Advertisement

National security law: could Japan or South Korea take Hong Kong’s finance crown?

  • Japan and South Korea want to tempt businesses considering an exit strategy in the wake of Beijing’s national security law for Hong Kong
  • But Tokyo’s high tax levels and South Korea’s complex regulations are hard to overlook, especially when compared to competitors such as Singapore

Reading Time:7 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
Clouds gather over the Hong Kong skyline. Photo: EPA
Japan and South Korea are working to boost their attractiveness to Hong Kong firms considering contingency plans as China moves to introduce a national security law in the run-up to the 23rd anniversary of the former colony’s return to Chinese rule on July 1.
Advertisement

The Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress is expected to meet on Sunday to further discuss the law – which targets secession, subversion, terrorism and collusion with foreign and external forces endangering national security.

Details of the law, and the offences that constitute crimes, are still unclear. and this has raised fears that Hong Kong’s autonomy and freedoms, which have been crucial to its success as a financial hub, will be undermined. Beijing, however, maintains the new law will restore stability to a city wracked by a year of anti-government protests that on several occasions descended into violence.

Foreign firms have been looking into possible exit strategies in the event the law ends up restricting the free flow of information in the city or affects their ability to woo talent.

This month, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said the country could take in Hong Kong residents working in the financial sector, and the ruling Liberal Democratic Party has since called for the government to “take advantage of being a safe business location, which is supported by solid democracy and the rule of law”.

01:08

US Senate passes bill that could punish China for Hong Kong national security law

US Senate passes bill that could punish China for Hong Kong national security law
Japan has long had ambitions to restore Tokyo to its glory days of the late 1980s, when its stock market accounted for a third of the world’s equity capitalisation.
Advertisement
loading
Advertisement