Posted on 05/15/2022 2:00:28 PM PDT by blam
Hong Kong saw a net outflow of 65,295 and 66,334 residents in February and March respectively, according to the city’s official immigration data. The trend will remain strong, as a new poll revealed that nearly 80 percent of Hong Kong residents surveyed were interested in emigrating.
In mid-March, Bartra interviewed nearly 500 Hong Kong residents aged 18 and above through an online questionnaire. According to the poll, 79 percent of the respondents indicated that they are considering emigration or will consider this in the future; 48 percent indicated that it was “possible in the future,” and 31 percent indicated that they were “considering” the move.
The top three reasons for the consideration were for a better living environment (51 percent), to seek better education for their children (29 percent), and to obtain multiple foreign residence status and nationality (27 percent).
In addition, more than 40 percent of the respondents prefer investment emigration because it is simpler and more direct.
Bartra regional director Jeffrey Ling said the company received about 500 immigration enquiries in the first quarter of this year. In the past, 80 percent of successful immigration cases were professionals with stable income; and many high-income families in Hong Kong had the intention of emigrating. He believes that with the slowdown of the epidemic in Hong Kong and the cancellation of entrepreneur visas in the United Kingdom, it is expected that the number of applications to immigrate to Ireland this year will increase.
Lin said that with the immigration policy of the UK looking uncertain, and its complicated tax system, he expected some of his Hong Kong customers to consider immigrating to Ireland instead of the UK or Taiwan.
Ireland’s investment immigration program only requires immigrants to stay in Ireland for one day a year to retain their right of residence, making it easier for investors to manage existing businesses with greater flexibility.
Citi Survey: Hong Kong Millionaires Plummet By 15 Percent
Meanwhile, on April 26, Citibank released its “Hong Kong Multi-millionaire Survey Report 2021.”
It is estimated that by the end of last year, there were 434,000 “millionaires” with net assets of HK$10 million or more in Hong Kong, accounting for about 7.4 percent of Hong Kong’s population, or 1 millionaire for every 13 people. However, compared with a similar survey from the same period in 2020, that number had decreased by 15 percent, or 81,000 people. The 2021 survey was conducted between October 2021 and January 2022, with 3,786 Hong Kong residents aged 21 to 79 randomly interviewed by telephone.
In Hong Kong, a “multimillionaire” is defined as a wealthy person with a total net worth of HK$10 million (approximately $1,274,300) or more, and liquid assets of at least HK$1 million (approximately $127,400). The median net worth of these multi-millionaires was HK$15.7 million (about $2 million), a slight increase of 1.3 percent from HK$15.5 million (about $1,975,200) in the same period in 2020. About 70 percent of their assets are properties and the rest are current assets.
The report shows that the median current assets increased from 3.5 million to 4 million. Most people’s liquid assets are nearly half in cash, nearly 30 percent in stocks, and more than 20 percent in funds and bonds.
More than 30 percent said their investment strategy had shifted to a more conservative approach because the epidemic; they tended to hold more cash, with reduced stock holdings, reduced new investments, with new invests in low-risk products.
After two years of the pandemic, more than 70 percent of people said that their total assets had returned to pre-epidemic levels, and nearly 25 percent of them said that their total assets had increased compared to before the epidemic.
Around 30 percent of the multi-millionaires said they expect slight economic growth this year, with 24 percent feeling optimistic about the property market in the next 12 months, and nearly 60 percent taking a wait-and-see attitude.
Hong Kong’s Ultra-Rich Once Surpassed New York
In fact, Hong Kong was once the city with the most ultra-rich in the world.
According to the “The World Ultra Wealth Report 2018” published by Wealth-X in September 2018, Hong Kong surpassed New York, with more than 10,000 people having assets of at least HK$235 million (about $30 million).
According to the report, in 2017, the number of ultra-rich people in Hong Kong increased by 31 percent to about 10,000 people; New York is the city with the largest population of ultra-rich people in the United States, with nearly 9,000 people; Tokyo ranks third. At that time, the total number of ultra-rich people in the world was about 256,000, with total assets of $31.5 trillion.
As of 2020, New York ranked in first place with 113 multi-millionaires, followed by Hong Kong and the technology hub San Francisco in the second and third places respectively. In 2021, New York was still on the list, but Hong Kong and San Francisco had dropped off.
In 2021, China’s richest people had their worst year since Bloomberg began recording the wealth of the world’s richest in 2012. Regulations by the Chinese authorities targeting large private companies, especially high-tech industries, resulted in the loss of nearly $61 billion in assets for China’s richest.
All they have to do is fly to Mexico and walk across the US border and their in like Flynn.
George Will once advocated a planeload of passports to give them.
If I was under the rule of a satanic Winne the Pooh, I would emigrate too.
I know two people who wants to leave Hong Kong but are unable to. The husband is a US Army veteran (not an American citizen though), in information technology, and were active in the Hong Kong protests.
We have not heard from them for a while so we suspect the CCP has them under surveillance.
It’s time for these people to start fixing their problems in their own countries. Everyone running from communism, and now it’s in the U.S., and it’s on collapse.
The folks from Hong Kong would make good neighbors... and they'd contribute. Democrats would NOT let them cross in from Mexico... no free phones and baby formula for folks who love freedom and might compete with our 'liberal elites'...
MY sister works for a foreign bank there. It’s a nice city to live..except for the commie bastards screwing everything up.
The citizens of Hong Kong are in large measure educated, industrious and law-abiding. Exfiltrating them en masse to the United States would be a huge gain for us and a brain drain for China. In other words it should be done, although of course it will not be.
Before the Ukrainian conflict a survey of Russians said that a huge percentage of the younger people wanted to immigrate. Even then the people saw little chance of bettering their lot in life if they stayed in Russia. When hostilities started many men of draft age fled the country. Russia (and China) have a huge demographic problem already. The economic drivers are people who are below the age of about forty. They are the ones who buy cars, houses, have kids, etc. Spend, spend spend. Xi was trying to transition the economy into one that depended on its own consumption, but there aren’t enough people to support the economy. In Germany they export 47 percent of their GDP. In the US it’s about three percent. (Depending on how you count it.)
So, having young people leave could spell doom.
Why wasn't "Escaping the inhuman clutches of the rabid slogan-touting Chicoms" an option?
In Japan, there are more senior diapers sold than infant diapers.
“It’s a nice city to live, except for the commie bastards screwing everything up.”
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Just like Los Angeles.
We’re headed down the same road because not enough people are willing to risk their comfort and possessions, things that ironically they will lose anyway if tyranny prevails. We also have the illusion of elections that permits many to think that they can vote their way out of tyranny without actually having to fight for their freedom. Maybe that will work (Virginia), but I doubt it (2020).
And 99% want to come to the US.
N0 should be allowed into the US. Let them fix their own problems there. Or die trying.
They have other options, like Australia, Canada (Vancouver) and other countries in the Pacific.
They certainly do. My point was that their coming to the USA would be a net benefit for us as well as for them.
Nope. We need to prioritize western and western descended immigrants rather than East Asians who have always been incompatible with our European-descended culture. Let the diaper faced Cantonese enrich Singapore and Malaysia.
They sure can’t come here to get anything different than they get there. Our leaders admire China. Schools here suck too.
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