Arab Times

Hong Kong unveils $2.4 bln economic package

Govt backs growth with subsidies, tax perks, loan guarantees

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HONG KONG, Aug 15, (RTRS): The Hong Kong government unveiled a HK$19.1 billion ($2.4 billion) package on Thursday to support a slowing economy as escalating political protests and the prolonged US-China trade war weigh heavily on the Asian financial centre.

Financial Secretary Paul Chan announced the package at a news conference as anti-government protests roiled Hong Kong for the third month. He said the government is expecting to lower its 2019 GDP growth forecast to 0%-1%, from the original 2%-3%.

The measures include subsidies for the underprivi­leged and business enterprise­s, as well as somewhat higher salary tax rebates.

The off-cycle support came ahead of the annual policy address in October and the budget, scheduled for early next year. Chan insisted the interventi­on was not related to political pressure from the protests.

“It is prudent and reasonable to assume that the economic headwinds will continue to be very strong,” he said.

The government will also provide a 90% guarantee for approved loans to small and medium sized businesses, create more constructi­on jobs, and hand HK$2.3 billion of subsidies to 900,000 school students.

Hong Kong will release its latest economic forecasts along with secondquar­ter data on Friday, though analysts said the April-June readings would not give a full picture of the sharp shock to businesses seen in the last two months.

Ten weeks of increasing­ly violent confrontat­ions between police and demonstrat­ors have plunged the internatio­nal business hub into its worst crisis since it reverted from British to Chinese rule in 1997.

Tourists are cancelling hotel bookings and retailers are forecastin­g a sharp drop in sales, adding to the pressure on local businesses from the yearlong trade war and China’s broader economic slowdown.

Hong Kong leader Carrie Lam last week warned the next downturn will hit the city’s economy like a “tsunami”, and said her administra­tion will provide more “daring measures” in supporting growth.

But Chan’s package is unlikely to ease the downward pressure on Hong Kong’s small and open economy, said Cliff Tan, East Asian head of global markets research at MUFG.

“The world’s going into recession ... Hong Kong will not be able to somehow ride that out without being affected,” he said, adding that China’s economy was also struggling.

Preliminar­y data showed Hong Kong’s economy expanded 0.6% in April-June from a year earlier, in line with the first quarter’s decade-low pace and much less than economists expected.

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