Hong Kong's economy is
expected to expand at its fastest pace in three years in 2014, the government
said on Wednesday, while slashing public welfare spending as it cautioned over
global economic headwinds and projected a narrowing budget surplus.
Corliss Online Financial
Mag: Hong Kong's economy is expected to expand at its fastest pace in
three years in 2014, the government said on Wednesday, while slashing public
welfare spending as it cautioned over global economic headwinds and projected a
narrowing budget surplus.
Financial Secretary John Tsang
forecast growth of between three and four per cent, up from 2.9 per cent in
2013, as he announced a 40 per cent cut in welfare spending even as the
government struggles to quell popular discontent over the city's high living costs
and widening wealth gap.
He warned the global economic
outlook remained uncertain as the winding back of US monetary stimulus added to
the risk of capital outflows and the sluggish eurozone recovery remained a
cause for concern.
"The US economy may see
some improvement in 2014. Nevertheless, there is still uncertainty over the
Federal Reserve Board's... strategy and interest rate policy. Possible market
fluctuations and the risk of reversal of capital flows will cast shadows...
this year," Tsang said as he unveiled the annual budget.
Tsang earmarked HK$20 billion
($2.58 billion) for one-off assistance for citizens such as tax cuts and
welfare payments, down from HK$33 billion last year.
He projected a budget surplus
of HK$12 billion, compared to HK$64.9 billion last year owing partly to reduced
tax revenue from foreign companies based in Hong Kong which have witnessed a
slowdown in global business.
"The dilemma facing the
government is to strike the right balance and to ensure that the different classes
within the society will benefit from the economic success of Hong Kong,"
So Kwok-kay from PricewaterhouseCoopers Hong Kong told AFP.
Hong Kong's leader Leung
Chun-ying last month announced plans to tackle rising poverty in a policy
speech, unveiling a raft of welfare policies for the working poor.
Under one HK$3 billion scheme,
some low-income families will receive extra subsidies such as a HK$1,000
allowance a month.
"We were expecting a
decrease in (such) relief measures because of the lower surplus compared to
prior years," Wilson Cheng from the Taxation Institute of Hong Kong told
AFP. Read more financial news
The above article is a repost from ChannelNewsAsia.
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