As the heroic and emotional relief efforts for the May-12 8.0-magnitude
earthquake are gradually drawing to an end, China is faced with a lasting and
formidable mission: reconstruction.
The earthquake, centered in Wenchuan County in the southwestern Chinese
Sichuan Province, has killed 40,075 people nationwide as of 6 p.m. yesterday and
authorities said the toll is feared to exceed 50,000. Some 247,645 others were
injured.
By all standards, it will be the toughest reconstruction task since 1976 when
the northeastern coastal Chinese city of Tangshan was leveled by a 7.8-magnitude
quake, which claimed over 240,000 lives.
But in comparison with the reconstruction in the wake of the Tangshan
earthquake, the mission this time is blessed with a strong economy, which has
been growing annually at nearly 10 percent on average since 1978 when China
began its reform-and-opening-up drive.
Economic toll and loss of private properties
Zhu Jing, in her 30s, could have never imagined she would become what she is
today -- a refugee in debt and with nothing valuable.
Following the May 12 earthquake, she was forced to flee her hometown
Dujiangyan, one of the hardest-hit city, to neighboring Chengdu, the provincial
capital of Sichuan.
In Dujiangyan, the devastating earthquake had turned her home -- a flat which
she bought on mortgage two years ago -- into a dilapidated building unsuitable
to live in, said Zhu, an employee of a local power supply company.
"I still owe the bank nearly 100,000 yuan (about US$14,300). I have spent
almost the same sum to renovate my house and buy home appliances," she said.
"Because of the disaster, my house has gone. My hardworking over the last
several years has gone down the drain," said the heartbroken woman.
Zhu was not alone. In Sichuan some 2.9 million houses were flattened and
nearly 14 million others damaged, according to a rough estimate.
Among them, only a small number was covered by house insurance. As of Sunday,
China insurance companies had received just 28,400 house-insurance claims, said
the China Insurance Regulatory Commission.
These houses were just the tip of an iceberg of the damaged or ruined
properties in Sichuan.
Zhuang Jian, a senior economist of the Asian Development Bank (ADB), told
Xinhua that the disaster had caused huge loss to property and wealth overnight,
which is a challenging problem for reconstruction.
Clearly, the quake had ruined the economy of dozens of counties hit hard by
the quake, Zhuang said.
A preliminary investigation showed that 14,207 industrial enterprises
suffered 67 billion yuan of direct economic loss in the calamity, the Ministry
of Industry and Information Technology said Monday.
Wang Bin, Communist Party secretary of the epicenter Wenchuan County, said
the quake had flattened or greatly damaged nearly all Wenchuan's buildings and
ruined factories and infrastructure.
"Undoubtedly, Wenchuan's economy sustained a fatal blow. The infrastructure
built in the last decades was destroyed suddenly," Wang said.
As the Chinese governments at all levels is still focused on quake relief and
disease prevention work, there is no official figure of overall economic loss
arising from the disaster.
Some economists had estimated that the Chinese economy suffered a loss of
over 500 billion yuan from the earthquake, more than three times that caused by
the snow and ice storm in February, which swept across central China and
disrupted transportation and the energy supply and pushed up commodities prices.
Zhuang, of the ADB, maintained that the earthquake's impact on the Chinese
economy will be quite limited since Sichuan's GDP accounted for no more than
five percent of the country's total.
Reconstruction under market economy
When the Tangshan earthquake struck in 1976, the Chinese people were living
under a strictly-planned economy and didn't have many private property.
Thirty-two years later, China has become a market economy. But in the
reconstruction after the Wenchuan quake, the government still has to play a
central role, said Zhuang.
The Chinese economy will be faced with a tough issue in helping those
hundreds of thousands of people who lost their private property and wealth in
the quake, said Wang.
Accordingly, governmental departments will have to make a thorough
investigation and provide quake victims with different levels of assistance
based on their losses, said the economist.
To help reconstruction, the Chinese government will need to formulate some
special policies and provide a large amount of money and materials, Zhuang
added.
He is right. Over the last two days, the government has already churned out
some preferential policies to support the incoming reconstruction process in
quake-ravaged regions.
On Monday, the People's Bank of China (PBOC, the central bank) and the China
Banking Regulatory Commission (CBRC) issued a notice, requesting Chinese banks
to provide financial support, including extension of loan maturities, for relief
and reconstruction in quake-hit regions.
Banks should not push for loan repayment if debtors fall behind in payments,
nor should they impose fines for defaults or add default notices to borrowers'
credit records, said the notice.
On Zhu's case, PBOC's vice governor Su Ning had said his bank was considering
"special solutions" for mortgage loans as many borrowers were either killed in
the quake or had lost their homes. Further, an expected decline in borrowers'
incomes following the quake would make the mortgage a heavy burden for them.
Also on Monday, the Chinese Ministry of Finance and the State Administration
of Taxation jointly decided to give preferential taxation treatment to
quake-stricken areas.
According to the circular, the country will give preferential tax treatment
to the fight against earthquake and reconstruction after the quake in terms of
corporate income tax, individual income tax, property tax, contract tax,
resource tax, urban land use tax, vehicle and ship use tax, and import and
export tax.
A much stronger economy
After the Wenchuan quake, a rich couple who are survivors of the 1976
earthquake, won plaudits from ordinary Chinese for their generosity in making
charitable donation for Wenchuan quake victims.
Zhang Xiangqing, in his late 30s, and his wife surprised many Chinese by
donating a total of 100 million yuan for quake relief and reconstruction work.
The Zhangs, who founded and own the Tianjin Rockcheck Steel Group Co., Ltd.,
said they would like to help people in quake-hit zones to rebuild their homes
and "earthquake-proof schools".
The couple is just a typical example of how ordinary Chinese, including a lot
of newly-wealthy people and celebrities who became millionaires or even
billionaires in recent years, are taking on unprecedented philanthropic
activities to help quake relief and the ensuing reconstruction.
By Tuesday noon, donations for Sichuan earthquake relief work had reached
13.925 billion yuan (US$2.01 billion) with 12.516 billion yuan in cash and 1.408
billion yuan in goods.
Governmental officials had said that as relief work was drawing to an end,
these donations will be used for reconstruction.
Such generous donations for a devastating disaster were unprecedented in
China's history in terms of the total figure and the broad participation of the
public.
Besides making charitable donations, there were other means to extend help.
Chen Guangbiao, chief executive of conglomerate Jiangsu Huangpu Investment
who has been active in philanthropy, had brought 120 drivers and 60 digging
machines from eastern China all the way to Sichuan to assist relief and road
reconstruction there.
China Life Insurance (Group) Co., the nation's largest life insurer, which
donated 16 million yuan in cash for quake relief, announced on May 14 that the
company would pay all the living costs of those orphaned in the quake until they
reached the age of18.
Some ordinary Chinese took advantage of soaring private car ownership and
drove their vehicles from across the country to the quake-hit zones to give a
helping hand.
All these were made possible partly because the Chinese economy, now the
world's fourth largest, and living standards of Chinese people have risen
remarkably in the last 30 years of reform and opening up.
Zhuang, of the ADB, said a much stronger Chinese economy in comparison with
that of 1976 has provided a solid basis for reconstruction efforts.
Moreover, he said, today's China has become increasingly open to
international assistance in both disaster relief and reconstruction, which will
enable it to make use of international resources.