<p>When the Covid-19 pandemic forced Wang Wei to shut his tourism company, the Tianjin native poured his life-savings of 80,000 yuan ($11,785) into selling coffee from the back of his green Suzuki micro van in the Chinese capital Beijing.</p>.<p>Since June, Wang has driven his mobile coffee booth from car boot fair to car boot fair, offering hand-brewed coffee steeped in an assortment of liqueurs.</p>.<p>Once considered too low-status for many, peddling wares on the street has made a comeback as people who lost their jobs or closed down their businesses seek new ways to make a living and work around China's relentless anti-Covid policies.</p>.<p>Hospitality, tourism and after-school tutoring have been particularly hard hit.</p>.<p>Wang, 40, gave up a bricks-and-mortar coffee shop in Tianjin in 2020 when the pandemic first hit. Overseas group tours he used to organise also took a blow that year, with a lucrative trip to see the aurora borealis cancelled, costing him hundreds of thousands of yuan in lost earnings.</p>.<p><strong>Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/china-says-covid-has-exacerbated-decline-in-births-marriages-1138543.html" target="_blank">China says Covid has exacerbated decline in births, marriages</a></strong></p>.<p>This year, the spread of the Omicron variant across China was the final nail in the coffin, making his group tours to the Chinese backcountry impossible.</p>.<p>Wang started running his mobile coffee booth this summer, after car boot fairs emerged in big southern cities like Chengdu, Chongqing and Guangzhou.</p>.<p>Under a canopy extending from Wang's van, customers relax in camping chairs, with soft lights in the evening completing the glamping experience.</p>.<p>"The rising popularity of this car boot sale market has helped me tide over the most difficult of times," said Wang, who reckons he earns about 1,000 yuan a day.</p>.<p><strong>Jobless youth</strong></p>.<p>China's economy barely grew in April-June. Youth unemployment has remained high, reaching a record 19.9% in July, the fourth month in which the rate had broken records.</p>.<p>Pan, 25, closed his bar in Shenzhen after a Covid outbreak in March, saddling him with over 100,000 yuan in debts.</p>.<p>"I was pretty down, and one night, my fiancée Annie, wanting to cheer me up, took me to a watering hole in a quiet area with warm, faint lights and soft music," he said.</p>.<p>That was when he saw a couple selling liquor at an outdoor stall, inspiring him to do the same - but from his Tesla.</p>.<p>"My best friend lent me 3,000 yuan, which became the initial investment for our pop-up liquor shop," Pan said.</p>.<p>Pan and Annie ran out of money in their first week, but their determination paid off, with daily revenues since climbing as high as 7,800 yuan.</p>.<p>"In the future, we plan to travel the country with our Tesla and sell liquor from the boot of our car in cities we enjoy the most," said Pan.</p>.<p><strong>'Penniless'</strong></p>.<p>Policymakers, in tacit admittance jobs are harder to come by, have encouraged "flexible" employment in the informal economy.</p>.<p>Even Beijing, which has long regarded makeshift market-places as beneath the capital, is closing an eye to car boot sales.</p>.<p>Liu, 30, used to make a living teaching Beijing kids how to solve the Rubik's Cube, but after in person learning was shuttered due to Covid-19, she became "penniless".</p>.<p>She now sells coffee from the back of her small van and hopes her small business will pull her out of her financial straits.</p>.<p>"We are still losing money at this stage, I get less than 100 yuan a day most of the time - not enough for meals and transportation," she said. "But I'm happy just being occupied."</p>.<p>($1 = 6.7879 Chinese yuan renminbi)</p>
<p>When the Covid-19 pandemic forced Wang Wei to shut his tourism company, the Tianjin native poured his life-savings of 80,000 yuan ($11,785) into selling coffee from the back of his green Suzuki micro van in the Chinese capital Beijing.</p>.<p>Since June, Wang has driven his mobile coffee booth from car boot fair to car boot fair, offering hand-brewed coffee steeped in an assortment of liqueurs.</p>.<p>Once considered too low-status for many, peddling wares on the street has made a comeback as people who lost their jobs or closed down their businesses seek new ways to make a living and work around China's relentless anti-Covid policies.</p>.<p>Hospitality, tourism and after-school tutoring have been particularly hard hit.</p>.<p>Wang, 40, gave up a bricks-and-mortar coffee shop in Tianjin in 2020 when the pandemic first hit. Overseas group tours he used to organise also took a blow that year, with a lucrative trip to see the aurora borealis cancelled, costing him hundreds of thousands of yuan in lost earnings.</p>.<p><strong>Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/china-says-covid-has-exacerbated-decline-in-births-marriages-1138543.html" target="_blank">China says Covid has exacerbated decline in births, marriages</a></strong></p>.<p>This year, the spread of the Omicron variant across China was the final nail in the coffin, making his group tours to the Chinese backcountry impossible.</p>.<p>Wang started running his mobile coffee booth this summer, after car boot fairs emerged in big southern cities like Chengdu, Chongqing and Guangzhou.</p>.<p>Under a canopy extending from Wang's van, customers relax in camping chairs, with soft lights in the evening completing the glamping experience.</p>.<p>"The rising popularity of this car boot sale market has helped me tide over the most difficult of times," said Wang, who reckons he earns about 1,000 yuan a day.</p>.<p><strong>Jobless youth</strong></p>.<p>China's economy barely grew in April-June. Youth unemployment has remained high, reaching a record 19.9% in July, the fourth month in which the rate had broken records.</p>.<p>Pan, 25, closed his bar in Shenzhen after a Covid outbreak in March, saddling him with over 100,000 yuan in debts.</p>.<p>"I was pretty down, and one night, my fiancée Annie, wanting to cheer me up, took me to a watering hole in a quiet area with warm, faint lights and soft music," he said.</p>.<p>That was when he saw a couple selling liquor at an outdoor stall, inspiring him to do the same - but from his Tesla.</p>.<p>"My best friend lent me 3,000 yuan, which became the initial investment for our pop-up liquor shop," Pan said.</p>.<p>Pan and Annie ran out of money in their first week, but their determination paid off, with daily revenues since climbing as high as 7,800 yuan.</p>.<p>"In the future, we plan to travel the country with our Tesla and sell liquor from the boot of our car in cities we enjoy the most," said Pan.</p>.<p><strong>'Penniless'</strong></p>.<p>Policymakers, in tacit admittance jobs are harder to come by, have encouraged "flexible" employment in the informal economy.</p>.<p>Even Beijing, which has long regarded makeshift market-places as beneath the capital, is closing an eye to car boot sales.</p>.<p>Liu, 30, used to make a living teaching Beijing kids how to solve the Rubik's Cube, but after in person learning was shuttered due to Covid-19, she became "penniless".</p>.<p>She now sells coffee from the back of her small van and hopes her small business will pull her out of her financial straits.</p>.<p>"We are still losing money at this stage, I get less than 100 yuan a day most of the time - not enough for meals and transportation," she said. "But I'm happy just being occupied."</p>.<p>($1 = 6.7879 Chinese yuan renminbi)</p>