Hong Kong expects modest growth in 2025 as Paul Chan looks to fight deficit

The government forecasts gross domestic product to expand 2 to 3 per cent in 2025, compared with a 2.5 per cent pace last year, says financial secretary

    • Financial Secretary Paul Chan says the government will seek to cut regular spending by 7 per cent over the next three years, as falling land sales continue to hurt a key source of tax revenue.
    • Financial Secretary Paul Chan says the government will seek to cut regular spending by 7 per cent over the next three years, as falling land sales continue to hurt a key source of tax revenue. PHOTO: BLOOMBERG
    Published Wed, Feb 26, 2025 · 12:37 PM

    HONG Kong Financial Secretary Paul Chan said the economy will grow modestly this year, as he looks to shrink the city’s deficit while countering headwinds from a slowing Chinese economy and rising trade tensions with the US.

    The government forecasts gross domestic product to expand 2 to 3 per cent in 2025, compared with a 2.5 per cent pace last year, Chan said in his annual budget speech on Wednesday (Feb 26). He vowed to rein in government spending that’s helped push the city’s budget deficit into the red for the third year in a row, while maintaining key public services.

    “Strictly containing public expenditure is a must,” he said, citing challenges including geopolitical disruptions to trade and investment as well as high interest rates.

    Policymakers are trying to balance the government’s books while finding ways to boost the economy in the face of elevated interest rates and the fallout from US President Donald Trump’s trade war.

    Chan pledged to invest HK$1 billion (S$172 million) in an artificial intelligence research centre to drive innovation and set up a HK$10 billion fund to invest in emerging industries of strategic importance.

    As the city searches for new growth drivers, Chan also said the government would accelerate the development of the Northern Metropolis, a project to further integrate the former British colony with neighbouring Shenzhen.

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    Chan said the government will seek to cut regular spending by 7 per cent over the next three years, as falling land sales continue to hurt a key source of tax revenue. He’s also expected to expand tax sources by legalising basketball betting.

    Hong Kong’s Budget shortfall for the current fiscal year ending March is expected to approach HK$100 billion, double initial estimates. PHOTO: BLOOMBERG

    Hong Kong’s Budget shortfall for the current fiscal year ending March is expected to approach HK$100 billion, double initial estimates.

    Officials are searching for ways to maintain the city’s financial stability, while attracting new visitors and investors after the hub’s image took a hit from strict pandemic measures and a crackdown on dissent.

    Trump’s new trade war is blurring the lines between Hong Kong and Beijing, threatening to erode the city’s main selling point as a global financial hub.

    When Trump slapped a 10 per cent levy on China earlier this month, that action for the first time also applied to Hong Kong goods, after the president in 2020 stripped the city of its special privileges.

    The city’s property market downturn has been one of the biggest drags on the economy, with prices nearing their lowest levels since 2016 in recent months. Consumer spending also remains constrained, with the total value of retail sales plummeting for 10 straight months to December, the longest streak since the Covid-19 pandemic.

    The government has already embarked on big-ticket infrastructure projects, including a sprawling land reclamation plan near Lantau Island and the Northern Metropolis, which could both boost the economy and drive up debt.

    Last October, Hong Kong Chief Executive John Lee relaxed mortgage rules for some home buyers and investors and slashed a tax on some hard liquor.

    His administration has also sought to attract visitors with a pair of baby pandas and a new stadium set to open next month that will host major acts including Coldplay later this year.

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