Pashinyan, Putin hold phone call Today is International Children's Day Ruben Rubinyan receives Ambassador of Switzerland to Armenia US weapons already used in attempts to strike Russian territory: Peskov Armenia boosts exports to EEU market by 14 times - Mikhail Mishustin Diplomatic corps, international organizations’ representatives in Armenia visit flood disaster zone West is forcing Armenia and Azerbaijan to mediate for settlement of conflicts: Belousov Armenia will not participate in session of Council of Defense Ministers of CSTO Agreements between Armenia and Azerbaijan must be stable, balanced, and mutually acceptable, Zakharova Armenian MFA extends congratulations to Croatia on Statehood Day 

Chinese used to escape to this former British colony. Now, cheap boba has turned the tables

Publications

With Hong Kong’s sky-high cost of living, residents like Andy Tsui have been looking for alternative ways to have more fun and spend less. And he’s found one.

Recent weekends have seen him shopping at glitzy malls, singing at swanky karaoke joints and dining on the freshest Australian crayfish.

Add a cup of the trendiest bubble tea, and his bill for the day normally amounts to no more than $60. That’s the sort of money many of his friends have been paying for just one meal — and no boba.

“You can have half a Peking duck for as little as 60 to 70 yuan ($10), more than enough to feed three people, and on every corner there is a bubble tea place that sells a cup that costs just 10 to 12 yuan ($1.70),” Tsui told CNN, ahead of yet another weekend trip to Shenzhen. “The price difference is just so stark.”

During the visits, he often finds himself surrounded by “more Hongkongers than locals.”

Tsui is one of the hundreds of thousands of Hongkongers who have been routinely making the short trip to the southern Chinese metropolis of Shenzhen on weekends for food, shopping and entertainment.

Most are taking advantage of the high-speed rail service between the cities that opened in 2018, which has cut the travel time to less than half an hour.

In the minds of the day trippers, these cross-border jaunts are just fun days out. But collectively, they are part of a bigger picture that reveals much about the shifting power dynamics between China and Hong Kong, and East and West.

Such trips are noteworthy because, for much of Hong Kong’s modern history, the traffic has been largely — conspicuously, even — in the other direction. Hong Kong used to be the place where Chinese would escape to, not from.

In the decades after the 1949 establishment of the People’s Republic of China, when the mainland was mired in poverty, hundreds of thousands of Chinese are estimated to have risked their lives to reach the glittering shores of what was then a British colony.They were drawn not only by the promise of Western-style freedoms, but by the sort of luxuries that only Western-style capitalism was able to afford at the time.

Hong Kong’s draw endured long after Britain handed over control of the city to China’s communist masters in 1997. Under the “One Country, Two Systems” formula of governance, Beijing allowed the city to keep its capitalist ways and Western-style freedoms, mindful of upsetting an economy that was then equivalent to almost 20% of China’s.

Even as recently as 2018, 51 million mainland Chinese tourists — about seven times the population of Hong Kong — visited the city, flocking to the local Disneyland or filling up suitcases stuffed with foreign goods such as baby formula to cart back across the border.

Indeed, so numerous were the arrivals that, despite the boost to the economy, locals began to resent their guests. Newspapers ran reports about misbehaving mainlanders and street protests denounced them as “locusts.”

The backlash got so bad that the Hong Kong government was eventually forced to limit Shenzhen residents to once-a-week visits.

But fast forward a few years, and the picture has changed. In 2023, just 26 million mainlanders — about half of the 2018 crowd — visited Hong Kong.

More tellingly, only about 200,000 mainland Chinese now visit the city on weekends, while more than twice that number travel in the opposite direction to Shenzhen, according to the data from Hong Kong Immigration Department tracking the second half of 2023.

“When ordinary people of Hong Kong, which used to be the shopper’s paradise, prefer to shop in Shenzhen, Hong Kong is not doing well by its ordinary folks,” said Steve Tsang, director of the China Institute at SOAS University in London.

It’s possible too to see the reversal in weekend visitor figures as a victory for Beijing’s efforts to tighten its control over the once freewheeling city, following the outbreak of historic pro-democracy protests in 2019.

Those efforts have included crude attempts to drum up patriotism and a sense of belonging to the mainland among Hongkongers, and more subtle ones based on economic incentives.

The strategy can be seen in Beijing’s plans to integrate Hong Kong and its southern Chinese neighbors into a giant Greater Bay Area, which Beijing envisages as an economic hub to one day rival San Francisco, New York or Tokyo.

Many Hongkongers resent that scheme, along with the various multibillion-dollar, record-breaking bridges that are being constructed to link the cities. They fear the intention is to subsume their city’s local identity.

Beijing’s ambitions can also be seen in the creation of the once highly controversial high-speed rail system that now carries Hongkongers to their Shenzhen shopping sprees at lightning speed.

Controversy over the line had centered around a jointly manned checkpoint at the West Kowloon terminus in Hong Kong, where mainland law enforcement officers were allowed to take charge of immigration and customs procedures in an arrangement some Hongkongers considered an infringement of territory.

A tale of two cities

The year 2018 was significant, and not only for the launch of the gleaming high-speed rail that now shuttles shoppers between Hong Kong and Shenzhen at 120 miles an hour.

That year Hong Kong’s economy was finally surpassed by that of neighboring Shenzhen, a situation that would have been hard to imagine a few decades previously.

Hong Kong’s economy is now equivalent to only about 2% of mainland China’s. As that number has fallen, critics say, so too have any lingering concerns Beijing might have had about upsetting Hong Kong by changing the “One Country, Two Systems” formula.

In 2019, pro-democracy protests swept Hong Kong, fueled by perceptions that Beijing was tightening its reins and reneging on its promise of a high degree of autonomy for the city.

A year later, Beijing responded by introducing a national security law that critics say has snuffed out many of the city’s freedoms, such as of speech and assembly, and introduced questions over the independence of its judiciary.

That law, critics say, has further blunted the advantage that Hong Kong once held over its mainland neighbors; that it was an entrepot to mainland China with the bonus of British-style rule-of-law. Beijing, though, maintains that the law will bring stability and prosperity.

Even as late as the 2000s, Hong Kong’s modern malls, trendy nightlife and East-meets-West culture were leaving Shenzhen’s offerings firmly in their shadow. But just as Hong Kong’s star was beginning to wane, Shenzhen’s was shining ever brighter.

The seed for its stunning growth was planted in 1980, when China made the city one of its first special economic zones, positioning it to benefit from the country’s stellar growth as its communist leaders embraced what some scholars describe as a form of state capitalism.

In the 1980s, the population of Shenzhen, a former fishing village, was only in the hundreds of thousands. Today, it has 13 million people and is now home to some of China’s biggest tech firms, including Huawei and Tencent.

The megacity now has gleaming malls and luxury karaoke lounges with floor-to-ceiling projector screens that make those in Hong Kong look quaint by comparison. And it has plenty of room for expansion. In 2025, the city is expected to complete the world’s biggest indoor ski resort.

Hongkonger Eddy Lam, 32, loves to go there for its wide selection of regional Chinese cuisines, from Chongqing’s spicy hot pot to xiaolongbao from Shanghai.

“The decor is nicer, the place is bigger, and the food is more authentic,” says Lam, who has visited Shenzhen 10 times in the past three months.

For others, Shenzhen’s main draw is - ironically - its Western-style membership only warehouse chains. It has branches of both Costco and Sam’s Club, a chain run by the American retail giant Walmart.

Cherrie Leung, a wealth manager from Hong Kong, says she buys her milk and yogurt from one of the three Sam’s Club branches in Shenzhen.

“They come straight from farms in Inner Mongolia, Beijing (and other places in China),” she says.  “And they’re super fresh.”

Հետևե՛ք -ին Youtube-ում`
Withdrawal from Syria only after security ensured: GulerPashinyan, Putin hold phone call18-year-old Chechen is suspected of planning terrorist attack during Paris Olympics in FranceAnkara welcomes sincere efforts of Armenia and Azerbaijan in settlement process: GulerAustin denies NATO expansion caused Ukraine conflictToday is International Children's DayBiden presents new Israel ceasefire plan, calls on Hamas to acceptHow does cheapest Intel Arc 310 graphics card handle modern games? Curious testKaty Perry will perform at the second pre-wedding celebration of the son of Asia's richest man on a cruise shipDefense ministers of the CSTO countries signed documentsAnahit Manasyan meets with residents of disaster zone in LoriGermany will provide Ukraine with additional Patriot air defense system and 500 million euros in aidRuben Rubinyan receives Ambassador of Switzerland to ArmeniaUS weapons already used in attempts to strike Russian territory: PeskovZelensky to sign three security agreements in Stockholm todayArmenia boosts exports to EEU market by 14 times - Mikhail MishustinAt least 15 dead in east India over 24 hours as temperatures soarFormer Speaker of Iranian Parliament enters presidential raceDiplomatic corps, international organizations’ representatives in Armenia visit flood disaster zoneArmenia and Azerbaijan are close to peace: AmirbekovNATO getting closer to war every week: OrbanWest is forcing Armenia and Azerbaijan to mediate for settlement of conflicts: Belousov14th package of EU sanctions against Russia may be adopted in mid-June: O’SullivanMay 31 - World No Tobacco DayBlinken and Fidan met: Gaza and Caucasus discussedArmenia will not participate in session of Council of Defense Ministers of CSTOThanks to the 118 million drams support from Karen Vardanyan, modern equipment was supplied to the National Center for Burns 'Guilty'. New York Times prints historic front page on Trump verdictFrance could announce sending military instructors to Ukraine – Le MondeNothing Phone (2a) Special Edition: An even more unusual version of the popular smartphone has appearedWe view political process in Armenia as country's internal affair, ZakharovaArmenian Prime Minister sends congratulatory message to Prime Minister of Croatia on National DayAgreements between Armenia and Azerbaijan must be stable, balanced, and mutually acceptable, ZakharovaOpportunity to establish peace between Armenia and Azerbaijan should not be missed, ErdoğanArmenian MFA extends congratulations to Croatia on Statehood DayKarkop is under the water-SanosyanTwo killed and five injured after Russian S-300 missile attack on KrasnopilliaIsrael has tactical control of Gaza-Egypt border corridor, says military spokesmanUK Parliament dissolved for new general election on July 4, 2024Pressure Grows on Biden to Allow Attacks on Russian Territory, NYTDeputy Prime Minister Mher Grigoryan participates in session of Council of Eurasian Economic CommissionRuben Rubinyna Receives Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of Kingdom of BelgiumSince popular, non-violent, velvet revolution of 2018, Armenia's economy has grown by almost 30 percent: PashinyanSuren Papikyan participated in opening ceremony of Schuman Security and Defence ForumThere is nothing against the church in Armenia - PashinyanSecurity is not enough, we need peace - PashinyanAzerbaijan denies Karabakh ex-state minister of Ruben Vardanyan’s appeal of his illegal arrestStorms kill at least 18 in several US statesPashinyan held remote meeting of operational headquarters of emergency situation management in Lori and Tavush provincesRestrictions to use Western arms to hit Russia hamper Kyiv’s ability to defend itself - Stoltenberg
Most Popular