2023 Chinese healthcare reform protests

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Date8 and 15 February 2023, 7 March 2023
Location
Wuhan and Dalian, China
Caused byExpenses resulting from the Chinese government's zero-COVID policy
MethodsProtests, demonstrations and protest songs
2023 Chinese healthcare reform protests
Part of protest and dissent in China
Date8 and 15 February 2023, 7 March 2023
Location
Wuhan and Dalian, China
Caused byExpenses resulting from the Chinese government's zero-COVID policy
MethodsProtests, demonstrations and protest songs
Parties
Lead figures
Number
Thousands of protesters (8 February 2023)

The 2023 Chinese healthcare reform protests were a series of simultaneous pensioner protests in the months that followed China's 2022 COVID-19 protests and the subsequent end of China's zero-COVID policies. On 15 February 2023, simultaneous mass protests of mostly elderly pensioners broke out in both Wuhan and Dalian.

The Chinese government announced that they are reducing subsidies for personal accounts in favor of pooled accounts, but some individuals raised concerns about the government's actual use of the funds. Yanzhong Huang, a senior fellow for Global Health at the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR), has suggested that the government's decision may not have been adequately explained to the public.[1]

China's healthcare system has long faced funding issues, and these challenges have only worsened in recent years due to the high cost of zero-COVID policies. As a result, local and regional authorities have attempted to cut back on spending, often at the expense of healthcare benefits for the elderly.[1][2]

Protests

On 8 February 2023, thousands of retirees in Wuhan gathered in front of the city government to protest the slashing of medical subsidies.[3]

On 15 February 2023, protests erupted in both Wuhan and Dalian in response to new health insurance reforms related to ongoing struggles within China's healthcare system and cash-strapped localities struggling to recover from zero-COVID expenditures. Most of the demonstrators were elderly citizens who opposed recent changes to the local healthcare insurance system, claiming that the reforms would make medical care more costly and reduce their access to it.[1]

During the demonstration, a group of protesters chanted various slogans, including "down with the reactionary government". In addition, they sang "The Internationale", a song that has been associated with communist movements across the globe and recently repurposed for use at protests in China.[1][4]

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