Otago Daily Times

Migration not an easy sell

Against a backdrop of Beijing’s plan to integrate Hong Kong into a southern Chinese megalopoli­s, young people in the territory are being encouraged to consider moving to the mainland. Reuters’ Clare Jim reports.

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SOME Hong Kong officials and lawmakers are encouragin­g younger residents to consider living across the mainland China border so that they can escape the territory’s skyhigh apartment prices and find more job opportunit­ies. It is not an easy sell, but some proChina business leaders say resistance to the idea will eventually crumble.

The Government has seized upon a Beijing plan to integrate the former British colony into the Pearl River Delta to create the Greater Bay Area, a region comprising nine cities in

China’s Guangdong province, plus Hong Kong and Macau, that would have the equivalent of the fifthlarge­st economy in the world by 2030 and a population of nearly 70 million. Hong Kong’s population is at present about 7.4 million.

Moving to one of those other cities would mean that Hong Kong’s millennial generation, many of whom have been priced out of Hong Kong’s housing market, could afford to buy their own homes or rent more than a shoe box. They would also have a wider range of jobs to choose from.

They may miss the freedoms of Hong Kong that are guaranteed under a ‘‘one country, two systems’’ arrangemen­t for the 50 years after the British handover of the territory to China in 1997. In Hong Kong, for example, the media and the internet are relatively freewheeli­ng, while in China they are censored vigorously.

A further diffusion of people who are Hong Kongborn and bred into the mainland may dim support for the prodemocra­cy movement in the territory, especially if more rich mainlander­s move into Hong Kong to replace them.

But Beijing has made it clear that economic integratio­n is key to reinforcin­g its sovereignt­y over Hong Kong, and it gets support from within the business community.

‘‘We will no longer be Hong Kong people, but Greater Bay Area people,’’ Jonathan Choi, chairman of the Chinese General Chamber of Commerce of Hong Kong, told the Hong Kong Economic Times last month.

‘‘We should therefore focus on integratio­n rather than on the interests of Hong Kong,’’ said Choi, who is also a member of the Chinese People’s Political Consultati­ve Conference, the top advisory body to China’s Parliament.

Building bridges

A series of major infrastruc­ture projects due to be finished in the next three months are going to connect major cities in the region through fast trains and road bridges, reducing the time to commute to and from Hong Kong significan­tly.

‘‘That distance, I believe, will no longer be a problem once they have learned about the latest progress of our growing transport infrastruc­ture links with the Bay Area,’’ Hong Kong Chief Secretary Matthew Cheung said this month in a blog titled ‘‘Debunk the myths over GuangdongH­ong KongMacao Bay Area’’.

The migration has already been happening. At least 500,000 Hong Kong people lived in the mainland last year, up from 155,000 in 2009 and just 62,000 in 2003, according to official data.

It is a stunning transforma­tion from the days only 40 years ago when the Pearl River Delta was more of a sleepy, poor agricultur­al region that was not much more than a curiosity to people in Hong Kong. It is now one of the world’s industrial engines, whose cities have among the highest per capita incomes in China.

Property agents in southern China said they had seen a jump so far this year in the number of Hong Kong people looking to buy homes across the border, especially in cities such as Zhuhai and Zhongshan, although most were sophistica­ted investors rather than the youth the Government is targeting. One said the increase had been as much as 40%.

Jackie Chan, a Hong Kong investor unrelated to the movie star of the same name, bought a home in the southern Chinese city of Zhongshan in April, betting that Beijing’s backing of the Bay Area plan was sure to bolster prices.

‘‘I bought for the Greater Bay Area concept because it’s a national initiative and it will support the developmen­t of many new industries,’’ said Chan, who already owns four apartments in Hong Kong, among the world’s most expensive real estate markets.

In Zhongshan, homes can be snapped up for 15,070 yuan ($NZ3360) per square metre, while those in Zhuhai go for around 43,060 yuan per square metre — a steep discount to the roughly $HK161,460 ($NZ30,550) per square metre for an apartment in Hong Kong.

Still, the bulk of Bay Area purchases so far have been for investment purposes or holiday homes, rather than as primary residences.

Another barrier is China’s ‘‘Great Firewall’’, which ensures many foreign websites are blocked on the mainland in the name of maintainin­g social stability, but that is not the case in Hong Kong.

Reluctance shown in poll

While supporters of Hong Kong independen­ce remain a small minority in the city and the prodemocra­cy camp faces a crisis of confidence over its future, younger residents overwhelmi­ngly identify themselves as Hong Kong people rather than mainland Chinese.

Hong Kong Youth Power Associatio­n, a proestabli­shment organisati­on, published a survey in May that showed almost 60% of the 878 young people polled said they would not consider working or living in the Bay

Area.

Reasons included not wanting to be far from home, higher income taxes on the mainland and being unfamiliar with Chinese government policies.

Hardline activists say young people will just never buy into the idea of living across the border.

‘‘Many young people don’t reject the idea of visiting the mainland for fun. But if you want them to live there, you have your head in the clouds,’’ said prominent activist Nathan Law (24), who was elected as Hong Kong’s youngest legislator in history before he was ousted by the Government.

‘‘You can’t even use WhatsApp or watch YouTube videos. You are isolated from the world.’’

❛Many young people don’t reject the idea of visiting the mainland for fun. But if you want them

to live there, you have your head in the clouds❜

— activist Nathan Law

 ?? PHOTOS: REUTERS ?? Right up there . . . Ma On Shan peak towers over residentia­l apartments in Hong Kong.
PHOTOS: REUTERS Right up there . . . Ma On Shan peak towers over residentia­l apartments in Hong Kong.
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