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No exit from ‘COVID-zero’: China struggles to find policy off-ramp

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ChinaтАЩs тАЬCOVID zeroтАЭ stance has put it at odds with the rest of the world and is exacting a mounting economic toll, but an exit strategy remains elusive as authorities worry about the ability of the health care system to cope and adapt to new strains.

Chinese medical experts believed last year that higher vaccination rates would eventually allow China to relax tough rules on movement and testing as infection rates slow elsewhere.

The emergence of the highly transmissible omicron variant dashed those hopes.

While some analysts have branded ChinaтАЩs approach as тАЬunsustainable,тАЭ many local health experts тАФ and some from overseas тАФ say the country has no choice but to continue given its less developed health system.

Some even argue ChinaтАЩs economy could even emerge stronger than ever if it keeps omicron at bay.

тАЬFor a large country with a population of 1.4 billion, it must be said that the cost effectiveness of our countryтАЩs prevention and control has been extremely high,тАЭ said Liang Wannian, head of the expert epidemic prevention group at ChinaтАЩs National Health Commission, at a Saturday briefing.

Kristalina Georgieva, managing director of the International Monetary Fund, called on China last week to тАЬreassessтАЭ its approach, saying it had now become a тАЬburdenтАЭ on both the Chinese and global economies.

But China is concerned the cost of lowering its defenses could prove even higher, especially with a health care system that has lagged its broader development.

тАЬWith a large population and high density the government is rightly concerned about impacts for the spread of the virus,тАЭ said Jaya Dantas, professor of international health at the Curtin School of Population Health in Perth, Australia.

China had 4.7 million registered nurses at the end of 2020, or 3.35 per 1,000 people, official data showed. The United States has around 3 million тАФ around 9 per 1,000.

China is also wary of the risk of new variants, especially as it refuses to import foreign vaccines. Studies suggest ChinaтАЩs vaccines are less effective against omicron and it has not yet rolled out its own mRNA version.

China is wary of the risk of new variants, especially as it refuses to import foreign vaccines. | REUTERS

Wu Zunyou, chief epidemiologist at the Chinese Center For Disease Control and Prevention, warned the тАЬinsidiousтАЭ omicron variant could still lead to a rise in the absolute number of deaths even if it was proven to be less deadly, and China must remain patient.

тАЬChinaтАЩs medical capacity and standards are not as good as Britain or the United States, but the results of ChinaтАЩs coronavirus prevention and control are far, far superior,тАЭ he said in a weekend interview with the Beijing News.

тАШPremature optimismтАЩ

China has stepped up its health warnings, urging citizens to ignore claims that omicron is no more serious than the flu and to stay vigilant.

On Wednesday, the Global Times, published by the official PeopleтАЩs Daily, also lashed out at overseas media for тАЬmockingтАЭ ChinaтАЩs policies, saying they saved lives.

Foreign criticism was тАЬbased on unfounded or premature optimism regarding the end of the pandemic,тАЭ it added.

Experts in China and overseas have also cast doubt on the hope that Omicron represents the final stage of the pandemic.

тАЬSARS-CoV-2 will not magically turn into a malaria-like endemic infection where levels stay constant for long periods,тАЭ said Raina MacIntyre, head of the Biosecurity Research Program at the University of New South WalesтАЩ Kirby Institute.

тАЬIt will keep causing epidemic waves, driven by waning vaccine immunity, new variants that escape vaccine protection, unvaccinated pockets, births and migration,тАЭ she said.

Endgame

ChinaтАЩs economy is expected to slow as a result of COVID-19 related supply disruptions, while lockdowns to douse domestic outbreaks weigh on travel and consumption.

Hong KongтАЩs тАЬCOVID zeroтАЭ approach has put the Chinese-controlled city out of step with other global finance centers and is battering its economy.

Still, ChinaтАЩs economy has remained resilient, with GDP growth at 8.1% last year, far exceeding expectations.

MacIntyre of the Kirby Institute said it wasnтАЩt a тАЬbinary choiceтАЭ between opening up and remaining isolated, adding there was тАЬno need to surrender to the virus, as Australia is doing at the moment.тАЭ

China could still emerge from the crisis in the strongest position, especially if COVID-19 leads to widespread cognitive impairment, organ damage and other long-term conditions in other countries, she said.

тАЬIf China keeps the virus largely under control, their population will be fit and healthy into the future, while the United States and Europe will be groaning under an unprecedented burden of chronic disease.тАЭ

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