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A pedestrian crosses a road in Beijing, China, May 30 2022. Picture: BLOOMBERG
A pedestrian crosses a road in Beijing, China, May 30 2022. Picture: BLOOMBERG

Beijing — China’s “zero-Covid-19’ policy of constantly monitoring, testing and isolating its citizens to prevent the spread of the coronavirus has battered much of the country’s economy, but it has created bubbles of growth in the medical, technology and construction sectors.

The Chinese government, alone among major countries in vowing to eradicate the coronavirus within its borders, is on track to spend more than $52bn in 2022 on testing, new medical facilities, monitoring equipment and other anti-Covid-19 measures, which will benefit as many as 3,000 companies, according to analysts.

“In China, the companies that provide testing services and other related industries are making big money because of the government's focus on a containment-based approach in fighting Covid-19,” said Yanzhong Huang, a global health specialist at the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR), a US think-tank.

China aims to have Covid-19 testing facilities within 15-minutes’ walk of everyone in its big cities and continues to impose mass testing at the slightest sign of an outbreak. Hong Kong-based Pacific Securities estimates this has created a market worth more than $15bn a year for test makers and providers.

The government is footing the bill for the vast majority of this, either by buying test kits or paying companies to do tests. Although prices of tests have dropped since the outbreak of the coronavirus in early 2020 — to as little as 50c per test — this continuing demand has helped a number of companies.

First-quarter profit more than doubled for Hangzhou-based Dian Diagnostics Group, one of China’s biggest medical test makers. Its revenue jumped more than 60% to $690m, just less than half of which was for its Covid-19 testing services, almost entirely paid for by the government.

Rival Adicon, which received about $300m of mostly government money for its Covid-19 tests over 2020 and 2021, according to the company's financial statements, has applied for an initial public offering on the Hong Kong stock exchange.

Shanghai Runda Medical Technology said it was processing up to 400,000 Covid-19 tests per day in April, during the almost two-month-long lockdown of Shanghai, generating more than $30m a month, according to an article by the state-run Securities Times.

China defends its “zero-Covid-19” policy as crucial to saving lives and preventing its healthcare system from being overrun. It shows little sign of pulling back even as the economic toll mounts.

The latest indicators show the country's economy has weakened sharply since March, as employment, consumer spending, exports and home sales have been hit by stringent lockdown measures that clogged highways and ports, stranded workers and shut factories.

Many private-sector economists expect the economy to shrink in the April to June quarter from a year earlier, compared with the first quarter’s 4.8% growth. The blue-chip CSI 300 index is down 19% in 2022.

Investors are uncertain how long the boom will last for companies like Dian, Adicon and Shanghai Runda, whose fortunes are closely tied to government spending. Analysts, on average, expect Dian's revenue to dip slightly in 2023, while they see Shanghai Runda’s continuing to grow. Stocks of both are down from the start of 2022.

“The development of the epidemic is uncertain due to the large number of mutated strains of the new coronavirus and the complexity of infectiousness,” said a recent research note by Shenzhen-based Essence Securities. “If the spread of the epidemic is well controlled and the epidemic prevention policy is adjusted, it may have a negative impact on the market demand for Covid-19 nucleic acid testing.”

Huang at the CFR said that China’s huge programme of lockdowns, tracing and isolating could prevent a worst-case scenario but was not a permanent solution. “Epidemiologically and economically, it is unsustainable,” he said.

Dian Diagnostics, Adicon and Shanghai Runda did not respond to requests for comment. Health authorities in Beijing and Shanghai did not respond to requests for comment.

Mass surveillance and quick buildings

Dozens of surveillance and thermal imaging camera manufacturers, such as Wuhan Guide Infrared and Hangzhou Hikvision Digital Technology, have benefited from the Chinese government's demand for gadgets that can help it keep track of the Covid-19 status of its 1.4-billion citizens.

Wuhan Guide, one of the world’s leading manufacturers of thermal imaging equipment, doubled its revenue in 2020 as it worked overtime to supply fever-detecting cameras across China and overseas. Growth flattened out in 2021, but analysts expect it to pick up again this year and next. The company did not respond to a request for comment.

Disease has been the mother of invention. Since March, Chinese companies and research institutes have filed at least 50 Covid-19-related patents, according to a Reuters review of international and domestic databases. The inventions are mostly related to adapting existing surveillance cameras and platforms to track close contacts and identify potential positive cases.

The urgent need for hundreds of new hospitals, to take the strain off China's already-stretched medical infrastructure, has created a boom for some construction companies.

Beijing-based China Railway, a conglomerate spanning construction, manufacturing and real estate, has built makeshift hospitals all over China this year, and has been particularly active in areas hit hard by Covid-19 such as Shanghai and the northeastern city of Changchun. Its profit has grown steadily over the past two years, at least partly helped by Covid-19-related projects, and analysts expect that to continue over the next few years. Its stock hit a three-year high in May. China Railway Group did not respond to a request for comment.

One analyst has estimated that about 300 makeshift hospitals were built around China during a 35-day span between March and April, as infections surged, at a cost of more than $4bn.

One third of those were built in and around Shanghai. There is no sign of waning demand from the government. On May 15, China’s National Health Commission head Ma Xiaowei called for the construction of what he called “permanent makeshift hospitals” in leading Chinese Communist Party publication Qiushi, suggesting that there will be a long-term need for such buildings.

A Reuters review of tenders for such projects suggest the government will spend about $15bn in 2022 on new hospitals.

Reuters

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