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Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam Cheng Yuet-ngor (left), has given her backing to Secretary for Justice Teresa Cheng Yeuk-wah (right). Photo: Felix Wong
Opinion
Mind the Gap
by Peter Guy
Mind the Gap
by Peter Guy

Teresa Cheng saga shows why it is a sad reflection of Hong Kong’s business culture

Chief Executive Carrie Lam Cheng Yuet-ngor’s willingness to endure ignominy and embarrassment and sacrifice political capital for very little gain represents a risk to Hong Kong’s business environment and rule of law

Much has already been written about Secretary for Justice Teresa Cheng Yeuk-wah’s failure to declare illegal structures in her house and the perplexing and staunch defence assumed by Chief Executive Carrie Lam Cheng Yuet-ngor. A more profound explanation lies in how Hong Kong people do business and government leaders, especially those in the generation over 50 years old, seem to be willing to compromise principles for the sake of facilitating an agenda.

Post-1997 Hong Kong governance is a reflection of pre-1997 Hong Kong business culture – trading, broking, real estate. At the heart of the business culture is the understanding of being an apolitical, dispassionate and consummate trader. The attitude that principles and ethics can be traded for expediency is not necessarily bad. Shaking the hand of a tycoon sealed deals; agreements and board resolutions came later as a matter of course. That is the legendary Hong Kong culture of the 70s, 80s and 90s that the over 50 generation came of age in.

The comparison to Pompeia, Caesar’s wife, of having to not only be virtuous, but appearing virtuous seems to have been lost on the government. But, government is only as good as the values and moral certitude of the people who govern. The willingness to stick to her decision is the Chief Executive’s prerogative, but it is a high-risk gamble of her political capital and franchise.

But, this generation of Hong Kong leaders has demonstrated little reluctance to trade away governing principles and autonomy simply to quell bickering or for short term gain. Avoiding trouble (“mah fan”) is a Hong Kong Chinese cultural cornerstone, sometimes a self-deception that creates an illusion of stability. It threatens governance with a wilderness of mirrors creating a value set that George Orwell described as where, “Truth is treason in an empire of lies.”

The lack of understanding and tolerance for partisan, adversarial politics lies at the heart of dismissive rationalisation of any local debate. Ultimately, it fuels social unrest at the lack of representative government and threatens business confidence at a time when the city needs to show the world it is transforming itself.

Expediency and the Hong Kong Chinese tendency to seek easy short term solutions have left the Basic Law looking as flimsy as perforated cork board after numerous amendments by the National People’s Congress, at the request of the Hong Kong government, for matters that should have been handled locally. These include among others, immigration and oath taking in Legco.

Hong Kong Chinese aren’t unprincipled. But, the ease with which our city’s leaders are willing to trade and rationalise principles means they can easily slide into unprincipled conduct. The willingness to endure much ignominy and embarrassment and sacrifice political capital for very little real gain represents a risk to Hong Kong’s business environment and rule of law. The legal woes of former chief executive Donald Tsang Yam-kuen demonstrate how wandering away from hard principles have corroded the highest levels of government.

Unfortunately, our top business leaders remain resolutely silent. But, that too is a reflection of their generation who cannot accept taking a political role as a necessary part of their greater social responsibility. They believe their only purpose is to make money. Yet they send their children to top universities in western, democratic countries where many people have actually died in conflicts over principles. And if Hong Kong becomes too difficult to live and make money in, they, like the expats they freely excoriate, will sail off to Vancouver or London.

The Chief Executive’s intransigence weakens the perception of the government’s commitment to what was supposed to be our excellence in governance. Hong Kong leaders chant, “Rule of Law” like it was a mantra of salvation. Like Dorothy clicking her ruby slippers in “Wizard of Oz” and repeating three times “There’s no place like home” our leaders magically hope to return to an age in Hong Kong’s idyllic past where tycoons and senior civil servants were loved and worshipped, where the commonality knew their place and didn’t demand, as a right, transparent and accountable government.

Peter Guy is a financial writer and former international banker

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: The business of governing Hong Kong
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