China dreams on hold: heartland city feels chill of economic slowdown

By Philip Wen, Stella Qiu and Yawen Chen

ZHENGZHOU, China, May 28 (Reuters) - For the last decade, the city of Zhengzhou has been getting a taste of the Chinese dream.

Fuelled by investment, including large subsidies from the central government in Beijing, the provincial capital of the inland province of Henan has boomed.

Once an impoverished city of 10 million set between the Yellow and Yangtze rivers, Zhengzhou now boasts a gleaming downtown skyline and a cascade of freeway overpasses. An upgraded rail network has helped turn the city into a logistics hub, linking China's output with overland shipments to Europe as part of the Belt and Road initiative.

The Apple supplier Foxconn built the world's largest iPhone factory in Zhengzhou.

For many across Henan, a province of 100 million people, Zhenghzou has become a symbol of achievement and opportunity in China's hinterland - a magnet for those leaving pig farms and wheat fields in search of better lives.

Personal incomes in Zhengzhou over the past decade have doubled on average, hitting 33,105 yuan ($4,791) last year. That has allowed many residents a taste of middle class life; consumer appliances, luxury goods and apartments of their own.

Automakers like GM, Honda and Nissan, and consumer brands like Christian Dior and Cartier, have taken note, betting that rising incomes in cities like Zhengzhou will open new and expanding markets for them.

But an economic slowdown that began in late 2018 appears to have accentuated uncertainties in the city. With momentum slowing across the board from real estate to the consumer and tech sectors, some here feel their chances of moving up the social ladder have diminished as the cost of living outpaces income growth. Once abundant opportunities now seem to be drying up.

Reuters reporters travelled to Zhengzhou in late 2018 and early 2019 to talk to dozens of business owners, consumers and people hoping to buy homes. Many expressed anxiety or doubts about their ability to hold on to or achieve the dreams of prosperity promised by President Xi Jinping.

These are three of their stories.

They indicate how hard it will be for China to build a new foundation for the economy of its future in inland provinces like Henan, and are a reality check for global retailers searching for lucrative new markets.

THE ENTREPRENEUR

For as long as he can remember, Gong Tao wanted nothing more than to become an entrepreneur like his father.

A travelling salesman of Chinese calligraphy brushes, his father eked out a living crisscrossing Henan to provide for the family, while imbuing in Gong the value of hard work.