IN FOCUSPublished: 31 Jan 12
595 views
Hong Kong business district at night (Photo by Ray Devlin)
FY 2012-13 budget to inject pain killers into economyHong Kong seems to be in for a lot of pain as growth slows by more than half in 2012 and prices continue to rise. The final budget by the administration of Chief Executive Donald Tsang is expected to focus on abating economic hardship and attenuating the widening income gap that could be the lot of Hong Kong residents until next year. To be revealed Feb. 1, the FY2012-13 budget will likely focus on offering short-term economic relief, according to financial analysts. There will be concessions, but not a repeat of the 2011 stimulus, and what concessions there will be are expected to be mostly one-off in nature. The budget will be one “. . . focused on short-term challenges,” said Kelvin Lau, an Economist specialising in Hong Kong and the Pearl River Delta in Southern China for Standard Chartered Bank. He noted that Hong Kong’s “hefty fiscal windfall in FY12” should allow the government to announce a raft of economic concessions for FY2013. “Much of the ammunition is likely to be spent on countering economic hardship stemming from slowing growth and the widening income gap, as opposed to tackling inflation,” Lau said. The government is said to be considering an aggregate assessment of salaries, profits and property taxes subject to a ceiling of HK$8,000 instead of a one-off reduction in salaries tax and tax under personal assessment. Relief measures currently in place that are likely to be extended include:
Analysts expect GDP growth to slow to 5% for 2011 and tumble 70% to 2.9% in 2012. They said the government is likely to report a sizeable surplus for this fiscal year at HK$70 billion or 4% of GDP. This would be the third-largest surplus in Hong Kong’s history, and close to the second-largest on record, which was achieved in FY2011. The improvement was due mainly to another year of surprisingly strong land sales and stamp duty receipts. The resulting leeway to provide one-off relief measures should prove timely given that growth is set to slow further in 2012. FY2011/12 will be the eighth year Hong Kong registered a surplus. This will underpin the government’s aggressive infrastructure investment, which is a key domestic offset to the external driven slowdown.
Also, given the imminent change in top government posts, analysts expect the upcoming budget to be long on one-off concessions and short on new vision. Do you know more about this story? Contact us anonymously through this link. Click here to learn about advertising, content sponsorship, events & rountables, custom media solutions, whitepaper writing, sales leads or eDM opportunities with us. Tags: Hong Kong, Chief Executive Donald Tsang, Standard Chartered Bank, Kelvin Lau
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||