More space, lower living costs lure Hong Kong elderly to retire in mainland China, but health care brings them back
- Not enough government help schemes for those who opt to retire across the border, experts say
- Rising demand for mainland subsidised care homes which have shorter waiting times, bigger rooms
![Illustration: Brian Wang](https://cdn.i-scmp.com/sites/default/files/styles/1020x680/public/d8/images/methode/2021/11/06/7f2dc846-3e18-11ec-a1b3-e785d5c8830c_image_hires_081833.jpg?itok=C7yYMe4P&v=1636157931)
Separated from her husband and estranged from their seven daughters in Hong Kong, retired cleaner Chan Yim-chun moved by herself to the mainland Chinese city of Zhongshan in 2000.
She bought a 600 sq ft flat in a rural area of the city in Guangdong province and had friends and relatives for company. Her monthly welfare allowances of about HK$3,700 (US$475) from the Hong Kong government covered her daily expenses.
“It is hard to survive in Hong Kong, but things are different on the mainland, where I had a big home and felt happy and carefree,” says Chan, now 78.
But after two decades, she is back in Hong Kong and sharing a tiny two-room flat in Sham Shui Po. Her room costs HK$3,500 a month, almost all of her monthly welfare allowances.
She returned last year because she needed long-term medical care for chronic conditions including high blood pressure.
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