Hong Kong’s business hub status imperiled by security law | BusinessMirror

by

Home News World NewsWorld

Hong Kong’s business hub status imperiled by security law

https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/0a07dbc6b5b98b612906301924679cd7?s=192&d=mm&r=g

By BusinessMirror May 30, 2020 Facebook Twitter Pinterest WhatsApp Linkedin Email Print

https://businessmirror.com.ph/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/world02-053020.jpg
Riot police stand guard at Central during the second day of debate on a bill that would criminalize insulting or abusing the Chinese anthem in Hong Kong on May 28.

HONG KONG—A national security law proposed by China could imperil Hong Kong’s status as one of the world’s best places to do business.

The law, approved Thursday in Beijing, led Secretary of State Mike Pompeo to say Washington will no longer treat Hong Kong, already reeling from anti-government protests and the pandemic, as autonomous from Beijing.

The Chinese government has not given details of the law, which is aimed at suppressing secessionist and subversive activity in the former British colony.

After 11 months of protests, Chinese leaders say it’s needed to combat unspecified threats in the semi-autonomous region of 7 million people. But business groups, lawyers and financial analysts say potential repercussions range from loss of business for Hong Kong’s financial markets and law firms to a loss of professional talent in the city.

Hong Kong is highly regarded for its skilled work force, business-friendly legal system, Western-style free speech and ease of movement. But global companies already were shifting some operations out of Hong Kong due to rising costs and uncertainty after prolonged, sometimes violent clashes between police and pro-democracy protesters.

Scott Salandy-Defour, founder of clean-tech start-up Liquidstar, has been considering moving out of Hong Kong, and the security bill is the “last straw,” he said. “I don’t see how it gets any better from here.”

“When we say we’re a Hong Kong-based company when talking to investors, it’s just not as attractive as it was as a year ago,” said Salandy-Defour, whose company provides sustainable battery rental and charging services for developing countries.

“We’re potentially cutting ourselves off from a lot of different funding avenues, like grants from the US government,” he said.

Hong Kong’s leader Carrie Lam has tried to reassure companies and the public that its civil liberties won’t be affected. But the law shows Chinese President Xi Jinping is determined to tighten control.

“Hong Kong is riskier than it used to be,” said Tara Joseph, president of AmCham Hong Kong. “There is a big worry that there are two buses careening towards each other, and that’s the US and China, and that this could have a profound impact in Hong Kong,” Joseph said.

Critics say the law undermines the “high degree of autonomy” promised when Britain handed control to China in 1997. That autonomy meant Washington and other governments have treated the city as a separate territory for trade, travel and other affairs.

Pompeo said Wednesday those changes are significant enough that Washington will no longer treat Hong Kong as autonomous.

Washington could revoke its promise to exchange Hong Kong dollars for US dollars, potentially disrupting the city’s financial system, Deutsche Bank economist Michael Spencer said in a report.

The financial sector would take a big hit if companies such as MSCI reclassify Hong Kong as an emerging market like Shenzhen and Shanghai instead of a developed market, Spencer said.

“A very large share of capital invested in the Hong Kong market will have to leave,” he said.

Hong Kong’s uncertain future is putting it at a disadvantage with other Asian destinations that are competing to attract foreign investment, such as Singapore and Tokyo.

“Over time, people get nervous, and think that this place may not be, my money may not be, as safe as it once was, and I’m going to think about going somewhere else,” said William Reinsch, senior adviser at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. “It sends a signal that Hong Kong is no longer a safe and reliable place to put your money or to do business.”

The national security law has added to worries that Hong Kong’s legal system is losing its independence. The Hong Kong Bar Association says the method for enacting it is a threat: China is circumventing the territory’s legislature by changing its mini-constitution, the Basic Law, to require its government and courts to enforce security measures, regardless of what local lawmakers decide.

Beijing has shown little regard for such considerations, said Reinsch.

“China is not a rule-of-law state, it’s a state where the party makes decisions about what’s going to happen, those are arbitrary decisions, and if that’s what’s going to happen in Hong Kong, it doesn’t bode well for the economy or for the people,” he said.

Bob Broadfoot, managing director of Hong Kong-based research firm Political and Economic Risk Consultancy, said companies might shift legal work to Singapore or other countries.

“Singapore’s going to get more business as a dispute resolution center,” said Broadfoot. “Its legal system, which is a bigger earner, will benefit from Hong Kong’s problems.”

Hong Kong’s troubles and broader global economic uncertainty due to the pandemic also may make it harder for businesses there to attract and retain talent.

Still, some experts believe the concerns over a possible loss of Hong Kong’s special status are overblown.

Many big companies have sizable operations in both the mainland and Hong Kong, and most of Hong Kong’s manufacturing base shifted to China years ago, said Nicholas Lardy, a fellow at the think tank Peterson Institute for International Economics.

“The real economic consequences are fairly limited,” Lardy said.

Hong Kong is still an attractive base for many companies, said Andrew Bishop, a partner with Signum Global Advisors, a risk advisory firm.

Last year’s protests gave businesses time to think, he said.

“At this point, continuing operations in Hong Kong has become a matter of careful calculation rather than a gut reaction to a surprise shock.” AP

Image Credits: AP/Vincent Yu

Related stories

World

Hello and welcome: Robot waiters to the rescue amid virus outbreak

BusinessMirror - May 30, 2020 RENESSE, Netherlands—You can always count on a robot for perfect timing. When Shaosong Hu saw robotic waiters serving food in China last fall, he knew exactly what he wanted for his oriental restaurant in the Dutch beachside town of Renesse. He just didn’t have a... Read more World

Rising US job losses stir fears of lasting economic damage

BusinessMirror - May 30, 2020 WASHINGTON—The coronavirus crisis threw at least 2.1 million Americans out of work last week despite the gradual reopening of businesses around the country, stoking fears Thursday that the scourge is doing deep and potentially long-lasting damage to the US economy. Despite a few glimmers of... Read more World

US says Hong Kong’s autonomy gone, sowing China trade doubt

BusinessMirror - May 28, 2020 The Trump administration said it could no longer certify Hong Kong’s political autonomy from China, a move that could trigger sanctions and have far-reaching consequences on the former British colony’s special trading status with the US. Secretary of State Michael Pompeo announced the decision on... Read more World

U.S. death toll from Covid-19 surges past 100,000 people

BusinessMirror - May 28, 2020 HARTFORD, Conneticut—The US surpassed a jarring milestone on Wednesday in the coronavirus pandemic: 100,000 deaths. That number is the best estimate and most assuredly an undercount. But it represents the stark reality that more Americans have died from the virus than from the Vietnam and... Read more World

US company trials coronavirus vaccine candidate in Australia

BusinessMirror - May 27, 2020 CANBERRA, Australia—A US biotechnology company began injecting a coronavirus vaccine candidate into people in Australia on Tuesday with hopes of releasing a proven vaccine this year. Novavax will inject 131 volunteers in the first phase of the trial testing the safety of the vaccine and... Read more World

Stormy weather puts damper on SpaceX astronaut launch

BusinessMirror - May 27, 2020 CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida—Stormy weather is threatening to delay SpaceX’s first astronaut launch. A SpaceX rocket is scheduled to blast off on Wednesday afternoon from Kennedy Space Center, carrying a Dragon capsule with NASA astronauts Doug Hurley and Bob Behnken to the International Space Station. It... Read more World

Huawei CFO gets first chance at release in extradition fight

BusinessMirror - May 27, 2020 The chief financial officer of Huawei Technologies Co., fighting extradition to the US, gets her first shot at release this week in a case that’s triggered an unprecedented diplomatic tussle between the US, China and Canada. On Wednesday, the Supreme Court of British Columbia is... Read more World

Global leaders call on UN, governments to help thwart health-care cyber attacks

BusinessMirror - May 27, 2020 Dozens of global leaders—ranging from former heads of state to private sector executives and Nobel laureates—signed onto a letter calling on international governments and the United Nations to help prevent the cyber attacks that have plagued health care and research facilities during the coronavirus crisis. Read more World

Japan vaccine hopeful continues surge as trial phase moves closer

BusinessMirror - May 27, 2020 Shares in Japanese biopharma venture AnGes Inc. continued to surge as its much-hyped coronavirus vaccine candidate moved closer to starting human trials. Shares jumped as much as 19 percent in Tokyo trading on Tuesday, taking its gaining streak to a fourth day, after the Nikkei... Read more