90 per cent of Hong Kong SMEs stand to benefit from abolition of MPF offsetting mechanism, welfare chief says
- The changes will do away with a controversial practice in which employers are able to raid workers’ pensions to pay their severance
- New government subsidies that will accompany the change will also make employers’ lives easier, officials say

Close to 90 per cent of Hong Kong’s 340,000 small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) stand to benefit from new government subsidies aimed at doing away with a controversial loophole that allows employers to raid workers’ pensions to pay their severance.
As long as the total amount of such payments owed to all dismissed workers in a single year did not exceed HK$500,000 (US$64,200), the employer would only be liable to pay them HK$3,000 each in the first three years of the new scheme, with the government footing the bill for the rest. After the first three years, the caps on payments will gradually rise over the next six, while the subsidies will be progressively reduced over the next 22.
“The most important part of this improved version is capping the amount of long service and severance payments for employees,” Law said, calling the cap “low enough to ensure the employer will be able to pay out of pocket”.
The controversial mechanism that the rule change would do away with has long allowed employers to take cash from workers’ pensions to offset their long-service and severance payments, drawing criticism that it was tantamount to robbing employees of their hard-earned money.
The government hopes to implement the measure from 2025, and has committed HK$32.9 billion over 25 years for the subsidies to help employers cover the payments.