overall global recovery. While most people have resumed work in
China, life has not been the same as the overall recovery remains sluggish. The
services sector has recovered rather slowly in April despite the lift of the
lockdown, official data showed.
“This is our new normal,” Wang said, noting that the country
has to win this competition to reopen society while preventing the recurrence
of coronavirus cases.
Source:Global Times
China and US
Photo: Global Times
Global test of governance is on
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