Historical bonds between HK, mainland will see region through unrest
By Li
Qiaoyi, Wang Wenwen and Chen Qingqing
Continuing
violence over the past three months has been tearing Hong Kong society apart,
with the opposition side stoking the flames by hyping the rhetoric that the
mainland is eroding Hong Kong. Many netizens in the mainland are also trying to
let off some steam with impractical ideas. Will the two sides’ mutual support
over the past few decades be wiped out by the unrest?
Findings
from the Global Times’ interviews with a handful of locals from different
sectors of society revealed that in the past, almost every Hongkonger was
inextricably linked with the mainland.
In the
words of Chan Kin-por, a member of the Legislative Council of Hong Kong who
chairs the LegCo Finance Committee, “Hong Kong and the mainland are essentially
blood relatives.”
Mutual support
The
hotel where Global Times reporters
stayed is located in Sheung Wan on Hong Kong Island. In the vicinity of the
hotel are many local restaurants dotted around a warren of winding streets.
These restaurants were mostly crowded with diners during meal times, but their
bosses and waiters never looked down on non-Cantonese speaking mainland
customers. They actively recommended their chef’s specials instead.
Compared
with the posh Central, Sheung Wan gives off a much more down-to-earth vibe.
Century-old establishments are not rare in Sheung Wan. Although stores that
hang Chinese knots and posters with the Chinese character ‘fu’ (wealth) are
only a few feet from Connaught Road, the site of frequent riots, they seem to
have been unfazed by the months-long unrest.
Diligence,
flexibility and good-naturedness were the first layers of color the early
settlers from the mainland added to Hong Kong. They are also the source of the
spirit that transformed the city from a fishing village into an international
metropolis.
Leung
Ming-hing, 57, came to Hong Kong from Shenzhen with his parents who hoped to
live a better life five decades ago.
“As long
as one worked hard, he could easily get along well with local people,” Leung
said, recalling his childhood when his family had to struggle to make a living.
The city
arguably changed the fate of Leung’s family.
The
mutual support between the mainland and Hong Kong could be said to be mostly
about individuals changing for the better before the reform and opening-up,
which became a turning point for the two sides to help each other jointly
change the nation for the better.
Chan
Kin-por made his first visit to the mainland in 1978 - the year that opened a
landmark chapter in China’s history with the start of reform and opening-up -
when he began his career in a local bank.
The maiden
visit left him the impression that the mainland was lagging behind in all
fields, he told the Global Times in
an exclusive interview in his office.
However,
that also meant tremendous opportunities. In the wake of the reform and
opening-up, many Hong Kong businessmen started to open factories in the
mainland, funneling capital, manufacturing technologies and business methods
into the motherland, giving a boost to the domestic economy, remarked Chan
Kin-por.
At its
peak in the Pearl River Delta, there were over 60,000 Hong Kong-invested
factories, employing 10 million employees, helping turn the region into the
world’s factory, according to Jonathan Choi Koon-shum, chairman of the Chinese
General Chamber of Commerce (CGCC).
Founded
in 1900, the CGCC is one of the oldest and biggest chambers in Hong Kong. The
CGCC began initiating training programs for senior officials and executives
from the mainland in 1982, and has witnessed years of vicissitudes brought by
the reform and opening-up.
Liu Ren,
vice general manager of Dailywin Watch Group, said he still remembers that when
he started to work at this Hong Kong-based watch manufacturer in 1996, senior
managers of its production line in South China’s Guangdong Province were all
businessmen from Hong Kong.
As more
labor-intensive industries like watch-making moved from Hong Kong to the
Chinese mainland during China’s economic reform and opening-up, Hong Kong
businesses played an important role in helping emerging sectors to grow in the
Pearl River Delta region.
“From
capital investment to technology transfer, Hong Kong businesses were teachers
for mainland companies,” Liu said, noting that the first batch of Hong Kong
businessmen investing in the mainland in the early 1980s-1990s also introduced
advanced management experience and technologies.
“Many
colleagues from Hong Kong taught us step by step. I worked as an intern for a
year after I started at Dailywin. All my managers were Hongkongers, and they
taught us a lot from design to craftwork,” he told the Global Times.
At that
time, there was a huge gap between the mainland and Hong Kong in terms of
salary and way of life. “But we wanted to communicate with each other, for
example, learn Cantonese to better understand our colleagues from Hong Kong,”
he said.
Strong backing
Hong
Kong also received backing from mainland through two major crises: the Asian
financial crisis in the late 1990s and the outbreak of Severe Acute Respiratory
Syndrome (SARS) in 2003.
Chan
Kin-por was still in the banking industry, working as an executive, in 1997,
when Hong Kong was hit by the financial tsunami. What hit him the hardest was
that a continued pay rise of over 10 percent annually, thanks to years of
growth in the local economy, came to a sudden end. Suddenly, there was no pay
rise, and even pay cuts, according to Chan Kin-por, expressing his gratitude
for the central government's help in reviving the local economy.
The
government of the Hong Kong made an unprecedented move to use the city’s
reserves to purchase HSI constituent stocks and the HSI futures, directly
hitting back at the speculators.
But the
move was a dangerous one. If HKSAR reserves were not sufficient, it would have
meant the Hong Kong economy could collapse, Choi told the Global Times.
“That’s
why the involvement of the central government was very important,” Choi said,
adding that the People’s Bank of China, the country’s central bank, sent
advisors to Hong Kong and offered its full support.
Norman
Chan Tak-Lam, Chief Executive of the Hong Kong Monetary Authority, noted that
by the end of 1997 the foreign reserves of Hong Kong had reached $80 billion
which was sufficient to support the market operation, and therefore Hong Kong
did not use the assistance of the central government in the end.
Chan
Tak-Lam told the Global Times that he
greatly appreciated the open pledge by the central government that it stood
ready to make use of its reserves, if needed, to help Hong Kong fend off the
speculators to preserve the city’s prosperity and stability.
“The
central government’s pledge, offered during such a critical period, was
undoubtedly a powerful boost to our confidence and morale,” Chan Tak-Lam told the Global Times in a written interview.
A few
years later, when Hong Kong became a city haunted by the SARS epidemic, it was
again the mainland that offered a pivotal helping hand.
Leung
said the SARS incident in 2003 had a detrimental impact on Hong Kong’s catering
industry, which he has been in since 16 years old, as well as the tourism
sector that his wife worked in. He believes the central government played a
decisive role in bringing Hong Kong out of the dilemma.
“The
independent travel policy enacted by the central government saved the two
sectors we worked for,” Leung said. “At that time, we felt very relieved
because we had the central government behind our back.”
Chan
Kin-por also praised Zhong Nanshan, a renowned expert in respiratory diseases,
who offered the Hong Kong healthcare sector multiple valuable opinions to cope
with the epidemic. The LegCo member noted that accelerated investment from the
mainland propelled an economic resurgence in Hong Kong after 2003.
Adapting to changes
Nonetheless,
drastic changes over the past decade appear to have brought about some new
thinking about the ties between Hong Kong SAR and the mainland.
In the
1960s, Leung’s cousins in Shenzhen would come to Hong Kong to stay with them
for a few days and Leung’s mother bought daily necessities for them to bring
back home. They admired Leung’s life at that time. But “every dog has its day,”
Leung said.
“Now we
are poorer than them. Since 1997, we have felt the development of the mainland.
The housing, medicare and finance in Hong Kong are not as good as the ones on
the mainland,” Leung said.
“If we
compare the changes of the mainland and Hong Kong from our age, the mainland
has developed quickly and changed a lot.”
Instead
of playing catch-up, the months-long protests in Hong Kong have almost cost
Leung and his wife their jobs. Leung’s restaurant has received few customers,
while his wife’s tour agency hasn’t received group tours from the mainland for
a long time.
In the
case of Dailywin, the watchmaker has shifted a large part of its business from
Hong Kong to Dongguan in Guangdong - the world’s factory - as it exports
600,000 watches every year along with watch cases and accessories made
especially for Swiss companies, according to Liu.
“Hong
Kong and the mainland are seeing a smaller gap. We keep our office in Hong Kong
small, and it’s in charge of logistics and accounting services,” he said,
noting that as the international financial hub, the city is still very
important for companies doing international business.
Some
changes in mindset are especially worth pondering, which might eventually lead
to a workable way to mend the rift.
There
have been a multitude of changes in the mainland, especially in terms of
infrastructure, said Chan Kin-por, stressing that some Hongkongers who haven’t
visited the mainland still imagine that it is the same as it was 15 years ago.
Chan
Kin-por compares the city to a child sent out to a foster facility before the
handover, and is supposed to be living a happy life after the handover. He
hopes that actions will be taken to create closer family bonds.
Source:Global Times
Local residents congregate at the
atrium of the Olympian City in Hong Kong on September 13 and sing the national
anthem. (Photo by Li Qiaoyi from Global Times)
Historical bonds between HK, mainland will see region through unrest
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