Advertisement

Elderly allowance is welcome help for some, but others are not so lucky

Recipients of the elderly allowance intend to use it for medical bills which are growing

Reading Time:2 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
Leung Wai-chun, 80, lives alone in Tsz Wan Shan, and does not qualify for the allowance. Photo: Jonathan Wong

Residents who are eligible for the new elderly allowance are delighted to get some help to cope with the higher cost of living, but others with just a little too much money in the bank are not happy with the government's stringent means test.

Advertisement

For Chou Shui, 88, the new HK$2,200 handout is double the original HK$1,090 in "fruit money" he has been receiving. Chou will use it to pay the medical bills of his wife, 77, who has been bedridden since a stroke three years ago, he says

"My wife cannot walk properly. It costs us HK$5,000 to HK$6,000 to get an injection in [Guangdong's] Foshan ," he said. "She has told me to take her to Foshan to get the injection after receiving the new handout."

The couple depends on HK$2,000 given by his younger son each month, while the fruit money goes towards his wife's treatment. A HK$25 shirt or a HK$70 meal to celebrate the Lunar New Year would be deemed expensive.

With the extra money, Chou hopes they can shoulder the increasingly hefty medical bills.

Advertisement

But Leung Wei-chun, 80, who also spends most of her money on medical treatment, has failed the means test. Her savings exceeded the HK$193,000 assets cap by a little, she said.

"You've got to understand us old folks; we're used to being frugal," Leung said. "I can't just use up that money quickly just so I can get [the allowance]."

Advertisement