“The Lights Are On But No One’s Working”: How China Is Faking A Coronavirus Recovery

Via ZeroHedge

Last weekend, we reported that in order to fool the world into believing that its economy is rebounding nicely and that its people have put that entire coronavirus “thing” in the rearview mirror, Chinese officials ordered a factory owner in one of the country’s provinces to “turn on the machines and consume electricity – in his closed factory which has no workers – or he’ll get ‘a visit’.”

Why must the owner of the empty factory pretend the factory is operating? Because “Higher ups are watching the electricity numbers.” And why are higher ups watching the electricity numbers? Because they know that not only the rest of the world is also watching these numbers, but so is China’s population.  And absent a rebound in electricity usage, which remain far below prior years even if it is to power unused machines in empty factories, China can’t hold out hope to pretend that February was the kitchen sink month as the level of economic activity simply will not rise for months… unless of course Beijing orders the local population to simply consume for the sake of giving the outside world it is consuming as if things were back to normal.

Only they aren’t, and as we warned last weekend, “instead of Chinese ghost towns, we now have Chinese ghost factories whose only purpose is to try to fool its population and the world that the coronavirus pandemic, which is still raging in China, is under control and the Chinese economy is back on solid footing. Of course, neither is actually happening.”

Fast forward to today, when China’s own Caixin, a Beijing-based media group, picks up where we left off and after conducting its own investigation, has found that local companies and officials are fraudulently boosting electricity consumption and other metrics in order to meet tough new back-to-work targets.

Workers at a factory in Tianjin’s Xiqing district on Feb. 19. Photo: IC Photo

As new coronavirus cases in China slowed in recent weeks, local governments in less-affected regions pushed companies and factories to return to work, typically by assigning concrete targets to district officials. Company insiders and local civil servants told Caixin that, under pressure to fulfill quotas they could not otherwise meet, they deftly did what China always does when in a bind – they cooked the books.

This is how a very desperate China is scrambling to give the world the impression that all is well: leaving lights and air conditioners on all day long in empty offices, turning on manufacturing equipment, faking staff rosters and even coaching factory workers to lie to inspectors are just some of the ways they helped manufacture flashy statistics on the resumption of business for local governments to report up the chain.

In short, the Chinese are simply doing what they always do when reporting “data” – they are making shit up.

As we pointed out several days ago, electricity consumption data has regularly been used as a proxy for the business resumption rate when reporting to Beijing, and to the public.

The East China province of Zhejiang has been lauded as a prime example of the nation’s industrial recovery from the coronavirus outbreak by China’s top economic planner, which reported on Feb. 24 that its work resumption rate was more than 90%. But a civil servant in one district of the provincial capital, Hangzhou, told Caixin that from Saturday plants were instructed to leave their industrial equipment idling for the whole day, while offices were told to keep computers and air-conditioners running, when Beijing began checking the resumption rate by examining power consumption figures.

Caixin chose not to name the district to protect the identity of the civil servant, who could face repercussions for revealing the information publicly. But reached by phone, one company insider in the district said they saw such directives in multiple corporate WeChat groups. Another said they received the order too, but their operations had already resumed two weeks prior, and its production lines were in normal operation by Feb. 29. Another executive said they were not informed of the electricity use target, and said they were running at about one-fifth of normal capacity, with only a small proportion of machines in use.

Hangzhou’s target was for corporate electricity consumption that day to hit 75% of what it was on Jan. 8, and that it should return to at least 90% of that by March 10.

The real resumption rate in one industrial park in Hangzhou over the weekend was 40%, the civil servant estimated, far below the 75% target. It means that the chart below showing coal usage is as a proxy for electricity demand is, as we suspected, the latest “data” that China is gaming to represent an economy which is nearly 100% stronger than in reality.

Of course, Beijing is well aware of what is going on, and the district official pointed out China is further subsidizing electricity costs as a way to incentivize businesses to resume, saying that many companies would rather waste a small amount of money on power than irritate local officials.

Insiders told Caixin that in some cases, rather than giving companies direct targets, local governments assigned quotas to local district officials who were then directly responsible for meeting them. Those officials would regularly visit the companies, prodding them to resume production in the guise of expressing “care and support.” That pressure is likely what drove them to switch on their machines.

Zhejiang Provincial Government Deputy Secretary-General Chen Guangsheng boasted to press on Feb. 24 that a segment of manufacturing plants in Zhejiang reported a work resumption rate of 98.6%, and service enterprises 95.6%. More than 99% of the coastal province’s companies with annual export value above $10 million had resumed business, the provincial leader said.

Picking up on our post from the weekend, Caixin next writes that a company in Wenzhou, confirmed it had received a designated power consumption target equal to half of the level before the outbreak, and had been running its air conditioners all day long to meet the goal.

Zhejiang is not the only place where the reality on the ground is said to deviate from government figures. In the small industrial city of Botou, some 230 kilometers (143 miles) south of Beijing, Caixin found factories reported by the local government to have reopened their doors had not in fact resumed production.

The head of one told Caixin that despite reports up the chain, the local government’s unwillingness to risk an outbreak meant it had not actually restarted. “The local government still forbids factories to actually resume work,” the executive said. “We have returned to the offices, but production has not resumed at all.”

He further said the Botou government asked him to falsely report the number of employees who had returned to work, and even went so far as to directly coach workers about how to lie if they received calls from inspectors. Prolonged suspension of production had led to the loss of technicians and business orders, he added, because some of the company’s peers in other parts of China had resumed manufacturing ahead of them.

Replying to Caixin’s request for comment on Monday, the Botou government said at least 228 enterprises in the Botou area had resumed business, but some companies might have said they did not because while they were registered as having resumed, they may not have been prepared to immediately commence production. They said companies were permitted to resume normal business after reporting to the local government, but could only begin operation after officials confirmed virus control measures were in place.

A source in a smaller enterprise in Botou told Caixin companies have been allowed to resume production after meeting certain virus containment requirements, but face the further logistical issues as many rural roads remain blocked. Without a way to get raw materials in and send products out, there’s not much point in businesses returning to production.

Open data from Baidu Maps shows overall traffic flow inside the Botou city over the weekend was still less than half of the average last year, after two weeks of slow recovery starting from Feb. 18. Of course, with everyone instructed to pretend as if things are normal on weekdays, the traffic then was in line with prior years.

Indeed, this confirms what we have observed previously: that whereas congestion data from weekday is almost back to normal across China’s industrial centers as a result of orders to pretend “all is well”, it is the the weekend traffic that indicates what local residents really think about whether the coronavirus is contained. So what does weekend traffic congestion show? Courtesy of TomTom, here is the last 7 day traffic congestion for Shanghai – while weekdays are virtually back to normal, the catastrophic weekend traffic makes clear that virtually nobody is outdoors on days when the locals aren’t ordered to pretend things have stabilizied, confirming that nobody believes the pandemic has been eradicated.

Unfortunately, this also means that none of China’s high-frequency indicators that Wall Street analysts had become so reliant on to determine if the Chinese economy is recovering, and which in recent days have shown a tentative improvement …

… are credible.

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19 Comments
oldtimer505
oldtimer505
March 5, 2020 2:40 pm

It would appear that the MSM on all sides of the great pond/ocean is only good for fish wrap.

(EC)
(EC)
  oldtimer505
March 5, 2020 2:50 pm

I don’t do Britishisms, do you mean ocean?

oldtimer505
oldtimer505
  (EC)
March 5, 2020 2:58 pm

That would be a yes. Sometimes it is difficult to escape one of the roots of the family tree.

Hyperborean
Hyperborean
  oldtimer505
March 5, 2020 4:20 pm

So, the three bat soup virus hot spots – Wuhan, Korea, and Iran – have all just gone live with their 5g roll outs. There is great amount of travel from Japan to China and Korea. Now Japan has bat soup virus. Coincidence, or just bat soup crazy?

And, there’s this yet to be suppressed due to community standards internet gem –

“The 5G trial network is delivering internet connectivity to the commercial passenger cruise ships and their passengers while in port. This is one of the first operational 5G trial networks with an ecosystem of partners, customers and consumers. … Each of the cruise ship carries as many as 2,000 passengers.”

Infected cruise ships (from East Asia), but no infected planes (from East Asia). No infected 5g-less cargo ships and crews (from East Asia) either. Correlation is beginning to look like causation.

But then it’s an ecosystem. And has electrolytes. Probably.

Hardscrabble Farmer
Hardscrabble Farmer
March 5, 2020 2:59 pm

Whatever is happening in China is not happening anywhere else. This isn’t the 19th century travel-wise, the Chinese have been flying to the US unimpeded daily since this thing first broke out with virtually zero spillover.

Why is this virus so virulent in China and virtually non-existent here? It’s March for goodness sake.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Hardscrabble Farmer
March 5, 2020 3:06 pm

Here is a thought. Maybe it does not spread well on planes. For whatever reasons, boats seem to be the culprit for now. That does not explain why the Chinese did not import this to us earlier.

chuck
chuck
  Anonymous
March 5, 2020 3:33 pm

Does not spread well on planes? You do know that aircrews and passengers have spread this right?
Targeted bio-weapons should not be that hard to believe in.
Do you think pig ebola came from a bat too?
We are engaged in genetic bio-warfare with China right now, simple.
We dont need to kill/maim like smallbox or ebola. A long incubation period, an asymptomatic presentation, thereby degrading their fighting force/overloading their care system was always the design of this agent. That they were working to develop a vaccine, should come as no surprise either. That it got out before they could do so is the embarrassing thing for them.
That’s why they
1. Wont admit where it came from(the bats, yeah thats the ticket)
2. Wont acknowledge how devastating it is to them(that shit you made that we totally didnt steal, yeah it didnt hurt)
And thats why we
1. Wont allow discussion of it being bio-engineered in the Western media.
2. Arent as worried as we should be by it’s getting out of China.
The thing is, gain of function is built into the genetic code. At the rate this thing mutates it could be a nothing burger in a few month or it could add some sequences that start to really fuck us up.
What doesnt change is the supply chain problems all the world will be experiencing going forward. Thats going to hurt worse than the flu.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Hardscrabble Farmer
March 5, 2020 3:26 pm

they ignored the initial indicators and let that thing spread to the point where people are collapsing in the street, same with Iran. This is what happens in Authoritarian regimes, the truth is completely suppressed, on pain of death.

in the west, the small versions of the truth are allowed, we do have a little lee way in what we are allowed to think and print.

So now CA is going to close shop along with WA and probably certain Burroughs of NYC, due to all the travel you mention. This is going to trigger a hard recession due to disruption of supply chain, probably a once in a life time experience for most folks.

plan ahead, get that favorite do dad that will keep you happy indoors for hours, your gonna need something to keep you occupied.

my brother lives near nyc and they are all pretty edgy about what good old Mario Jr is about to declare, he is another one of those demagogues who will never let a good crisis go to waste.

Pat
Pat
  Hardscrabble Farmer
March 5, 2020 6:17 pm

One theory is that this could be a sars vaccine from 2004 backfiring on them, there is data to support that theory. Another is that we brought them to their knees during the trade war, now its time to get on ours.

StackingStock
StackingStock
March 5, 2020 3:31 pm

Does this site not allow Bitchute videos. I posted one an hour ago and it disappeared. It was a informative video that showed empty shipping ports here in the USA.

22winmag - TBP's top-secret Crypto Jew
22winmag - TBP's top-secret Crypto Jew
March 5, 2020 3:48 pm

OT

Granny Warren just dropped out.

A few more hatchet jobs, and we can have 4 more years of Trump and 8 years of Don Jr.

View post on imgur.com

Lie about good Republican men-> off with your fucking head.

View post on imgur.com

Pat
Pat
March 5, 2020 6:12 pm

I should send my kids over there, they cant turn off a switch to save their life!!!

TN Patriot
TN Patriot
March 5, 2020 8:50 pm

Until the container ships start hauling loaded containers, their economy will still be in the toilet.