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Time to amend hukou, tackle mass migrations

By LI TIE | China Daily | Updated: 2020-02-12 07:59

Passengers return to work at a train station on Feb 9, 2020. [Photo/sipaphoto.com]

The biggest challenge in China's all-out efforts to fight the novel coronavirus that emerged in Wuhan, capital of Hubei province, was how to effectively stop the virus from spreading across the country, given that the epidemic broke out at a time when millions of people were leaving for their hometowns for Spring Festival family reunions. Mass migrations on a massive scale were taking place across the country.

There is no doubt that mass migrations in China during the Spring Festival holiday have added to the difficulty of combating the epidemic and could trigger more outbreaks after the holiday.

What the authorities should also reflect on is how to strengthen and reform the hukou or household registration system to allow migrant workers to become urban residents and thus reduce the problems caused by large-scale migrations.

China has institutional and organizational advantages that can help it mobilize resources to fight the epidemic within the shortest possible time, but such advantages come at economic and social costs. It is near impossible to accurately compute the economic losses China will incur because of novel coronavirus, but some studies put the figure as high as trillions of yuan.

Worse, a large number of small and medium-sized service enterprises are encountering serious problems. The urban service sector and tourism and related industries are all facing closures that could last a month or longer. For them, the corresponding capital and cost pressures are too much to bear. In addition, the financial cost governments at all levels will incur in preventing and controlling the epidemic will be astronomical.

It is time we reflect on the huge pressure such mass migrations put on our efforts to fight the epidemic. The country must reconsider its hukou system, which prevents migrant workers from settling down where they work to become urban residents. Only by reducing people flows can the country lower the dissemination risk that an epidemic poses.

-LI TIE, CHIEF ECONOMIST WITH CHINA CENTER FOR URBAN DEVELOPMENT

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