As China returns to work, it is hardly business as usual

SHENZHEN, China/BEIJING: The Chinese economy will sputter towards normal on Monday after the coronavirus outbreak forced an extended holiday, although numerous stores and factories will remain shut and many white collar employees will continue working from home.

The usually week-long Lunar New Year holiday was extended by 10 days in much of China amid mounting alarm over an epidemic that as of Saturday morning had killed 722 people.

Huge cities including Beijing and Shanghai seem like ghost towns, with shops and restaurants closed or empty, and as containment measures including transportation curbs are enforced in many parts of the country. Some cities are keeping schools closed and restrictions on movements remain.

Many employers in the southern technology hub of Shenzhen are taking precautions to prevent workers from returning in large crowds, asking those who have traveled from elsewhere to self-quarantine for up to 14 days.

Calls to the hotlines of an NGO serving migrant workers in nearby city of Guangzhou have multiplied in recent days.

“People are asking, ‘what if my factory hasn’t put enough safety measures in place? Will there be a notice suspending work again? How do I get in to work if roads are sealed off?’” said Ice Huang, a spokeswoman for the Inno Community Development Organization.

Apple Inc (AAPL.O) said on Friday its retail stores in China would stay closed, even as it worked toward opening its corporate offices and contact centers.

Apple supplier Foxconn (2317.TW) plans only to “gradually” restart its factories with a view to resuming full production in late February, a person with direct knowledge of the matter told Reuters.

While in Shanghai, the city government said Tesla’s (TSLA.O) factory would reopen on Monday.

The toll on China’s already-slowing economy has been heavy, with Goldman Sachs cutting its first quarter GDP target to 4% from 5.6% previously and saying an even deeper hit is possible.

“It’s certainly not going to be a return to normal next week,” said Julian Evans-Pritchard, senior China economist at Capital Economics in Singapore. “The longer this disruption continues the higher the risk it affects employment and the higher the risk of a much bigger hit on the economy,” he said.

TEMPERATURE CHECKS, HOME QUARANTINE

In Shenzhen, businesses looking to reopen were required to check the recent travel history of all staff and implement temperature checks and prevention measures such as providing masks. Similar guidelines were in place elsewhere.

Some businesses told Reuters that they were not sure when they would reopen.

“We’re still not sure we’ll be open on Monday,” Suki, who works in human resources for a Belgian-owned manufacturing company in Shenzhen and declined to give her surname.

“We applied online to open five days ago but inspectors only visited today,” she said on Friday.