In 1897, when the New York Journal told Mark Twain, the humorist, of the rumor he was dying in poverty in London, he was amused. He replied, âThe report of my death was an exaggeration,â hoping to nip the story in the bud. The same can also be said of anybody who predicts Hong Kongâs demise.
Stephen Roach is a highly regarded American economist. He was formerly the chairman of Morgan Stanley Asia and once called Hong Kong his home. He professes to âlove Hong Kongâ, which is why it pained him, on Feb 12, to tell the Financial Times 12 that âHong Kong is now overâ.
Roach undoubtedly cares for the city, and is not some crazed ideologue bent on harming China. He knows his stuff, making his conclusion all the harder to fathom. However, âeven Homer sometimes nodsâ, and experts can err.
Roach said that the combination of three developments led him to his âuncomfortable position as a naysayerâ.
The first issue highlighted was a âdistinct lack of political autonomy in the aftermath of the massive demonstrations of 2019-20,â which is hard to follow (the other two were economically related). After all, the âpolitical autonomyâ enjoyed by the city before 2019 was ruthlessly abused by those who wished to undermine the âone country, two systemsâ policy, and the house nearly collapsed. Their antics posed an existential threat not only during the insurrection of 2019-20 but also before it.
Although, by 2012, Hong Kongâs political development had proceeded to the point whereby half its legislators (35) were directly elected by the geographical constituencies, with universal suffrage being the Basic Lawâs ultimate aim, it was sabotaged from within. Political saboteurs infiltrated the body politic, bent on frustrating the governmentâs work and confronting Beijing, and mayhem resulted.
Anti-China forces not only turned the Legislative Council into a bear-pit where brawls were common and staff were injured but also paralyzed its operations for months on end. A new breed of lawmakers, some of whom were unwilling to take their oaths of office in the manner prescribed by law, made a mockery of the cityâs burgeoning democracy. They did not see their role as ensuring peopleâs livelihoods, furthering Hong Kongâs participation in the countryâs economic development, or promoting the cityâs status internationally.
Whatever its short-term challenges, Hong Kong will ultimately prevail, and a bright future beckons. Once this becomes clearer, Roach will hopefully be happy to eat his words
Instead, they used their positions to filibuster, to support street violence, and to incite the US to revoke Hong Kongâs trading preferences and sanction its officials. This beggared belief and this type of conduct by elected officials would have been unacceptable anywhere in the world. If Hong Kong was ever to resume normal operations and to maintain its position as a financial center, a trading hub and a tourist destination, things had to change.
And change they did once the political system was reformed after the insurrection. Those who assume elected office must now be responsible individuals who appreciate patriotic duties, and Hong Kong is back in business. Had things continued politically as before, Hong Kong would have been finished, something Roach failed to grasp.
Moreover, despite some last-minute tinkering, little by way of political development occurred under the British before 1997 but this did not prevent Hong Kong from becoming an Asian success story. Indeed, it was only when greater democracy was introduced after 1997 that the problems began, with malign individuals exploiting it to harm China. By not factoring this in, Roach compromised his analysis.
His forte, however, is economics, and here he was also pessimistic on two issues. He said Hong Kongâs âeconomic underpinningsâ would be undermined by a âprotracted malaise in the mainland Chinese economyâ (a little surprising, given that Chinaâs economy expanded by 5.2 percent last year). It would also face âa squeeze from US-centric friendshoring,â meaning the cityâs East Asian trading partners would have to choose sides âin coping with the crossfire of the Sino-American conflictâ (the implication being they would side with the US against China).
Although views may differ, Roach has exaggerated the cityâs difficulties, and this blurred his perspective. In 2022, when Robin Harding, the FTâs Asia editor, assessed the situation in Hong Kong, he saw things differently. In an FT article entitled âDonât write off Hong Kong as a financial center just yetâ, he wrote. âFor hard economic reasons, the future of the Chinese territory, which retains some separation from the mainland under the principle of âone country, two systemsâ, is more secure than any global rival except for New York.â
Harding explained how Hong Kong retained âan entirely separate and fully convertible currency pegged to the US dollarâ. He said a series of âso-called Connect schemesâ in the city enabled âforeigners to access Chinese markets and Chinese investors to place money abroadâ. He also pointed out that, for Chinese companies cold-shouldered on US stock markets, the Hong Kong Stock Exchange (the worldâs fifth-largest) was the ânatural venue for them to seek international capitalâ.
Other leading experts endorsed Hardingâs optimism, including Carlos Casanova, senior Asia economist at Union Bancaire Privee (UBP). On Feb 5, in Nikkei Asia, he said it was âimportant that investors not lose sight of Hong Kongâs continuing importance as a global financial centerâ. In 2023, it was the worldâs largest clearing center for the yuan outside of the Chinese mainland, and processed over 70 percent of cross-border yuan payments, well ahead, for example, of second-placed London, with its 5 percent share.
This, noted Casanova, was significant because last year the yuan overtook the yen to become the fourth-most-widely-used currency for cross-border payments. As Chinaâs share of global trade was almost 20 percent, he predicted the yuanâs share would keep rising in the years ahead.
About two-thirds of direct foreign investment entering or leaving the mainland goes through Hong Kong. Casanova expected the amount of investment flowing through it into other low-cost manufacturing hubs to increase. He said this âshould generate opportunities for both local and global companiesâ.
He also highlighted how the Big Four accounting firms, which prepare companies to go public, had all forecast a strong rebound in initial public offerings in 2024, âlikely generating over $10 billion in proceeds and making the city once again a leading global IPO marketâ.
Casanova even predicted that Hong Kongâs fund management industry could overtake Switzerland as the worldâs largest cross-border private wealth management center by 2027. He pointed to the cityâs âunusually large concentration of international fund managers, advisory businesses and private banksâ. Whereas Hong Kong had about 2,000 licensed asset managers in 2023, the corresponding figure in Singapore, for example, was 1,194. And while Hong Kong had approximately $2.2 trillion in assets under management, Singapore had $1.5 trillion.
Casanova was in no doubt that âHong Kong remains an essential player in global financeâ, a view shared by Donald Liao, co-chief executive of HSBC Asia-Pacific. On May 10, 2023, Liao emphasized the significance of Hong Kongâs role as the Chinese mainlandâs gateway to the world. He said he believes the city will âcontinue to be a capital and talent hub for mainland China and the rest of the world, as long as we take advantage of the huge opportunities in the mainland market, maintain our renowned legal system, and play by the rules of the international marketâ. Of this, there can be no doubt.
Although Western politicians rarely have a kind word to say about Hong Kong, honest commentary is not entirely dead
In 2023, moreover, Chris Williamson, chief business economist at Standard and Poorâs (S&P) Global Market Intelligence, confirmed in an S&P economics commentary that âbusiness is booming in the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, with output growing at the fastest rate for over a decadeâ. He said the S&P Globalâs latest purchasing managers index (PMI) had shown âbusiness confidence soaring far higher than anything seen previously in the surveyâs history, buoyed by surging demand amid the reopening of the Chinese mainland economyâ.
The PMI survey, not mentioned by Roach, also revealed, said Williamson, that âfuture output expectations surged almost six points to jump to its highest since comparable data were available in 2012, rising for a sixth successive month to indicate a remarkable turnaround in business confidenceâ. Whereas rising orders were being received by Hong Kong businesses, this was being driven by a âwave of new business received from the Chinese mainland, which rose at a rate not seen since the global financial growth boom of early-2010.â
Although Western politicians rarely have a kind word to say about Hong Kong, honest commentary is not entirely dead. Whereas the likes of the UKâs prime minister, Rishi Sunak, and foreign secretary, Lord (David) Cameron, malign the city at the drop of a hat, there are still a few statesmen around. One such is Lord (William) Hague, the former Conservative Party leader and foreign secretary, and a typical Yorkshire straight shooter.
On January 20, Hague said Hong Kong had âflourished on the strength of its dynamismâ. He explained its âgeographic location, free-trade policy and efficiency as a logistics hub, as well as its trade history and networks, have propelled the city to become one of the worldâs largest trading economiesâ. Sunakâs government might not be in so much trouble if there were more truthful politicians like this around.
The picture that emerges, therefore, of Hong Kongâs future is far rosier than Roach would have us believe. Like other economists, he should have attached greater weight to Beijingâs unflagging support of the city, which is crucial to any proper understanding of its situation. In January, Hong Kongâs exports to the Chinese mainland, its largest market, soared by 54.2 percent year on year.
Whereas the central government is expected to set a growth target for the national economy of about 5 percent at this monthâs two sessions annual meetings, it envisages an increasing role for Hong Kong in Chinaâs overall development. This encompasses the Greater Bay Area, which accounts for over a third of Chinaâs exports, and the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI).
On Feb 27, the visiting director of the Hong Kong and Macao Affairs Office, Xia Baolong, rammed the point home. He said the âhigh-quality development of Chinaâs economy is a powerful driving force for Hong Kong to move towards a bright futureâ. He added, âthe central government firmly supports Hong Kongâs economic development and Hong Kongâs protection of investor interestsâ. He also highly supported the cityâs status as an international financial center. His message, therefore, was entirely positive and will hopefully have registered with Roach.
Hong Kong has faced difficult times, like many other places, but these are being overcome. On Feb 27, the Census and Statistics Department reported that its exports rose 33.6 percent in January (they jumped to HK$388.7 billion), the best monthly performance in three years. As imports rose 21.7 percent year on year in January to HK$385.1 billion, there was a trade surplus of HK$3.6 billion.
It was particularly gratifying that Hong Kongâs export growth was mainly driven by Asian demand. In January, exports to Asia increased 45.7 percent year on year. This hardly supported Roach's claim that East Asian countries were giving Hong Kong the cold shoulder as global tensons rise. Indeed, ASEAN was Hong Kongâs second-highest trading partner in 2022, with trade amounting to HK$1.29 trillion, or 13.7 percent of its total.
In 2022, Hong Kong applied to join the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP), a free trade pact among Asiaâs largest economies, including China, Indonesia, Japan, Malaysia, and South Korea. On Sept 16, 2023, the secretary for commerce and economic development, Algernon Yau Ying-wah, said, âI expect Hong Kong can join the free trade pact next year.â If so, it will help to bury Roachâs claim that Hong Kongâs East Asian trading partners will, to its detriment, be âsqueezedâ into choosing sides.
Over the years, Hong Kong has faced many vicissitudes but has always pulled through. Although the doom-mongers predicted the worst, it triumphed over natural disasters, pestilence, financial crises, political upheaval, brain drains, social disorder and even wars. Whatever its short-term challenges, Hong Kong will ultimately prevail, and a bright future beckons. Once this becomes clearer, Roach will hopefully be happy to eat his words.
The author is a senior counsel and law professor, and was previously the director of public prosecutions of the Hong Kong SAR.