How Hong Kong can – and should – raise its game to restore status as a major global financial centre
- Business leaders at the city’s non-profit think tank, Better Hong Kong Foundation, say there are plenty of reasons for optimism
- Council members John Lee and Catherine Leung both believe the city can eclipse Asian rivals by rekindling its famous can-do spirit
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After the scares and setbacks of the past three years, the official line is that Hong Kong is now primed and poised to bounce back. The economy is revving up, the city’s doors are open again to welcome tourists and traders and it’s all systems go for business and investment.
Prominent members of the Better Hong Kong Foundation (BHKF), a non-profit think tank formed by the city’s business and community leaders, see plenty of reasons for optimism.
John Lee, vice-chairman and head of Greater China for global banking at investment bank UBS, and Catherine Leung, co-founder and partner at MizMaa Ventures, a venture capital firm which has close links with Israel’s tech start-up scene, are both BHKF’s council members. They have wide-ranging views about what is required to enhance the city’s competitiveness and drive growth.
Leung is also the chairperson of the Chamber of Hong Kong Listed Companies, whose membership includes 240 companies listed on the main board and Growth Enterprise Market board of the Hong Kong stock exchange.
Lee and Leung take great encouragement from recent policy statements, notably Chinese President Xi Jinping’s July 1 speech marking the 25th anniversary of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, which confirmed the city’s “distinctive status and advantages”.