Dubai Telegraph - Labour vs luxury: virus tracing highlights China's inequality

EUR -
AED 4.224876
AFN 72.462986
ALL 96.160604
AMD 434.099231
ANG 2.058963
AOA 1054.738043
ARS 1606.038123
AUD 1.628909
AWG 2.073245
AZN 1.957787
BAM 1.959215
BBD 2.316138
BDT 141.107219
BGN 1.966056
BHD 0.434221
BIF 3416.109293
BMD 1.150205
BND 1.471035
BOB 7.974972
BRL 6.040894
BSD 1.150005
BTN 106.071837
BWP 15.680472
BYN 3.425836
BYR 22544.020924
BZD 2.312943
CAD 1.573084
CDF 2605.214492
CHF 0.906057
CLF 0.026511
CLP 1046.813004
CNY 8.001115
CNH 7.92826
COP 4260.842959
CRC 540.146332
CUC 1.150205
CUP 30.480436
CVE 111.13859
CZK 24.454509
DJF 204.414853
DKK 7.471767
DOP 70.564391
DZD 152.131445
EGP 60.230841
ERN 17.253077
ETB 181.013531
FJD 2.547595
FKP 0.868334
GBP 0.863925
GEL 3.128823
GGP 0.868334
GHS 12.519984
GIP 0.868334
GMD 84.515954
GNF 10093.05076
GTQ 8.814443
GYD 240.721742
HKD 9.006578
HNL 30.561304
HRK 7.539937
HTG 150.724067
HUF 391.404502
IDR 19517.831177
ILS 3.591441
IMP 0.868334
INR 106.132132
IQD 1506.768745
IRR 1519478.512409
ISK 143.211796
JEP 0.868334
JMD 180.895354
JOD 0.815474
JPY 183.113233
KES 148.840282
KGS 100.58578
KHR 4622.10278
KMF 493.437605
KPW 1035.184626
KRW 1714.570528
KWD 0.353216
KYD 0.958279
KZT 555.322921
LAK 24700.655091
LBP 103000.87101
LKR 358.097383
LRD 210.775166
LSL 19.277199
LTL 3.396257
LVL 0.695748
LYD 7.3728
MAD 10.806191
MDL 20.009056
MGA 4779.102216
MKD 61.709926
MMK 2415.019418
MNT 4107.710362
MOP 9.274449
MRU 46.140499
MUR 53.806333
MVR 17.782217
MWK 1997.906655
MXN 20.371795
MYR 4.520887
MZN 73.509782
NAD 19.277204
NGN 1571.67499
NIO 42.235365
NOK 11.132226
NPR 169.721992
NZD 1.964872
OMR 0.442264
PAB 1.150015
PEN 3.943482
PGK 4.948754
PHP 68.636185
PKR 321.223553
PLN 4.272265
PYG 7464.01199
QAR 4.190485
RON 5.09484
RSD 117.426723
RUB 93.449256
RWF 1678.149313
SAR 4.316316
SBD 9.261061
SCR 16.378688
SDG 691.272965
SEK 10.749024
SGD 1.470163
SHP 0.862952
SLE 28.293004
SLL 24119.239327
SOS 657.347107
SRD 43.214935
STD 23806.924333
STN 24.844431
SVC 10.06263
SYP 127.126407
SZL 19.277227
THB 37.243559
TJS 11.039641
TMT 4.031469
TND 3.35973
TOP 2.769417
TRY 50.804333
TTD 7.798663
TWD 36.812088
TZS 2996.284814
UAH 50.697321
UGX 4341.606456
USD 1.150205
UYU 46.751909
UZS 13923.233407
VES 513.274734
VND 30238.893372
VUV 137.524572
WST 3.146058
XAF 657.108248
XAG 0.014306
XAU 0.00023
XCD 3.108487
XCG 2.072531
XDR 0.819555
XOF 661.945035
XPF 119.331742
YER 274.323586
ZAR 19.240229
ZMK 10353.228016
ZMW 22.395236
ZWL 370.365589
  • CMSD

    -0.0900

    22.9

    -0.39%

  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • CMSC

    -0.0150

    22.975

    -0.07%

  • GSK

    0.3900

    53.78

    +0.73%

  • BP

    0.2400

    42.91

    +0.56%

  • RIO

    2.0400

    89.87

    +2.27%

  • BCC

    1.6900

    71.69

    +2.36%

  • BCE

    0.6421

    25.89

    +2.48%

  • BTI

    1.0150

    60.945

    +1.67%

  • RELX

    0.3500

    34.49

    +1.01%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1500

    16.4

    -0.91%

  • VOD

    0.1900

    14.6

    +1.3%

  • JRI

    -0.0450

    12.545

    -0.36%

  • NGG

    -0.0100

    90.89

    -0.01%

  • AZN

    2.1500

    192.05

    +1.12%

Labour vs luxury: virus tracing highlights China's inequality
Labour vs luxury: virus tracing highlights China's inequality

Labour vs luxury: virus tracing highlights China's inequality

The stark contrast between the lives of two coronavirus patients unearthed by Chinese contact tracers sparked a widespread debate on Thursday over the country's entrenched wealth inequality.

Text size:

One patient recently infected in Beijing went skiing, shopped at Dior and watched live comedy.

Another hauled construction waste through the night across China's capital, working more than a dozen odd jobs in two weeks while he searched for a missing son.

Chinese authorities regularly release semi-anonymous descriptions of Covid-19 patients' movements in the days leading up to their diagnosis as part of contact tracing efforts.

Beijing is battling a fresh Covid outbreak just days before the start of the Winter Olympics, reporting six new locally transmitted cases over the past week.

The itinerary of a 44-year-old man surnamed Yue, who was found to have an asymptomatic infection on Tuesday, went viral for the life of hardship it revealed.

Yue, a native of Henan province, visited two dozen locations including construction sites for work from January 1 to January 17, often late at night, and ate out only once -- at a budget noodle restaurant.

An interview with Yue published by the state-run China Newsweek revealed that the man had come to Beijing to search for his missing adult son, and that he was working to support his younger son as well as his parents, who were unwell.

Yue said his wife worked for a kelp seller in Shandong province, earning only 10,000 yuan ($1,577) each year, while he was able to make a similar amount doing odd jobs in Beijing in less than two months.

Chinese media quickly dubbed Yue the "most exhausted man found by contact tracers", with many social media users pointing out that his plight was not uncommon among the country's millions of migrant workers.

"He represents the majority of disadvantaged people struggling at the bottom of society," one user on the Twitter-like Weibo commented.

Others pointed out that Yue's case stood in stark contrast with the lifestyle of another Covid-19 patient reported in Beijing last week.

The earlier patient, an affluent office worker, had celebrated New Year's Day with a Peking duck lunch, shopped at a luxury boutique and visited a theatre the next day. She then went skiing the following weekend.

The viral online discussions about the two cases come as Chinese President Xi Jinping launches a "common prosperity" initiative to reduce economic inequality.

It has included crackdowns on tax evasion and excessive incomes in the entertainment and tech industries.

China's breakneck development in recent decades has pulled hundreds of millions out of poverty but the world's most populous nation remains a deeply unequal place.

The richest 20 percent earn more than 10 times the poorest 20 percent, according to Bloomberg News, a wider wealth gap than in the United States or European countries such as Germany and France.

A.Murugan--DT