BIZCHINA / Review & Analysis |
HK's wealth gap must be narrowedBy Hong Liang (China Daily)Updated: 2007-06-26 14:16
The number of households earning HK$4,000 ($512) a month or less has swelled by 80,000 in the past decade, while those earning more than HK$40,000 have increased by 100,000. To put this in perspective, HK$4,000 is barely enough to rent a room for a month in the city. Dividing the population into 10 income groups, the figures show that the median income of the bottom two groups dropped 12.5 percent from HK$4,000 a decade ago to HK$3,500, while the median income of the top two increased 20 percent from HK$25,000 to HK$30,000. What is worse, some economists have warned that the middle-class of Hong Kong is gradually dissolving as many of them are beginning to slip into the low-income segment, while a few only are making it to the top. This is depressing news for Hong Kong people, especially those of my generation, with vivid memories of a rapidly developing economy that offered almost unlimited opportunities for young people to move up the social ladder. That was the time when the super-structure of an international financial center, created by the large influx of foreign banks and other financial institutions, was beginning to take shape in Hong Kong, while the economy was anchored by a booming manufacturing sector which guaranteed a strong demand for workers. There were no figures available to show what the income gap between the poor
and the rich was like at that time. It could well be wider than what we are
seeing now. But when jobs were plentiful and incomes were rising, few people had
time to complain. In recent years, the transformation to a service economy has been accompanied by the wholesale relocation of almost all manufacturing facilities to the Pearl River Delta region. The displaced factory workers were largely absorbed by the fast expanding service sector in the go-go years of the 1990s when the economy was kept on the boil by huge profits earned from the export of goods made in mainland factories either owned or contracted by Hong Kong manufacturers.
Without the protection of a minimum wage law, many thousands of displaced
workers during the recession had to fight for available temporary employment at
wages largely dictated by the service providers.
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