76 per cent of young people polled identify as ‘Hongkongers’, while only 2 per cent think of themselves as ‘Chinese’
- Analysts say overall findings affected by immigration wave as those who were not in favour of Communist Party may have left
- New government urged to find ways of winning the hearts of young people instead of giving up on them

Only 2 per cent of Hong Kong’s youth identify as “Chinese”, a drop from 5.4 per cent some six months ago, according to latest findings of a half-yearly tracking poll released on Tuesday.
This was despite overall survey results showing an increase in recent years of residents’ sense of being “Chinese”, with the latest rating at 6.52 on a scale of zero to 10, up from 6.13 last time, also the highest since the poll in December 2018 when the rating was 6.6.
Analysts attributed it partly to the recent wave of emigration and also urged incoming leader John Lee Ka-chiu to step up youth work to win back their hearts, in the wake of Beijing’s perceived hardline approach on Hong Kong following the 2019 social unrest.
The findings were derived from phone interviews of 1,000 city residents from May 31 to June 5, conducted by the Hong Kong Public Opinion Research Institute, a private polling centre founded by former University of Hong Kong pollster Dr Robert Chung Ting-yiu.
In the latest survey, overall, 39 per cent of the respondents identified as “Hongkonger”, and 18 per cent thought of themselves as “Chinese”. Both figures were the same as those in the last poll some six months ago.