LIFE HAS RETURNED MUCH AS IT HAD BEEN BEFORE THE PANDEMIC
Writer: admin Time:2020-03-30 09:58 Browse:
After a difficult struggle against the epidemic, China is ushering in the dawn of victory. The resilience and development potential of China's economy in the fight against the epidemic have aroused the attention and discussion of foreign media.
Production and life are becoming normal
With the national epidemic basically under control, enterprises and factories in various parts of China are returning to work one after another, and the consumer trend is picking up day by day. Foreign media are keenly aware of the signs that China's economy is gradually returning to normal operation.
Factories in China resumed production, shops opened for business, rail freight returned to normal and air transport and shipping resumed, Austrian daily Vienna reported on its website.
China's economy is showing some signs of normalisation after the full impact of the outbreak, but still faces severe challenges, international monetary fund officials said in a paper on the economic impact of COVID 19, Reuters reported. Most of the larger Chinese companies have returned to work, and many local employees have returned to work.
According to the website of the French newspaper la Tribune, some factories in China are returning to work, although they are not yet operating at full capacity. Airbus has restarted the tianjin 320 passenger assembly line. Toyota motor corp. 's three plants in China have also returned to work. In Asia, particularly in China, there has been a return to work and many projects have been restarted, according to the head of REDOX. "If we don't respond, our competitors will take over the market."
The living conditions of ordinary people also reflect the trend of China's economic and social normalcy. China declared a public health emergency in late January to deal with the outbreak, The Times online reported. Two months later, there was light at the end of the tunnel. Satellite images show increasing night light levels across China, especially in the three major economic zones. For many in China, life is slowly returning to normal.
"China has reopened thousands of tourist sites, most of them open-air, to allow visitors to enjoy the cherry blossom season." More businesses are returning to work as the outbreak in China is brought under control, The Daily Telegraph reported. In response, Shanghai is welcoming a limited number of visitors back to its major parks and attractions, and other parts of China are encouraging people to resume normal activities.
China's tourism industry has begun to recover, with Chinese people beginning to book domestic and international travel itineraries, according to an article published on March 24 in France's daily daily. After a two-month quarantine, bookings for April and may began and Chinese travel agencies resumed overseas Tours, according to data released by China's two major tourism platforms.