Opening the window of opportunity

No one can deny the significant impact of developments in China on Hong Kong. Before 1978, the effects were felt without much direct interaction between the territory and the mainland. In the reform era, the two economies have become more and more closely integrated; and since July 1997, Hong Kong has become a Special Administrative Region (SAR) under Chinese sovereignty.

As a Chinese SAR, Hong Kong people seem to have a strengthening identification with China. A survey by the Department of Journalism and Communication of the Chinese University of Hong Kong in September 1997 indicated that 32.1 per cent of the respondents identified themselves as 'Chinese', compared with 25.7 per cent in a survey in August 1996; 23.2 per cent identified themselves as 'Hongkongese', compared with 25.2 per cent in the earlier survey. Those who claimed to be 'Hongkongese as well as Chinese' decreased slightly from 32.9 per cent to 31.8 per cent, while those who claimed to be 'Chinese as well as Hongkongese' dropped from 14.7 per cent to 11.6 per cent.

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