Each night under the cover of darkness, Shanghai resident Zhang Hongyan and her neighbours conduct barter transactions to get essentials which are in short supply due to the city’s coronavirus lockdown.
The residents conduct their bartering at night to avoid being caught outside their homes by authorities who enforce strict penalties for anyone caught breaking lockdown. On Thursday night, Zhang, who lives in the Baoshan district of the city, offered 10 eggs for barter in a WeChat group chat in the hope of receiving some fruit in return. On this occasion she was lucky, one of her neighbours agreed to give her a few apples in exchange.
“It’s not convenient during the day. I’ll leave the eggs at your building gate now and you go get them quickly,” she told the neighbour, named Anan, at 10 minutes to midnight.
Things being swapped range from garlic to sanitary towels after residents were ordered to stay at home to curb the city’s worst Covid-19 outbreak to date — driven by the highly transmissible Omicron variant of the virus.
While most households have received some supplies from the government after most of the city went into lockdown from Monday last week, the ancient way of trading has regained popularity within resident compounds as people find supplies running low and delivery services unable to keep up with demand.
On Thursday Shanghai recorded over 21,000 new infections, of which 824 were symptomatic, pushing the total number of cases since March 1 to a new high of 131,000. There is no word from the municipal government yet when it will lift the citywide lockdown.
Cici Chen, a local woman living in a large residential compound in Songjiang district, said bartering had become an important part of her daily life and for residents in her building trying to help each other.
As the mother of a two-year-old child, Chen said she received baby milk formula powder and diapers from neighbours and in return she is trying to find them eggs and milk.
“Shanghainese are quite cold when it comes to relationships with neighbours, but this situation has brought our hearts together,” she said.
The practice is a little harder when the two sides live in different buildings, as the Shanghai government has stressed that the lockdown means people have to stay at home until restrictions are lifted. As a result people are unable to collect deliveries from the gates of their community or even dispose of their rubbish.
But despite the risks of being caught breaching the lockdown by leaving one’s building, many are doing just that in order to trade for basic supplies while the authorities struggle to contain the virus.
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