coronavirus

Mask-Clad Chinese Workers Cautiously Return to the Office

China has registered 80,754 cases in total, with almost 60,000 having been released from hospital and 17,721 still receiving treatment

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Riding the subway for the first time after weeks of working remotely from home, Zhuang Xue felt a sense of calm, outfitted in a blue surgical mask and protective goggles as she headed for the office.

The 29-year-old purchasing agent joined other office workers finally allowed back to their cubicles on Monday in Beijing, where virtually no new COVID-19 cases have been reported in recent days.

Authorities extended the Lunar New Year holiday that began in late January, ordering most workers in the city to stay home to help curb the spread of the virus that has infected more than 110,000 people worldwide, most of them in China.

Zhuang, her goggles fogged up in the morning chill as she left the subway station, said she had been preparing for this moment for weeks, exercising at home and trying to eat as healthily as possible to strengthen her immune system. She was carrying disinfectant wipes and a personal water bottle.

“Everyone is pretty conscientious,” Zhuang said.

It's not exactly life as usual, though. Fearing a resurgence in cases, the government is taking a gradual approach.

Beijing's city government is requiring that the number of people in each office be limited to no more than 50% of usual staffing levels. Protective face masks are required, and office workers must be seated at least 1 meter (3.3 feet) apart. Workers are not supposed to face each other when eating.

Dr. Michael J. Ryan of the World Health Organization answered questions on Monday about the spread of the coronavirus.

Similar measures have been implemented to varying degrees across the country, as the number of new cases has dwindled.

China reported just 19 new cases of the virus on Tuesday. Last month, the number of new daily cases was in the thousands. At least 59,000 people in mainland China have recovered from the disease, according to the National Health Commission, while more than 3,000 have died.

While Chinese cities experiment with slowly reviving activity, other countries are canceling public gatherings, encouraging remote work and — in the case of Italy — following China's lead with a lockdown on affected regions.

“It might be more serious now overseas,” said Yang Tianxiao, a finance worker who has been back at his office for a couple of weeks.

“I think in China it's OK,” Yang said. “Things are slowly returning to normal.”

Chinese factories that make the world's smartphones, toys and other consumer goods are gradually reopening but aren't expected to reach normal production until at least April. Travel curbs are still in place in many areas, making it difficult for employees to get back to work.

That is disrupting imports of components and raw materials from China's Asian neighbors as well as shipments from China. On Saturday, the government reported that exports fell 17% and imports were off 4% from a year earlier in January and February.

The recovery may come too late for some business owners struggling to stay afloat after restaurants and entertainment venues were ordered to close and consumers opted to avoid the risk of catching the virus by staying home.

Trading in U.S. stocks was temporarily halted on Monday and none of the major indices were able to recover by the end of the day. The Dow Jones Industrial Average, the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq Composite were all down down more than 7% when trading closed.

The street food stand run by Cheng Sheng and his brother at one intersection in Beijing's usually bustling central business district used to stay open from 5 a.m. to 9 p.m. every day, selling their savory fried pancakes stuffed with egg, lettuce and sausage and covered with a sweet-and-spicy sauce. Now they close at 10 a.m., he said, since the area empties out after morning commuters have passed through.

They need to make at least 1,000 yuan ($143) a day to break even, but struggle now to sell more than 500 yuan ($71) worth of food even on their busiest days.

“Our business is one-fifth of what it was before,” Cheng said, halfheartedly flipping pink sausages on a grill. “We're losing money.”

“The main thing is that there's much less foot traffic,” he said. “There are no people.”


Associated Press Business Writer Joe McDonald and researcher Yu Bing in Beijing contributed to this report.

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