China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Senior care dilemma as cross-border option ends

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Fewer older people from Hong Kong are moving to the mainland to take advantage of lower costs to fund their retirement, as reports.

Living on the other side of the border used to be a popular option for retired seniors in Hong Kong, especially as they often had to wait years to be allocated a place at a local nursing home.

Larger homes, a lower cost of living and a better social environmen­t were some of the factors that prompted seniors to spend the autumn of their lives in the Chinese mainland.

However, in recent years the number choosing to make the move has fallen.

The appreciati­on of the yuan against the Hong Kong dollar has resulted in a higher cost of living on the mainland, so it is no longer a cheap option for Hong Kong seniors, especially as they do not qualify for free use of the mainland’s social welfare services and must use their savings to pay all expenses.

In October 2013, the Hong Kong government launched the Guangdong Scheme. It offers an allowance of HK$1,325 ($169) a month to eligible Hong Kong seniors age 65 or older who choose to reside in Guangdong province, but the number of people drawing the allowance is falling every year.

The Hong Kong Social Welfare Department said 14,600 people benefited from the policy in 2016-17, a fall of 15 percent from the 17,194 recorded in 2013-14.

The number of recipients of Portable Comprehens­ive Social Security Assistance has also declined.

The program is part of Comprehens­ive Social Security Assistance, a welfare measure that provides supplement­ary payments to Hong Kong residents whose income is too low to cover daily needs.

Portable Comprehens­ive Social Security Assistance extends the concept by ensuring that residents who choose to live in Guangdong or Fujian province still receive the monthly payment, boosted by an annual long-term supplement.

In 2015-16, 1,733 people claimed welfare benefits; a fall of about 25 percent from the 2,304 who claimed in 2012-13.

Cross-border care

The Hong Kong Jockey Club Shenzhen Society for Rehabilita­tion Yee Hong Heights is a residentia­l nursing center in Shenzhen, Guangdong. The center is supported by the Hong Kong Society for Rehabilita­tion, a charitable organizati­on.

It is one of just two facilities in Guangdong that implements the Pilot Residentia­l Care Services Scheme. Launched in June 2014, the scheme offers places at nursing homes and residentia­l care services to Hong Kong seniors on the city government’s Central Waiting List for Subsidized Long Term Care Services.

The other facility is the Hong Kong Jockey Club Helping Hand Zhaoqing Home for the Elderly in Zhaoqing, part of an 11-city cluster in the Number of recipients of Portable Comprehens­ive Social Security Assistance Number of recipients of the Guangdong Scheme

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Residents watch television at Yee Hong Heights, a nursing home in Shenzhen favored by seniors from Hong Kong.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Residents watch television at Yee Hong Heights, a nursing home in Shenzhen favored by seniors from Hong Kong.

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