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Interdisciplinary Lunchtime Seminar
Debt at a Distance: China’s Debt Collection Callers during Covid-19
Dr. Tom McDonald
(Department of Sociology, The University of Hong Kong)
Date/Time: November 17, 12:00 nn – 1:00 pm (HK time)
Venue: Conducted via Zoom
Enquiry: (852) 3917-5007, ihss@hku.hk
Interdisciplinary Lunchtime Seminar
Debt at a Distance: China’s Debt Collection Callers during Covid-19
Dr. Tom McDonald
(Department of Sociology, The University of Hong Kong)
Date/Time: November 17, 12:00 nn – 1:00 pm (HK time)
Venue: Conducted via Zoom
Enquiry: (852) 3917-5007, ihss@hku.hk
Title:
Debt at a Distance: China’s Debt Collection Callers during Covid-19
Speaker:
Dr. Tom McDonald (Department of Sociology, The University of Hong Kong)
Date/Time:
November 17, 2020, 12:00 nn – 1:00 pm (HK time)
Language:
English
Enquiry:
(Tel) (852) 3917-5007
(Email) ihss@hku.hk
Title:
Debt at a Distance: China’s Debt Collection Callers during Covid-19
Speaker:
Dr. Tom McDonald (Department of Sociology, The University of Hong Kong)
Date/Time:
November 17, 2020, 12:00 nn – 1:00 pm (HK time)
Language:
English
Enquiry:
(Tel) (852) 3917-5007
(Email) ihss@hku.hk
During the early stages of China’s Covid-19 outbreak — which happened to coincide with the nation’s Spring Festival celebrations — severe restrictions on nationwide travel were enacted, leaving millions numbers of workers stuck in their hometowns and unable to return to their workplaces. Many workers faced an unexpected shortfall in their earnings and as a result missed repayments on loans and credit cards. This paper examines how China’s financial institutions and debt collection agencies attempted to enforce debts “from a distance” during this period, along with debtors’ responses to these efforts. We document how both parties’ actions were framed by broader ongoing regulatory shifts whereby the state has aimed to ‘civilise’ debt collection in China. We ask what the implications of cold calling, debt collection scripts, automated messaging and Artificial Intelligence had for the moral performativity of debt collection and repayment? We argue that Covid-19 destabilised the moral norms surrounding debt, leaving debtors, debt collectors and the state struggling to decipher appropriate ways to enact debt relations.
Tom McDonald is an Anthropologist at the Department of Sociology, The University of Hong Kong. His research focuses on technology and society in China. His first co-authored book, How the World Changed Social Media (2016, UCL Press), details the findings of the UCL Why We Post project, an ERC-funded comparative ethnographic study on the use and consequences of social media around the world. His solely-authored monograph, Social Media in Rural China: Social Networks and Moral Frameworks (2016, UCL Press) describes his own extensive fieldwork in the Chinese countryside. His current research investigates the adoption of digital money platforms amongst migrant factory workers in Shenzhen, examining how such platforms are reworking monetary practices and social infrastructures amongst low-income labourers. He has published articles in several respected academic journals, including American Anthropologist, China Quarterly, and Ethnos.
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