The Economist March 12th 2022 China 37
FoodinChina
About face
N
o banquetinChinaiscompletewith
outthehostloudlycallingformore
food,evenwhenitisclearthatnoonecan
eat another bite. Whether at business
mealsorfamilygatherings,toleavea clean
plateistoimplythatthehostprovidedtoo
little.Culturalissuesof“face”alsoleadto
bigservings:everyonewantsto bemore
generous than their neighbour. Now,
though,thesedeeprootednormsarebe
ingchallengedfromthetop.
Soonafterhecametopowerin2013,
China’s president,Xi Jinping, recounted
hisownexperienceofhungerduringChi
na’sGreatFamineof195961.Evenathis
eliteboardingschool,dinnermeantonly
soup.Healsospokeofleantimesduring
the Cultural Revolution from 196676,
whenhewentmonthswithout“knowing
thetasteofmeat”.Suchhardshipbredfru
galhabitsinpeopleofhisgeneration.
Butafter 40 yearsofeconomicreform,
Chinaisnowthelandofplenty—andthe
landofwaste.Precisemeasurementishard
andestimatesvarywidely.Speakingata
conferencein2020,ChenShaofeng,anex
pertattheChineseAcademyofSciences,
reckoned that the country’s net annual
foodlosscomprisedarounda thirdofthe
world’stotal.A studypublishedlastyearin
Nature, a leadingscientificjournal,saidit
amountedto350mtonnes(thoughitsaid
thataccountedforjustovera quarterofthe
world’stotal).Evenatthelowerrangeof
theestimates,wasteinthefoodservicein
dustry(meaningrestaurants,canteensand
dining halls)wouldamount to17m18m
tonnesannually,enoughtofeed tensof
millionsofpeople.
In 2020 MrXicalledChina’sfoodwaste
problem“shockinganddistressing”,fram
ingitintermsoffoodsecurity.A yearlater
his government enacted an “antifood
waste” law. It is a mishmash of worthy
edicts, such as rules on grain storage, and
wacky ones, such as a ban on streaming
mukbang (bingeeating performances), a
phenomenon that originated in South Ko
rea. Violators may be fined as much as
100,000 yuan ($15,800) and slapped with
administrative punishments.
Much of the law is designed to cajole
the public into better habits, such as order
ing “in moderation” and eating “in a civi
lised and healthy” way, particularly at spe
cial occasions. A survey by government re
searchers reported in 2020 that around
40% of the food served at wedding ban
quets, business meals and social dinners
was wasted. The banqueting culture dis
plays “a bad atmosphere of ostentatious
ness, lavishness, and concern for face”,
said the People’s Daily, the official organ of
the Communist Party.
Mr Xi and other officials have started
promoting what they call “clean plate” be
haviour. The new law calls on restaurants
to make it easier for guests to take leftovers
home. It gives businesses cover to hit
wasteful diners with extra charges or re
ward frugal ones, for example with dis
counts or parking vouchers.
Among the first to fall foul of the law,
just weeks after it took effect, was a popu
lar streaming service called iqiyi. One of its
talent shows encouraged fans to vote for
their favourite performers using codes
printed inside the bottle caps of a milk
drink. This led to an outcry over those who,
in pursuit of the caps, bought and dumped
the drink in large quantities. The show was
ordered to stop production.
While much of the public attention
around the law has focused on getting con
sumers to waste less, efforts to improve
practice among suppliers will be just as
important. According to the study in Na-
ture, half of China’s food waste occurs not
long after harvest, when it is first pro
cessed and stored. Food waste, theauthors
write, is a “farmtofork” problem.n
B EIJING
Chinaisclampingdownonwaste
uary he cowrote an oped warning that
China had set itself up for disaster. Its vac
cines offer limited protection against Omi
cron, relatively few people have natural
immunity and China’s health system is not
equipped to handle a large wave. Hong
Kong is a harbinger of what will come if
China does not change tack, says Dr Oster
holm. Omicron has overwhelmed the city,
where hundreds of mostly unvaccinated
and old people are dying each day.
It is one thing for foreigners to call for
change, but lately China’s doctors and epi
demiologists have also hinted that a new
approach is needed. Though they continue
to swear by the zerocovid policy in public,
they are quietly changing what “zero”
means. Since late last year Liang Wannian,
a top Chinese epidemiologist, has been
telling state media that China’s new “dy
namic zero” policy does not mean zero in
fections and that the most stringent mea
sures will not last forever. The policy
means having zero tolerance for slow re
sponses to outbreaks, he says.
Learning to coexist
The longterm goal is to live with the virus,
wrote Zeng Guang, the former chief scien
tist of the Chinese Centre for Disease Con
trol and Prevention, on Weibo, China's ver
sion of Twitter, last month. He said a “Chi
nese roadmap to coexistence with the vi
rus” would soon be revealed. For such a
strategy to work, China would have to pro
duce better mrnavaccines of its own, or
end its apparently political refusal to au
thorise effective, foreignmade jabs. Im
proved treatments would also help. And
the government would have to worry less
about mild infections. That is broadly in
line with the change in mindset suggested
by Zhang Wenhong, a respected doctor
who runs Shanghai’s covid response. Offi
cials should be more precise, more scien
tific, striking a balance between prevent
ing virus resurgence and protecting the
economy, he wrote on Weibo.
The politics of all this are complicated.
China has taken great pride in its covid
strategy, which has seen it do better, in
terms both of avoiding deaths and of pre
serving economic growth, than any other
large country. Politicians may be loth to
ease restrictions in the months leading up
to an allimportant Communist Party
meeting later this year, when President Xi
Jinping is expected to extend his rule. In
Shanghai even the contacts of contacts of
those infected are being made to quaran
tine for two weeks. That is not a wise use of
medical resources. But it is in line with Mr
Xi’s orders to guard against “a largescale
epidemic rebound”.
Dr Zeng’s post about the Chinese road
map to coexistence has disappeared. But
there are indications that attitudes to
wards covid are changing in the country.
Last summer Dr Zhang was attacked online
by nationalists when he wrote that China
would eventually have to live with the vi
rus. They accused him of pandering to
Western ideas and wanting to see people
die. His latest post, though, drew many
supportive comments. Scholars in touch
with Chinese scientists say some are writ
ing internal advisories on how the country
could safely drop the zerocovid policy. Ul
timately politicians will decide if and
when a changeisneeded. Omicron may
force their hand. n
A growing worry
Source:JohnsHopkinsUniversityCSSE
China, daily new covid-19 cases, March 8th 2022
1 5 10 20 40 94
No cases
Hong Kong 28,475