Chen et al., 2020
People’s movements within and between cities
Data from several other sources allowed the researchers to see how people reacted to the lockdowns. Indices of peoples’ movements, provided by internet search-engine and mapping giant Baidu, indicate that when China imposed lockdowns, people’s activities were curtailed within days. The index reflecting the intensity of travel within cities dropped by more than half in just three days and remained low for six weeks, only to pick up in mid-March. The indices outside Hubei recovered more rapidly, and by March had almost reached their level of early January. Travel to and from cities in Hubei was nearly frozen, and travel between other cities also experienced a sharp decline, though to a lesser extent.
Meanwhile, according to location data from three major mobile carriers, when the Wuhan lockdown was imposed, many people stopped going to offices and shopping malls and hunkered down at home instead. And sales data from an undisclosed online platform tell the same story, showing that the share of sales going to digital and electronic goods fell dramatically, while the share going to groceries spiked.
‘Large, severe, and perhaps still mounting’
“In sum, the economic impact of lockdown on China is large, severe, and perhaps still mounting,” despite various massive economic and financial policies quickly rolled out by top authorities in Beijing, write Chen, He, Hsieh, and Song. In terms of economic recovery, they note, China faces a daunting challenge, especially because the deteriorating pandemic situation around the globe has brought China’s export sector almost to a halt, and could make it difficult for Chinese companies to access critical inputs.