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City Beat | Hong Kong’s coronavirus policy U-turn comes at a price, so lessons must be learned

  • In recent days, city leader Carrie Lam’s administration has had to make two major policy reversals that could have been avoided
  • The lesson for the administration to reflect on now is the need to grow out of its habitual, if not entrenched, Hong Kong-centric thinking

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People leave a government quarantine centre at Penny’s Bay after a policy reversal on how to handle variant cases. Photo: Nora Tam

One of the last things any government wants is to make an abrupt policy U-turn.

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It takes political courage and wisdom to do so when necessary, but just as important is understanding and acknowledging why, as well as learning any lessons to be drawn from it.

In this particular case, the lesson for the administration to reflect on is the need to grow out of its habitual, if not entrenched, Hong Kong-centric thinking.

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Within one week, the government had to reverse two major anti-pandemic policies which could have been avoided.
Last Monday, Chief Executive Carrie Lam Cheng Yuet-ngor put on hold her labour and welfare minister’s decision to make it mandatory for all the city’s foreign domestic helpers to be vaccinated for Covid-19 before applying for or renewing their work visas.
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