Will Hong Kong’s street hawkers be saved by government licences or see their trades die?
Craftsmen earning hundreds per day weigh proposed annual fee of HK$3,458
On a pavement in Hong Kong’s Kwun Tong district, a 60-year-old clocksmith sits behind a small mobile cupboard, carefully taking tools out of various drawers to repair a broken watch.
He is one of five street hawking tradesman that the government are planning to issue licenses to in the district in a bid to legalise their operations. Critics say the move may force those who are unable to afford the fees to close down and end the succession of some traditional handcrafts.
The licenses would include an annual license fee of about HK$3,458, according to a proposal submitted to the Kwun Tong district council last month.
“I make just about HK$200 a day,” the clocksmith, who only gave his surname Tsang, said. “If all the charges add up and exceed HK$4000 [a month], I might as well just go clean toilets.”
Tsang said he was not sure if he wanted to be legalised or simply shut down his business.
Just two streets away, Tsang’s teacher, a 67-year-old master surnamed Lee, sits inside a less than three-feet-wide mobile cupboard.