Surprise! Blogger.com is not blocked here in Hainan, though my blog is. This is illogical to me. I'm not sure what I have done to deserve such an honor. This also means that I can log in and post, but can't view my blog normally – quite ironic really.
Let me come to the main point quickly. I returned to
I've been throwing questions around since my arrival Friday (AA delayed my trip by one day, hardly a surprise). And this is the impression I got:
For urban people, the financial crisis is largely a Western issue. Life and business in Chinese cities are humming along as usual. If anything, the purchasing activity has only increased in the run up to the Spring Festival. A relative who works in the financial sector for a private company tells me that, since last fall, the government has changed its position from discouraging general consumption (in order to slow down the overheated economy) to encouraging domestic consumption (as the world braces for recession). Now, "to consume is to be patriotic," and people seem to be more than happy to follow this calling.
I was in
Here are a few photos I took Saturday in a huge supermarket named Da Ruenfa owned by a
After my sisters finally snatched their pork (to make dumplings for New Year eve), they went to the next counter to have it ground, a free service provided by the supermarket. However the staff working there simply ignored all such requests. Instead they were busy selling pre-packaged ground pork for 13 Yuan a pound, a 75% increase from the 8 yuan/pound of our pork. My sisters had a brief conference between themselves on whether to go for the expensive price and abandon their hard-earned unground pork, but they had little option.
Presumably, it is premature to make a general conclusion from this thrilling shopping scene. For one thing, the biggest holiday season of the year may have colored things. At the dinner table with my family members, who came from different cold-weathered cities to gather in this warm island, Maple's home, for the Chinese New Year, I asked about housing markets and the situation of migrant workers. The consensus was that the export business (in which one of the men works) has been hit hardest (surprise!), especially the light manufacturers such as textile factories in
That was when I asked if they had heard Charter 08. The answer was uniformly "No," though they knew the name of one of the signatories Liu Xiaobo. My brief description of Charter 08 did not generate much interest. "Useless," one of the men said, in an immediate reaction. Then he thought about it a bit more and said tolerantly that such things were not that bad to have. "The democracy activists and foreign media complaints about our government help to improve policies sometimes. Just one of those natural noises that should be allowed to exist. But if they attack too much they will get attacked back by Chinese people." His assessment was that right now the government enjoys the highest trust ever in history, and others agreed with him.
Their guess on why the government has blocked the spread of information on Charter 08 was it 's timing, with the clouds of financial crisis hanging above the migrant workers and the Spring Festival approaching. At a time like this the government is most nervous about potential chaos and tends to overreact.
My relatives mentioned that local governments such as those in Sichuan, one of the provinces that supplies a large number of migrant workers from its countryside, were ordered to arrange local jobs for the newly unemployed who returned home from coastal cities. There is no concept of unemployment insurance for those people, but apparently actively putting them to work is part of the mandate. Many did get new jobs, I heard, though no one could say to what extent the problem had been resolved. I may find out more about this when I go back to
About the housing markets: I heard
The Chinese stock market has crashed badly, but none of my family members were affected because they are not players. Lucky for them.
5 comments:
thanks for the update. Chun Jie Kuai Le!
I love your blog and have ordered your book through Amazon.co.uk as a result. I look forward to receiving and reading it.
Keep up the good work!
- Mona-Lia
Yes, your blog is blocked and I have had to use a GFW-circumvention tool to visit it.
Housing price of Chongqing is low??! I cannot afford to buy even the cheapest tiny secondhand apartment! Doesn't matter coz I have no intention to stay in this monstrous and filthy city (though like you I was born and grew up here). The rivers used to be clean and the sky used to be blue, long time ago...
Your relatives' response to Charter 08 proves the extent of the dictatorship's blockage of information... We feel like suffocating since the most recent wave of internet crackdown in the name of smut-cleasing began... No room for free speech... I have signed Charter 08 but have not received an invitation to drink tea yet:)
In Shanghai, companies are laying off people, and not just companies specific to export/import/manufacturing. Many, if not most, of the Chinese workers I know have had the generous overtime they'd been offered cutback, people are being asked to commit to a 4 day workweek, and many people left two or 3 days early for new year's festivities.
These aren't factory workers I am talking about, they are Shanghai's rank and file, 4-10 years out of college. The ripple effect of having soooo much of the Chinese economy tied into manufacturing and SOE is profound.
You are right in that observing a supermarket days before a major family holiday is not a good indication of much - it's akin to going to Albertsons or Whole Foods the day before Christmas and taking the long lines as an indication - ANY indication - of the state of the American economy.
Where I used to live in Los Angeles, there was 1 major supermarket for a very large population. Invariably it would be crowded, just from a lack of area options. Likewise, the line at the movie theater here in Palm Beach County - one of the wealthiest in the U.S. - was the longest I've ever seen... yet next to the theater is a closed Linen's and Things, the abandoned shell of a Circuit City, and behind that is what's left of a Bennigans.
Chun Jie Kuai Le, Bien.
Mona-Lia, thanks for your kindness. I hope you enjoy my stories.
Shanghai Anon, your comment is very interesting. Apparently, while the economy was faltering, holiday consumption didn't, even in Shanghai as I hear. In contrast, Christmas shopping in the US was much quieter than in previous years. Could this mean the Chinese consumers are better cushioned than Americans?
Chongqing Anon, good to hear that you are one of the Charter 08 signatories. I would love to ask you a few questions on this subject. Would you like to contact me at xjeberlein@gmail.com? Meanwhile, keep warm and safe.
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