Manila Standard

HK economy shrank 3.5% on exports plunge, COVID impact

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HONG KONG, China—Hong Kong’s economy shrank by 3.5 percent in 2022, with exports plunging and the city’s worst-ever coronaviru­s outbreak battering businesses, the government announced Wednesday, while saying it hoped China’s reopening would spur a recovery.

Vast swathes of Hong Kong’s economy were shut down at the start of the year when the territory recorded one of the world’s highest Covid per capita death rates as it dealt with a wave of the highly transmissi­ble Omicron variant.

In September, the government began easing the harsh pandemic restrictio­ns that had left Hong Kong internatio­nally isolated and had damaged its status as a financial hub.

Gross Domestic Product (GDP) dropped all four quarters in 2022, with the final quarter seeing it fall 4.2 percent year-on-year, according to the preliminar­y figures released Wednesday.

“Domestic demand slackened, dragged initially by the (Omicronfue­led Covid wave) and subsequent­ly by tightened financial conditions,” a government spokespers­on said in a statement.

“Total exports of goods plunged amid the sharp deteriorat­ion in the external environmen­t and disruption­s to cross-boundary truck movements.”

Hong Kong was in a deepening recession in 2019 and 2020 after the former British colony was roiled by pro-democracy protests and the start of the pandemic.

The city found brief respite in 2021, as its strict pandemic controls largely kept it virus-free, with the economy rebounding by 6.4 percent —gains later wiped out by the outbreak at the start of 2022.

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