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Carrie Lam
Opinion

Will Carrie Lam open the door on Article 23 and political reform in her first policy address?

Mike Rowse says while focusing on education, housing and the economy, the chief executive also needs to tackle some thorny issues, and make it clear that independence is a no-go for Hong Kong

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Carrie Lam meets the media before the Executive Council meeting in Tamar last week. The chief executive, in her first policy address, is going to have to dip her toe into some shark-infested pools that she would probably rather avoid. Photo: Sam Tsang
Mike Rowse
The annual policy address by the chief executive is always important, never more so than when it is first given by a new holder of the position. So when Carrie Lam Cheng Yuet-ngor stands up in the Legislative Council next month, it will be the first real opportunity for us to gauge her actual priorities.
There is sure to be something on education, always a subject close to the hearts of Hong Kong parents, and indeed the focus of her first major initiative. Since the HK$5 billion reform package sailed through the Finance Committee, it would be reasonable to give herself a modest pat on the back for a job well begun.
Housing is the most pressing issue for many families. Prices have gone beyond all reasonable levels and have led to great divisions in our society between those who acquired property many years ago and are sitting on huge notional paper gains, and those who can never buy at current price levels. If middle-class citizens feel the system froze them out, their role as the stabilising force of moderation is at risk.

Carrie Lam’s focus on affordable housing in Hong Kong will finally help the squeezed ‘sandwich’ class

It should be a source of shame for us all that developers put living spaces of less than 150 square feet on the market and find queues of buyers. Apart from some palliative measures – inviting NGOs to manage shared apartments at reasonable rentals, for example – we really need a breakthrough in securing land that already exists, or can be created, and building homes at prices ordinary people can afford. Imagine the impact on sentiment if the government set a minimum of 500 sq ft for apartments and offered a few thousand per year for sale at construction cost plus a modest margin, say 20 per cent. The ripple through the market could see a restoration of common sense prices.

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Simon Pun Shun-sai, eight, does his homework in a 50 sq ft slab-type apartment. Housing remains the most pressing issue for many families. Photo: Dickson Lee
Simon Pun Shun-sai, eight, does his homework in a 50 sq ft slab-type apartment. Housing remains the most pressing issue for many families. Photo: Dickson Lee
Hints have also been dropped that we can expect measures to boost the economy, but special tax allowances for research and development, or lower tax rates for profits below a certain threshold, for example, are only going to benefit companies already profiting. Far better would be to use the same public money to help start-ups launch and take flight. But there may be some projects where a relatively modest capital injection could have a substantial and long-term economic impact.

Nobody comes to office with a completely clean slate, of course, because we are all bound to some extent by what was done – and not done – by our predecessors. Lam is therefore going to have to dip her toe into some shark-infested pools that she would probably rather avoid.

Hong Kong government needs to get tough with rogue pro-Beijing lawmakers and activists, too

First, independence. Repeating mildly what every thinking person knows – independence for Hong Kong is nonsense – will not be enough to satisfy the audience in the north. This is probably the appropriate place to remind our pan-democrats that there is an audience to the north. So, a carefully crafted statement ruling out independence, while trying not to trample all over freedom of speech, is needed.

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