--- title: "Explainer|Can Paul Chan’s budget help Hong Kong’s economy strike a purple patch?" description: "Hong Kong's Financial Secretary Paul Chan will present the annual budget aimed at accelerating economic recovery, amidst expectations for new initiatives. The budget will focus on innovation, with inv" type: "news" locale: "en" url: "https://longbridge.com/en/news/276802002.md" published_at: "2026-02-24T23:36:45.000Z" --- # Explainer|Can Paul Chan’s budget help Hong Kong’s economy strike a purple patch? > Hong Kong's Financial Secretary Paul Chan will present the annual budget aimed at accelerating economic recovery, amidst expectations for new initiatives. The budget will focus on innovation, with investments in intellectual property and urban-rural integration. Despite an anticipated operating surplus, concerns remain about reliance on land sales and geopolitical tensions. Political groups are advocating for expanded tax breaks and relief measures for low-income households. The budget will also align with mainland China's five-year plan, promoting technological self-reliance and business clustering in Hong Kong. Hong Kong Financial Secretary Paul Chan Mo-po will deliver his annual budget on Wednesday, unveiling measures to accelerate the city’s economic recovery after balancing the books, amid mounting expectations for more “sweeteners” in the blueprint. The 2026-27 budget also marks the government’s first major test in aligning the city with mainland China’s 15th five-year plan and unveiling long-term growth initiatives. The South China Morning Post examines how political and economic factors will shape the budget and what Hongkongers can expect from it. 1. What is the theme, and what are the debates? The finance chief revealed on Sunday that this year’s budget will feature a purple cover, symbolising Hong Kong’s strengthening economic momentum amid a volatile external environment. The budget comes against the backdrop of heightening geopolitical tensions, following US President Donald Trump’s announcement last week of a new 15 per cent global tariff. With an earlier-than-expected operating surplus in sight, the government is under pressure to strategically invest in long-term growth engines while navigating headwinds, and deliver more sweeteners, even as economists warned that public finances could not support large-scale relief measures. 2. What measures have been revealed so far? Sources told the SCMP that the finance chief would unveil a raft of measures to strengthen the city’s growing intellectual property (IP) economy, including investing tens of millions of dollars to establish a dedicated academy for nurturing professionals. Innovation will be a key theme, with the Hong Kong Technology and Innovation Support Centre (HKTISC) tasked to help local tech companies evaluate the quality of their innovations and assess the values of their patents. The authorities will also earmark HK$100-200 million (US$12.8-25.5 million) for a “Northern Metropolis urban-rural integration fund” to advance rural and cultural tourism projects, and hundreds of millions are to be spent on large-scale exhibitions ranging from superyachts to supercars to boost the “yacht economy” and exhibitions sector. 3. We are finally out of the red, but what are the concerns? After three years of huge deficits, Hong Kong is on track for an early operating surplus which could reach about HK$500 million, according to estimates by some accounting firms. While the capital account remains in the red, economists estimate the consolidated deficit will be much lower than the HK$67 billion projected for 2025-26, thanks to a boom in the city’s stock market. Some pundits describe the finances as “robust” while urging the city to wean itself off its heavy reliance on land sales for revenue. They also highlight future bond repayment pressures tied to expanded infrastructure bonds. Economists also warn that geopolitics could undermine the economy, urging the city to step up its efforts to help internationalise the yuan. 4. Which ‘sweeteners’ do parties agree on? With fiscal breathing room, most political groups are calling for expanded tax breaks in the budget. All major parties back higher child allowances, with some advocating a progressive tax allowance to boost the birth rate. The G19 bloc, formed by the Election Committee and functional constituency lawmakers, and the Business and Professionals Alliance for Hong Kong (BPA) have proposed raising the basic salaries tax allowance from HK$132,000 to HK$140,000 and HK$152,000 respectively. The Democratic Alliance for the Betterment and Progress of Hong Kong, the city’s biggest political party, and the pro-business Liberal Party are both lobbying for tax relief for families that hire foreign domestic workers. 5. What’s in it for me? Chan earlier acknowledged the growing burden on the middle class and pledged a comprehensive review of taxation and allowances, following calls for support from major parties. Low-income households are hoping for more relief measures, with concern groups and economists pressing for targeted measures for the unemployed, such as a one-off subsidy. The city’s unemployment rate edged up 0.1 percentage point to 3.9 per cent for the November to January period. Small and medium enterprises want better financing, loans and technological upgrades, according to a survey released this week. Some lawmakers have called for consumption vouchers to boost the “nighttime economy” and catering and retail sectors, though officials stress the need to spend public funds prudently. 6. How will Hong Kong align with the 15th five-year plan? While Hong Kong will devise its first five-year plan to align with the national one, Chan has hinted that the budget will include policies to help mainland innovation and technology enterprises “go global” and promote the clustering of key businesses in the city. The national blueprint prioritises technological self-reliance and “new quality productive forces”. Observers say the government should meet Beijing’s expectations by adopting a “reform mindset”, breaking from the “small government, big market” approach and tackling the city’s own critical bottlenecks first. ### Related Stocks - [00HSI.HK - Hang Seng Index](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/00HSI.HK.md) ## Related News & Research | Title | Description | URL | |-------|-------------|-----| | 財政預算案 2026︱陳茂波:住宅成交量去年上升至約 6.3 萬宗 創 4 年新高 | 財政司司長陳茂波宣讀《財政預算案 2026》,他回顧去年住宅物業價量齊升,交投自去年 3 月起持續活躍,全年成交量上升至近 6.3 萬宗,為 4 年新高。樓價全年上升 3.3%,結束前 3 年跌勢;租金亦上升 4.3%。非住宅物業成交量反彈 | [Link](https://longbridge.com/en/news/276825556.md) | | 預算案公佈前夕 恒指高開 154 點 阿里美團向上 智譜跌近 6%|港股開市 | 在美國總統川普即將公布國情諮文之際,港股恆指高開 154 點,報 26745 點。阿里巴巴和美團股價均上漲超過 1%。地產股表現不一,新世界上漲 1.3%,而恆地和長實則小幅下跌。美股三大指數周二收漲,市場對 AI 相關股票表現樂觀,Ant | [Link](https://longbridge.com/en/news/276811925.md) | | 澳洲 SSN-AUKUS 潛艦計畫 購入英製核反應爐零組件 | 澳洲政府已支付首筆款項用於採購英國制核子反應爐零組件,以支持未來的 SSN-AUKUS 潛艦計劃。根據 AUKUS 防禦協議,澳洲將建造多艘核動力潛艦,預計 2040 年代初服役。國防工業部長康洛伊表示,此計劃將創造 2 萬個高技術工作機會 | [Link](https://longbridge.com/en/news/276780359.md) | | 【黃金收評】伊朗突傳大消息引爆避險!金價暴漲近 100 美元 接下來如何交易? | 週三,現貨黃金價格因伊朗突發消息大幅上漲,收盤暴漲 99.77 美元,漲幅 2.05%,報 4977.29 美元/盎司。儘管美元走強,避險情緒升温吸引了逢低買盤。美國國家安全高官已告知川普,軍方準備對伊朗發動潛在打擊,可能在本週末之前。美國 | [Link](https://longbridge.com/en/news/276399556.md) | | 俄烏戰爭將滿 4 週年 基輔又傳遭空襲 2 人受傷 | 俄烏戰爭將滿 4 週年,基輔今晨遭彈道武器襲擊,造成 2 人受傷。基輔市軍事管理局發出空襲警報,呼籲民眾避難。市長克裡契科表示,受傷者為一名婦女和一名孩童,已送醫。自 2022 年 2 月俄羅斯全面入侵烏克蘭以來,基輔頻繁遭受飛彈和無人機攻 | [Link](https://longbridge.com/en/news/276537616.md) | --- > **Disclaimer**: This article is for reference only and does not constitute any investment advice.