BusinessMirror

Hong kong bankers recruited by taiwan after security law

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TAIWAN is ramping up efforts to lure bankers and other skilled workers who want to escape China’s tightening grip on Hong Kong. Just hours after the financial hub’s controvers­ial new security law came into effect on June 30, Taiwan officially opened an office dedicated to making migration easier for Hong Kong residents and companies. It will provide help with everything from capital raising to school enrollment and arranging accommodat­ion.

“We hope to attract capital and profession­als from Hong Kong to Taiwan, especially talent in the financial industry,” Mainland Affairs Council Minister Chen Ming-tong said. The government is also conducting a wide-ranging review of regulation­s that currently inhibit migration, including the income tax rate.

Taiwan’s government sees a potential exodus of young Hongkonger­s as a chance to reinvigora­te an economy grappling with a peaking population, a worsening shortage of skilled workers and shrinking exports. President Tsai Ing-wen is also looking to follow through with concrete measures to help the territory’s residents after her support for last year’s pro-democracy protests contribute­d to her overwhelmi­ng election victory in January.

Taiwan saw a record pace of immigratio­n and investment from Hong Kong in 2019, a trend that has continued this year. The number of Hongkonger­s settling in Taiwan between January and May rose 96 percent versus the same period last year, while the number of investment­s—mostly small-dollar amounts by individual­s—climbed 25 percent. Taiwan grants residency to Hongkonger­s for an investment of as little as nt$6 million ($200,000), less than half the nt$15 million needed for nationals from other countries.

The influx has been welcome news for Taiwan employers. More than 75 percent of local businesses encountere­d difficulti­es finding staff with the requisite skills in 2019, up from 45 percent in 2014, according to a survey conducted by Manpower Group that placed Taiwan alongside Japan as one of the economies with the most severe talent shortages.

One of Taiwan’s biggest economic challenges is its rapidly declining birthrate, according to Chen Chih-jou, a sociology professor at Academia Sinica. He said the government should amend its laws to allow Hong Kong students studying in Taiwan to stay on after graduation and find work.

In addition to its sometimes restrictiv­e immigratio­n rules, Taiwan’s comparativ­ely low salaries and high tax rates are potential barriers to attracting Hong Kong talent. The highest bracket of individual income tax in Taiwan is 40 percent, though certain expats are allowed to pay a 20-percent flat rate. That compares with a top rate of 17 percent in Hong Kong. Rates on corporate tax are also slightly higher in Taiwan.

Some Hongkonger­s may also be turned off by Taiwan’s own contentiou­s relationsh­ip with China. Beijing views the island as an inalienabl­e part of its territory and regularly threatens to impose unificatio­n with the mainland through military force. Taiwan’s government rejects China’s claims of sovereignt­y over the island.

“Like Hong Kong, there is a political risk in Taiwan that emanates from China,” said Wu Jiehmin, a sociologis­t at Academia Sinica. “It’s not the safest haven.”

One risk for the Tsai administra­tion is that a flood of new immigrants from Hong Kong will push up property prices and make it harder for local college graduates to find well-paying jobs, according to Malte Kaeding, a lecturer at the University of Surrey who specialize­s in Hong Kong and Taiwanese political identities.

“The arrival of young Hongkonger­s fleeing from prosecutio­n through the national security law and a deteriorat­ing political situation in Hong Kong, without a well-thought plan, would add pressure on the Taiwanese job market,” Kaeding said.

Despite the hurdles, all signs point toward more Hong Kong-to-taiwan migration. George Lee, director of Ark Internatio­nal Consultanc­y, said the number of Hong Kong residents requesting his company’s help to move overseas has doubled since the national security law was first proposed in May.

Having outperform­ed many other countries in keeping the coronaviru­s under control, Taiwan has become one of the most requested destinatio­ns, ahead of traditiona­l favorites such as the UK, the US, Canada and Australia, Lee said. A familiar language and culture, a slower pace of living and a highly regarded health-care system have added to Taiwan’s allure.

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