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In the past decade, Hong Kong's labour force increased
by 22.5 percent, from 2.9 million to 3.5 million. During
the same period, the number of employees in the SAR
rose by less than 16 percent, to 3.2 million. Clearly
there is a mismatch between the rise in the number of
people wanting work and the number able to find it,
and it is one that will continue for some time.
The most remarkable change over the past decade is
the increase in the number of women seeking work, from
36.7 percent in 1993 to 43.9 percent last year, a rise
of 3.9 percent a year as compared to the 0.8 percent
increase for the workforce as a whole. More than three-quarters,
76.2 percent, of the people joining Hong Kong's workforce
in the past 10 years were women.
But, that just measures who wants to work, not who
actually has a job. Total employment increased between
1993 and 2003 by 15.9 percent, which explains the more
than quadrupling of unemployment from 57,700 to over
250,000, or barely 2 percent to more than 8 percent.
Even more remarkable, nearly every woman added to the
workforce found a job.
Are young people today suited for work? The simple
answer is that those who stay in school will find work.
Of the 15-19 years of age group, one in four is unem-ployed,
Yet, unemployment among those with an advanced degree
is just 3.3 percent.
Certainly we have made great strides in education in
the last decade. The number of employed people with
little or no education fell nearly 57 percent in the
past 10 years, from 3.3 percent to just 1.2 percent.
Those with just a primary school education also contracted
sharply, from 23.6 percent to 13.9 percent, a drop of
31.4 percent. While graduates of secondary schools grew
in line with total employment (remaining at 57 percent),
those with an advanced education more than doubled,
to 18.3 percent of all employees.
Higher education and the structural shifts in our economy
show up in changes to the mix of jobs performed in Hong
Kong. As manufacturing moved up the Pearl River, the
number of people engaged in craft work or machine operations
fell by 29.6 percent while those considered managers
or professionals rose by 51.4 percent and now comprise
just under one-third of all employees, up from 24.8
percent in 1993.
Making it, here or there
We're also better off. The median income rose from
$8,000 a month to $9,800, an increase of 22.5 percent
during a period in which consumer prices rose just 17.5
percent. To break it down further, half the people with
jobs (50.8 percent, actually) earn less than $10,000
a month, down from 71.7 percent in 1993. Those earning
$10,000 to $20,000 rose more than 60 percent (to 28.5
percent of the total) while the share with incomes of
more than $20,000 a month nearly tripled, to 20.7 percent.
According to the Census and Statistics Department's
survey, some 238,200 Hong Kong residents worked in the
Mainland in 2002, a number equal to 6.8 percent of the
labour force or nearly 10 percent of local employment.
The graph shows the rise over time, but since surveys
were sporadic until 2001, the increase is not as smooth
as it seems.
Of those working in the Mainland, more than three-quarters
were in the manufacturing sector. That fits with the
structural shifts in Hong Kong's economy, which saw
manufacturing as a share of the economy drop from 9
percent of GDP to less than 4 percent. Clearly, our
workers were not moving up the Pearl River to do the
same jobs they used to do here, so it shouldn't be a
surprise that 37 percent of Hong Kong people working
elsewhere in China were administrators or managers.
As might be expected, 88 percent worked in Guangdong.
Some have suggested that the reason Hong Kong people
want to work in the Mainland is because of the explosive
growth opportunities, and certainly that must play a
factor. However, only 22.2 percent of the people surveyed
last year worked in China because of better career prospects
or because it was easier to find a job. The great majority
(85.1 percent) were simply on assignment for their employers.
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