What measures does China take to recover its economy from the epidemic?

Focusing on ensuring the supply of living materials in Wuhan, Hubei and Beijing, comprehensive measures such as increasing supply, increasing inventory, ensuring production, ensuring transportation, stabilizing the market and stabilizing expectations are taken to ensure that the supply is generally sufficient and the prices are basically stable. Under the situation that the passage from Han to Hubei was controlled and the community was closed, emergency measures were taken to coordinate the supply of goods and increase the market supply, which quickly realized the transformation of the supply and marketing mode of urban living materials with a population of 10 million, providing a solid material guarantee for winning the defense war between Han and Hubei.

Legal basis:

Law of People's Republic of China (PRC) on the Prevention and Control of Infectious Diseases

Article 1 This Law is formulated for the purpose of preventing, controlling and eliminating the occurrence and prevalence of infectious diseases and safeguarding human health and public health.

Article 2 The State implements the policy of putting prevention first, combining prevention with control, classified management, relying on science and relying on the masses in the prevention and control of infectious diseases.

Article 3 Infectious diseases stipulated in this Law are classified into Class A, Class B and Class C. Class A infectious diseases refer to plague and cholera. Class B infectious diseases refer to: infectious atypical pneumonia, AIDS, viral hepatitis, polio, human infection with highly pathogenic avian influenza, measles, epidemic hemorrhagic fever, rabies, epidemic encephalitis B, dengue fever, anthrax, bacterial and amebic dysentery, tuberculosis, typhoid fever and paratyphoid fever, epidemic cerebrospinal meningitis, whooping cough, diphtheria, neonatal tetanus, scarlet fever, brucellosis, gonorrhea and syphilis.