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Earnings of Hong Kong’s low-income mainland migrants ‘fall below pre-Covid levels’

Study collected employment data of 3,236 working-age mainland migrants between 2019 and 2024

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The university found the median income of such residents stood at HK$15,448 in 2019. Photo: Felix Wong

The earnings of low-income migrants from mainland China in Hong Kong fell below pre-pandemic levels last year, with the recovery in pay disrupted by an influx of new workers and a slowdown in consumer spending, a study has found.

The study, led by Baptist University, collected the employment data of 3,236 working-age mainland migrants between 2019 and 2024 through advocacy group the Society for Community Organisation (SoCO).

The university found that the median income of such residents stood at HK$15,448 (US$1,990) per month in 2019, before dipping by 4 per cent in 2020. Earnings bounced back in 2022, then surpassed pre-Covid figures a year later, but dropped again in 2024.

“When the pandemic just ended, people were positive and there was more spending and cross-border movement, which created a lot of job opportunities,” said Cheng Yuk-shing, director of the university’s Centre for Sustainable Development Studies.

“It is worrying to see that this period only lasted for a very short time before [the median salary] dropped again.”

Cheng suggested that aside from providing short-term help to meet the immediate needs of low-income migrants, the government should introduce targeted measures to get them back to work to help reduce poverty.

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