Published: 11:44, March 25, 2020 | Updated: 05:54, June 6, 2023
One fifth of US firms in China 'back to normal operations'
By Reuters

A worker monitors a production line of Swire Coca-Cola Beverages Hubei Limited in Wuhan, central China's Hubei province, March 24, 2020. (XIAO YIJIU / XINHUA)

BEIJING - More than one fifth of American companies in China are back to normal operations after widespread disruptions caused by the coronavirus epidemic, a survey showed Wednesday.

Nearly a quarter of the respondents to a survey by the American Chamber of Commerce in China said they expected a return to normal operations by end April

Nearly a quarter of the respondents to the survey by the American Chamber of Commerce in China said they expected a return to normal operations by the end of April, although another fifth expect delays throughout the summer.

“This is one of the areas that I think provides some sense of optimism,” the chamber’s president, Alan Beebe, said at a news conference accompanying the survey’s release.

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Half of the 119 respondents to the survey are experiencing revenue declines of over 10 percent, and 14 percent reported losing at least a half-million yuan (US$70,784) per day as a result of delays to re-opening businesses.

The survey also highlighted the reliance of American companies on China’s small and medium-sized businesses (SMEs), which have been slowest to get back to work and are most vulnerable to cash flow disruptions.

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Eight in ten respondents said SMEs contribute up to half of annual revenues, and over a tenth said that 75 percent or more of their supply chain depends on SMEs.

The chamber is calling for its members to directly support their SME suppliers and customers, Beebe said.