Life as one of China’s 13 million ‘deadbeats’ means slow trains, special ring tones

  • Individuals on a national list of ‘discredited individuals’ are barred from taking aeroplanes and high-speed trains
  • A total of 13 million individuals are on the credit blacklist maintained by China’s courts

Sarah Daiin Beijing
Passengers wait for a train to depart from the Hankou Railway Station in Wuhan, central China's Hubei province. In China, only those who cannot afford the high-speed train take the slow train. Photo: AP

David Kong was feeling crumpled after a recent business trip to Chongqing, which took more than 30 hours on a hard sleeper known locally in China as the “green-skin train” for its distinctive dark olive hue. The same journey would have taken just three hours by air, or about 12 hours by high speed train, but Kong could not take either as he was a “deadbeat”.

As one of 13 million officially designated “discredited individuals”, or laolai in Chinese, on a public database maintained by China’s Supreme Court, 47-year-old Kong is banned from spending on “luxuries”, whose definition includes air travel and fast trains.
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