China Daily

HK youth encouraged to pursue their dreams in Greater Bay Area

- By LUO WEITENG sophia@chinadaily­hk.com

In order to nurture Hong Kong youth’s sense of belonging to the motherland, the special administra­tive region is joining hands with Guangdong province to officially kick off three programs as part of the plan to essentiall­y help talented Hong Kong youth take part in the big story unfolding across the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area.

“The Bay Area is a natural place for our young people to venture into and take advantage of the golden opportunit­ies, right under their noses, brought about by China’s innovation and entreprene­urship,” Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam Cheng Yuet-ngor said at a ceremony in Hong Kong on Friday.

The ceremony — “Greater Bay Area: Starting Line to a Bright Future” with a theme of youth developmen­t — took place as a tribute to the second anniversar­y of the promulgati­on of the Outline Developmen­t Plan for the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area.

The event witnessed the official launch of three programs spearheade­d by the Guangdong and Hong Kong government­s and tailor made for young Hong Kong talent, who are known for their multilingu­al abilities, as they aspire to go beyond the city to seek out greener pastures and realize their aspiration­s on a larger stage.

One bright spot is the Greater Bay Area Youth Employment Scheme, announced by Lam in her policy address in November. The scheme provides 2,000 positions, around 700 of which are designated for innovation and technology posts. The Hong Kong SAR government will grant a monthly allowance of HK$10,000 ($1289.4) to enterprise­s for each graduate employed for up to 18 months.

The scheme comes at a critical time as Lam warned in the policy blueprint that “the city’s youth unemployme­nt rate may remain at double digits for some time taking into account Hong Kong’s economy and market scale”.

Since applicatio­ns for the scheme opened on Jan 8, Lam said as many as 200 companies have expressed keen interest and considered recruiting local talent. Global accounting firm Pricewater­houseCoope­rs, for instance, plans to offer 100 job positions.

In October, during the 40th anniversar­y of the establishm­ent of the Shenzhen Special Economic Zone, President Xi Jinping encouraged young people in Hong Kong and Macao to study and work on the mainland to strengthen their “sense of belonging”.

“As youth developmen­t across the Bay Area has been put at the top of the national agenda, Guangdong has been at the forefront of offering a much larger playing field for Hong Kong and Macao young talent,” Zhang Xin, vicegovern­or of Guangdong province, said in a recorded video.

Zhang said the first batch of 10 youth entreprene­urial bases across the Bay Area, to which the Guangdong and Hong Kong government­s jointly presented a plaque in May 2019, are well underway.

Meanwhile, the region is attracting Hong Kong entreprene­urs by offering generous subsidies for business startup costs. A batch of Guangdong-based positions in local government­s and public institutio­ns are also open to or even designated for Hong Kong youth.

Today, Guangdong houses nearly 600 Hong Kong/Macao-based startup teams employing more than 4,000 talented youth. Zhang pledged concerted efforts and closer cooperatio­n with his Hong Kong counterpar­ts to press ahead with the Greater Bay Area Youth Employment Scheme to help Hong Kong youth get their careers off the ground across the region.

For the Funding Scheme for Youth Entreprene­urship in the Bay Area, Lam vowed to provide HK$100 million for more than 10 nongovernm­ental organizati­ons to implement youth entreprene­urship projects, and for approximat­ely 200 youth startups. Nearly 4,000 young people will be given better entreprene­urial support and incubation services.

Meanwhile, the Funding Scheme for Experienti­al Programmes at Innovation and Entreprene­urial Bases in the Bay Area will provide subsidies for NGOs. Every NGO can have no more than two projects funded, with the funding of each project limited to HK$700,000, Lam added.

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