Iran Daily

20% of Hong Kong residents live in poverty

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A record number of Hong Kong residents live in poverty, with one fifth of the population falling below the poverty line despite economic growth, according to new government figures.

The number of people living below the poverty line rose to 1.35 million in 2016, about 20 percent of the city’s population. The number is the highest number of poor since the government began publishing statistics in 2009, reported The Guardian.

Despite opulent wealth, Hong Kong is a deeply unequal society. It is the world’s most unaffordab­le housing market and poorer residents live in squalid conditions, with some living in ‘coffin homes’ — rows of wooden boxes crammed into tiny flats.

The number of poor rose despite the government raising the poverty line last year. For single person households it is set at £388. It is £873 for a two person home and £1,455 for a family of three. In the city’s poorest district of Sham Shui Po, which is home to large numbers of recent immigrants and ethnic minorities, the poverty rate rose to nearly a quarter of the population.

Hong Kong officials blamed the increase in poverty on an aging population, and the rate for residents over 65 was about 32 percent.

Social groups criticized the government for its lack of action on poverty alleviatio­n and demanded an increase in welfare payments.

“Economic growth cannot help the lower classes share in the economic achievemen­ts,” said a spokesman for the Society for Community Organizati­on, an NGO that works with the poor.

“Reflecting on the grim poverty in Hong Kong, the government’s poverty alleviatio­n measures lack strength, precision and intensity.”

The group called on the government to pass laws combating age discrimina­tion and increase welfare schemes for the elderly. The city’s minimum wage is £3.35 per hour and is reviewed every two years.

The large number of poor in Hong Kong rose despite the government posting a £10.7 billion surplus in the most recent fiscal year. Hong Kong’s GDP per capita is ranked among the highest of any country or territory, according to the World Bank, and exceeds the UK, Germany and Japan.

Wealth is most apparent in the city’s chronicall­y unaffordab­le property market. A recent analysis found that prices for parking spaces were rising faster than for flats in some parts of Hong Kong.

In a sample of three housing estates, parking bay prices rose by an average of 167 percent in the past six years, while flat prices increased by 52 percent.

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theguardia­n.com

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