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IMMIGRATION

Singapore population push puts spotlight on Hong Kong

Rival's plans to allow in thousands of expats raises stakes for city, after its own attempts to halt fall in birth rate were branded a failure

Wednesday, 30 January, 2013, 11:14am

A major push by Singapore to boost immigration over the next two decades has led to calls for Hong Kong to get its act together on population policy.

The Lion City unveiled ambitious plans yesterday to open its doors to hundreds of thousands of expatriate workers.

The move could see foreigners making up nearly half of Singapore's population by 2030.

It was inspired by concerns about the falling birth rate and ageing population, which mirror those in Hong Kong.

In a controversial white paper, Singapore officials said the city's population needs to rise by as much as 30 per cent over the next 17 years, to between 6.5 million and 6.9 million.

They plan to meet that target by taking in between 15,000 and 25,000 new citizens, including foreign-born professionals, and granting about 30,000 permanent resident permits each year. The Singapore proposals prompted accusations from some that an expatriate-led solution is a betrayal of locals.

They come days after Hong Kong's attempts to reverse its falling birth rate were branded a failure by Professor Paul Yip Siu-fai, of the University of Hong Kong.

He is a member of a new steering committee, headed by Chief Secretary Carrie Lam Cheng Yuet-ngor, tasked with formulating a population policy blueprint.

In response to Singapore's plan, Yip described the situation facing Hong Kong as "very urgent".

He blamed a lack of top-level planning, the responsibility for which he said could be laid in part at the door of the administration of former chief executive Donald Tsang Yam-kuen.

It would be difficult to import foreign workers to Hong Kong as the community is unlikely to reach a consensus on such a move
Paul Yip Siu-fai, University of Hong Kong

He acknowledged that the Singaporean government did not face the same "political obstacles" as the SAR and also pointed out that the path the Lion City was taking might not be suitable for Hong Kong.

"It would be difficult to import foreign workers to Hong Kong as the community is unlikely to reach a consensus on such a move. However, the problem is very urgent as the city's workforce is on the decrease," he said.

Chinese University Professor Hau Kit-tai, also a member of the steering committee, said it would be difficult for Hong Kong to follow the Singapore model.

"Home prices are already high in Hong Kong. It could further push up the prices if more people move in," said Hau.

The policy paper, released by the National Population and Talent Division, said the proportion of Singaporean citizens would fall to 55 per cent by 2030, from 62 per cent last year, when the population was 5.31 million.

Minister for National Development Khaw Boon Wan said: "Hong Kong in terms of density is much higher, and we must never try to reach that area."

Agence France-Presse, Bloomberg

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This article is now closed to comments

megafun
Hong Kong is overcrowded, but only in its present unplanned state! HK can grow alot and must grow, like any other major cities. None of the locals in major cities - Shanghai / Beijiang - wants migrants either. But, cities must be big and huge to work well. What is require is better plans, or in HK's case - some planning. Moreover, once we have set our plans, get it DONE! CY plan to construct housing quickly for all who are suffering problems of accomodation, however, he does not move fast nor has the guts to overcome objections, resolve objectors' issues, side-step unresolved obstacles. The present situation on land-for-housing, or for private developers, is a case in point. He is right insofar that there will always be obsjections to the use of any piece of land, even if its a grave! (such as in a disuse abandoned quarry)
cwiahk
Well, if it's population density for Hong Kong Island, it's 16,390/km²
pnelnik
: Minister for National Development Khaw Boon Wan said:
"Hong Kong in terms of density is much higher
He is simply wrong.
HK population density is: 6,480 people per sq km
Singapore has a density of: 7315 people per sq km
SpeakFreely
U are kidding or never been to Singapore. Simply their avg. home size is over 1,000 sq ft. Because singapore developed a lot Land vs HK had not. Simply dividing the population by area is not the correct comparison.
ianson
(1) Hong Kong is badly overcrowded; increasing the population is bad news for all;
(2) Housing standards continue to fall, in terms of average apartment size available;
(3) The seriously growing imbalance of old over young is creating a big future economic challenge;
So has anyone got any ideas how to ship all the oldies out rather than bringing young'uns in?
The government ought to get cracking to develop a scheme whereby it offers substantial cash incentives to facilitate retirement age persons getting the **** [incredible! I used the word H - E - L - L here but it was automatically censored out!] out of here. They could match the cash they offer the Hong Konger with a similar cash incentive to the "receiving" government to grant them citizenship.
apdld
"ship all the oldies out"... explain the sentence, it sounds very disrespectful to the elderly and ignorant in general.
And who's going to be next in your opinion after "all the oldies" have gotten out of here? The sick, weak and the poor?

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