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Policemen
remove protesters in the central district after a pro-democracy rally
seeking greater democracy in Hong Kong early on July 2, 2014. (AFP
Photo/Philippe Lopez)
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If China wants Hong Kong residents to stop taking to the streets in protest, it should start picking better leaders.
Of course, that’s exactly why an estimated 300,000 demonstrated
yesterday and almost 800,000 voted in a recent unofficial referendum: to
gain the right to choose the city’s chief executive officer. China
won’t let them and is noncommittal about when, or if, that might happen.
Not surprisingly, anger about China’s meddling, surging property
prices, pollution and income disparities are coalescing around Beijing’s
handpicked CEO.
Since July 2012, Leung Chun-ying has stood aside as China clamped
down on Hong Kong’s media, tried to make the city less transparent and
moved to impose patriotic education on students. His predecessor, Donald
Tsang, spent seven years looking the other way, while Tung Chee Hwa,
the city’s first leader, enriched a whole class of tycoons, including
Asia’s richest man, Li Ka-Shing.
When you look at the quality of Beijing’s picks, it beggars belief
that the Communist Party can’t see why Hong Kongers want greater
democracy. It’s equally shocking that China doesn’t get just how much
it’s bungling its Hong Kong experiment. Before 1997, when the U.K.
turned Hong Kong over to China, the city-state was a test case for all
things laissez-faire: low taxes, minimal red tape, the rule of law and
unfettered capital flows. But then something got in the way to send
income gaps even further out of whack: China. Long before the British
returned it to China, Hong Kong was an oligarchic economy. After 1997,
though, the concentration of wealth accelerated as China’s influence
grew.
Communist Party bigwigs with millions, or even billions, suddenly had
ill-gotten dollars to stash and Hong Kong property became an obvious
first stop. The torrent of money from China’s nouveau-riche politicians
drove real estate into the stratosphere, stoking public discontent.
Beijing has tried to make Hong Kong more opaque with proposals to block
disclosure of personal data on company directors, muddying who owns
what.
Hong Kongers are realizing just how rigged their system has become.
Much of the blame must be traced to the patronage politics that shackled
the city to Leung, the latest chief executive chosen for his
connections, not skill. This cronyism has infiltrated Hong Kong’s
first-world financial system. Of the 10 biggest stocks in the Hang Seng
index, the majority are state-owned Chinese companies with
Beijing-selected leaders. Wall Street’s infamous “sons and daughters”
programs elevated mediocre talents to high places, subverting Kong
Kong’s meritocracy while helping to further skewing incomes. As these
dynamics become entrenched, Hong Kong is becoming more corrupt and less
competitive. It hardly helps that China cowed Hong Kong’s media into
censoring itself.
Now, things have gone full circle with even billionaires like Li —
who has started investing overseas — worrying about waning trust in the
leaders Beijing keeps foisting on Hong Kong. In a June 27 speech, a man
who’s benefited royally from the status quo, said he’s worried that
“more and more people will lose faith in this system, breeding
skepticism towards what is fair and just, doubting everything and
believing all has turned sour and rancid.” What’s fascinating about
these sentiments is how they dovetail with Hong Kong’s answer to the
Occupy Wall Street movement, Occupy Central. The kind of backlash about
which China has long worried seems to be afoot. Students of economics
and politics saw this coming. If the last 100 years have taught us
anything it’s what happens when wealth and social disparities undermine
order.
For all its wealth, Hong Kong is a potential powder keg. About 1.3
million of its 7.2 million people, or one in five, live under the
poverty line. Its Gini coefficient, a measure of income inequality, rose
to 0.537 in 2011 from 0.525 a decade earlier, and now is 12th highest
in the world. And given the surge in property prices during Leung’s
tenure, coming mostly from public servants in Beijing, it’s safe to
assume the gap has widened more since then.
Not surprisingly, Hong Kong residents think they can do a better job
picking leaders. After all, few of them trust Community Party leaders to
do anything other than feather their own nests while inequality soars
in Hong Kong. China’s heavy-handed efforts to contain the pro-democracy
movement risks turning more and more of the city’s residents against the
mainland.
Many Hong Kongers wonder how their city got to such a fraught place.
But when even billionaires fret publicly about the risks of social
unrest, and start investing elsewhere, Hong Kong is in trouble. If left
to fester, something worse is possible. That’s bad for business in a
place where business is supposed to come first.
William Pesek is a Bloomberg View
columnist based in Tokyo and writes on economics, markets and politics
throughout the Asia-Pacific region.
By William Pesek on 08:14 pm Jul 02, 2014
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