Special Report: Global Financial Crisis
2009 Spring Festival travel rush
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Travelers wait to enter Beijing West
Railway Station in Beijing, capital of China, on Jan. 16, 2009. The
passenger flow in 40-day Spring Festival transportation, or Chunyun in
Chinese, run up as the Chinese lunar New Year draws near. The Spring
Festival, or the Chinese lunar New Year, falls on Jan. 26 this year.
(Xinhua/Fan Jiashan) Photo Gallery>>> |
by Xinhua writers Lin Jianyang and Huang Yan
GUANGZHOU, Jan. 17 (Xinhua) -- Outside a temporary
waiting room at the Guangzhou Railway Station, a rail hub in south China, a man
sat with his mother and daughter on a duffel bag.
Ahead of the three-generation family was a 1,250-mile
journey from the coastal area to their rural inland hometown of Hechuan,
Chongqing.
They were making some of the estimated 2.32 billion
trips that will be taken during the Spring Festival, the Lunar New Year holiday,
for family reunions. This year, the holiday falls on Jan.26.
LOTS OF
BAGGAGE
Wang, who would only give his surname, and his
relatives looked more like they were relocating than going on a holiday. Besides
their three shoulder bags, they also had a TV, a fan, three electric rice
cookers, four buckets and a shoulder pole for Wang to carry more bags than their
hands could hold.
"I probably won't be back after the holiday, like in
previous years," said Wang. He worked for eight years on construction sites in
Guangzhou, capital of China's export heartland Guangdong Province, which is next
to Hong Kong.
The economic boom of the past decades benefited huge
numbers of farmers like Wang, who left the countryside for a better future in
the city. Wang said he could earn more than 1,400 yuan (about 205 U.S. dollars)
per month at his construction jobs.
That was much better than toiling on the farm.
According to Chen Xiwen, a top agricultural expert, Chinese farmers' per capita
net income stood at 4,700 yuan (688 U.S. dollars) on average in 2008, less than
one-third of that of urban residents.
FINANCIAL CRISIS HITS
HOME
Wang's world fell apart in the second half of last
year, as the financial crisis gripped the world economy and crippled demand for
made-in-China products.
Since October, export-oriented factories in Guangdong
and other parts of the country have cut back on overtime, fired staff or closed
as their orders were cancelled and payments delayed.
Wang's last employer in construction was affected as
well, cutting jobs and wages.
"Given that my pay has fallen by about half, my
family and I can no longer afford to live here," Wang said. "But we hate to
leave these things behind, so we decided to take them home."
Elsewhere at the station, there were many homebound
migrant workers carrying more baggage than usual. They, too, were probably
leaving for good, or at least a long time.
Guangdong, which accounted for more than a quarter of
China's foreign trade last year, had some 26.7 million migrant workers, one
third of the country's inter-province workers, according to the provincial
government.
DIFFERENT THIS
TIME
Year after year, at Lunar New Year approaches,
Chinese people go on the move in the "chunyun," or Spring Festival travel rush,
recognized as the world's biggest human migration.
During chunyun, hundreds of millions of people
squeeze into cars, buses, trains, ships and planes to go home and then return to
where they work or study.
This year, the entire transportation sector is
expected to provide 2.32 billion trips during the 40-day chunyun, which started
this past Sunday, 15 days ahead of Lunar New Year.
This means 58 million people, about the population of
Italy, will be on the move every day.
Each year, the migration leads to familiar, striking
scenes: frustrated and tearful passengers, endless lines, packed stations,
people crawling into trains through windows, sardine-like conditions and frantic
staff.
Every year, this human tide puts the transport system
to a formidable test, in particular the rail network, which often has difficulty
coping.
This time, these difficulties are exacerbated by the
human fallout of the financial crisis, which has had an unprecedented impact on
chunyun.
GOING HOME
EARLIER
The Wangs were not among the initial wave of
homebound migrants. Some of his fellow townsmen went home as long as eight weeks
ago, when their factories laid them off or shut down entirely.
A report by the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences
has said more than 4 million migrants nationwide had so far gone home earlier
than usual. An investigation by the Ministry of Agriculture showed 6.5 percent
of the country's 130 million migrants, or about 8.4 million, had gone home
early.
In one dramatic case, four migrant families
(including children) who could no longer to eke out a living in Shantou, on the
Guangdong coast, went home with their belongings on three-wheeled motorcycles.
The 1,875-mile journey started Nov. 18 and took more than two weeks.
These homebound trips by migrants got chunyun off to
an early start this year. Usually, the travel season only begins about two weeks
before the Spring Festival.
Cao Jianguo, vice general manager of Guangzhou
Railway Group, said rail travel volume rose earlier and faster this year as
factories let workers go ahead of time amid the economic woes.
In November and December, Cao's organization
transported more than 6.48 million outbound passengers, up more than 20 percent
from the year-earlier level, a growth rate more than 10 percentage points higher
than in recent years. Many of them were migrant workers.
Wang Yongping, spokesman with the Ministry of
Railways (MOR), said the same developments have been seen nationwide.
Early this month, major rail hubs such as Guangzhou
in the south, Shanghai in the east and Beijing in the north have seen passenger
numbers rise earlier than in previous years.
MOR also attributed the earlier-than-usual travel
rush to an aberration of the calendar: this January has the fewest workdays,
leaving 14 days off for people across the country.
In addition to the three-day New Year break, Chinese
are also expecting a week-long Spring Festival holiday, which prompted many
homeward people to leave early to take advantage of the cluster of holidays.
SYSTEM UNDER
PRESSURE
Even with the early departures of millions of
migrants, the transport sector said the estimated 2.32 billion trips that would
be taken during chunyun represented a 5-percent rise from last year.
Xu Yahua, deputy director of the road transport
section at the Ministry of Transport, said the roads would carry nearly 2.1
billion passengers, up 3 percent from last year.
The MOR estimated it would serve 188 million
passengers, up 8 percent over the year-earlier level, which spokesman Wang said
would put the over-stretched rail network under huge pressure.
"We are expecting more passengers, not fewer. We will
face even tougher pressure this year," Wang said.
As of end-2008, China had more than 79,000 kilometers
of tracks in operation, nowhere near enough to meet demand, according to the
MOR.
During major holidays like the Spring Festival, the
network has always been strained. At such times, many trains are overcrowded
because they are cheaper than planes, safer than road transport and serve
far-flung areas.
But there is still a wide gap between what the rail
system can deliver and what passengers want.
GUANGDONG AN
EXAMPLE
In Guangdong, the provincial transport system is
expected to serve more than 140 million passengers during chunyun, a record
high. Most of the burden will fall on trains.
According to Wang, in recent years 30 percent to 40
percent of migrant workers stayed in Guangdong during chunyun. Demand was
strong, and they could earn extra money. This year, he said, far fewer workers
would stay.
Also, many of the 13 million migrant workers who
spent the last Spring Festival in Guangdong after the transport system was
immobilized by a long spell of heavy snow and ice were determined to go home
this year, he added.
The Guangzhou Railway Group said about 2,540
Guangdong-based enterprises had booked some 765,000 group tickets for their
homebound workers, a significant increase over recent years.
Zheng Qiang, an official with Sichuan's liaison
office in Guangzhou, said about 1.5 to 2 million of the 5 million migrant
workers from Sichuan were expected to return home for the Spring Festival. In
previous years, the number was less than 1 million.
UNCERTAIN
FUTURE
Migrant worker Wang has no idea of what he'll do
after chunyun. Others said they might try their luck in other cities. And that
uncertainty has created further complications for transportation authorities.
Every year, the system pulls out all the stops to
handle the chunyun rush. MOR spokesman Wang said the flow of migrant workers had
followed regular patterns in recent years, but this year will be more difficult
to plan. In part, that reflects a change in the school calendar, with many
Chinese schools planning to re-open later than usual.
Mostly, though, it reflects uncertainty in the lives
of migrants.
"Migrant workers will make new choices. Some of them
will return as usual, while others will hesitate. Those who worked in coastal
regions before might look for new jobs inland," he said. "We have to monitor the
situation closely."
