Moving the goalposts won’t fix sources of Hong Kong poverty

Last week, Xia Baolong, Beijing’s point man on Hong Kong and Macau affairs, made a two-day trip to the city to review the Hong Kong government’s progress across many areas.

Everything seems to have been orchestrated with precision. Ahead of Xia’s arrival, the government launched its two-month public consultation on the city’s first five-year plan. The day after Xia concluded his visit, the government released its 200-plus page report on the impact of its targeted poverty alleviation strategy.

The same day, the International Institute for Management Development released the results of the latest World Competitiveness Ranking. Hong Kong has risen one place to the world’s second-most competitive economy. All this offered a timely reminder of what the administration had accomplished.

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The result-oriented government of Chief Executive John Lee Ka-chiu has essentially released its own report card on poverty alleviation. Launching the city’s first five-year plan is the administration’s strongest display of political will to Beijing, showing how well Hong Kong is moving in line with national plans. Lee should be proud given that Xia apparently gave his administration a big thumbs up.

Lee said the five-year plan would unify the blueprints in different fields by setting a five-year threshold “so that all development proceeds at the same pace and in the same direction”. The not-so-subtle message is that aligning with the central government’s plans for the country has been part of Hong Kong’s plan all along under Lee’s leadership.

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Lee’s administration has made efforts to improve cross-bureau coordination and address poverty. However, the recently released report on poverty is really about how the government is redefining its work.

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