Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

1980s in Hong Kong

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Part ofa series on the
History ofHong Kong
Timeline
Heads of Government
Henry Pottinger 1843–1844
John Francis Davis 1844–1848
George Bonham 1848–1854
John Bowring 1854–1859
Hercules Robinson 1859–1865
Richard Graves MacDonnell 1866–1872
Arthur Kennedy 1872–1877
John Pope Hennessy 1877–1882
George Bowen 1883–1885
William Des Vœux 1887–1891
William Robinson 1891–1898
Henry Arthur Blake 1898–1903
Matthew Nathan 1904–1907
Frederick Lugard 1907–1912
Francis Henry May 1912–1918
Reginald Edward Stubbs 1919–1925
Cecil Clementi 1925–1930
William Peel 1930–1935
Andrew Caldecott 1935–1937
Geoffry Northcote 1937–1941
Mark Aitchison Young 1941
1946–1947
Rensuke Isogai1942–1944
Hisakazu Tanaka1945
Alexander Grantham 1947–1957
Robert Brown Black 1958–1964
David Trench 1964–1971
Murray MacLehose 1971–1982
Edward Youde 1982–1986
David Wilson 1987–1992
Chris Patten 1992–1997
Tung Chee-hwa 1997–2005
Donald Tsang 2005–2012
Leung Chun-ying 2012–2017
Carrie Lam 2017–2022
John Lee 2022–
By topic

1980s in Hong Kong marks a period when the territory was known for its wealth and trademark lifestyle. It remained acolony at the beginning of the decade in 1980, and transitioned into adependent territory of theUnited Kingdom in 1981, becoming among its last significant colonial territories, also being the richest out of allBritish dependent territories at the time and most populated with over 5 million people. During this period, Hong Kong would be recognised internationally for its politics, entertainment and skyrocketing real estate prices. It would also go on to be the subject of intense negotiations between Britain and China, which would be resolved in theSino-British Joint Declaration.

Background

[edit]

After being made a crown colony in 1843, the status of Hong Kong was changed effectively under theBritish Nationality Act 1981 enacted by theBritish Parliament, which came into force on 1 January 1983. The Act renamed all existing British colonies to dependent territories (similar to a current overseas territory) upon the independence of the remaining major colonies, namelySouthern Rhodesia andBelize.

The renaming did not change how the government operated. Still, it affected the nationality status of Hong Kong's then over 5 million inhabitants, most of whom were to become British Dependent Territory citizens. This status could no longer be transmitted by descent.

Regardless of the competing claims for sovereignty, China'sparamount leaderDeng Xiaoping recognised that Hong Kong, with itsfree market economy, could not be assimilated into the People's Republic overnight and that any attempt to do so would not be in the interests of either. He advocated a more pragmatic approach known as theone country, two systems policy, in which Hong Kong (as well asMacau, and potentially alsoTaiwan) would be able to retain their economic systems within the PRC. On 19 December 1984, theSino-British Joint Declaration on the Question of Hong Kong (The Joint Declaration) was signed between the PRC and UK governments. Under this agreement, Hong Kong would cease to be a British Dependent Territory on 1 July 1997 and would thenceforth be aSpecial Administrative Region (SAR) of the PRC. Citizens who were opposed to thehandover and had the means to leave led to the first wave of emigration.

Demographics

[edit]
A view of Hankow Road, Tsim Sha Tsui, in 1982

Population

[edit]

Hong Kong's population topped five million just at the beginning of the 1980s, and rose at an annual average rate of 1.3% over the next ten years. The additional 700,000 residents raised the population to 5.73 million at the end of the decade. The population of females rose 1.5% per annum, faster than that for males (1.4% p.a.), although females would remain a minority until 1996. Upon the independence of Southern Rhodesia as Zimbabwe in 1980, Hong Kong became the largest colony by population for the United Kingdom at the time.

The decade also saw the first signs ofpopulation ageing, as the number of residents under the age of 25 fell by 1.2%. Households shrank in size from an average of 4.01 occupants in 1982 (the earliest available data) to 3.67 at decade's end. The 1980s were also characterised by the lowest population increase due to net migration (30.1%), as opposed to natural expansion.[1]

Immigration and emigration

[edit]

From 1978 to September 1980, nearly 23,000 illegal immigrants from Mainland China entered Hong Kong. The government abolished the "touch-base" policy on 23 October 1980. After this date, any illegal immigrants captured would be sent back to their originating countries immediately. There were public outcries in the early 1980s over decreasing wages due to the large influx of mainland immigrants raising supply against demand.[2]

On the other hand, citizens of Hong Kong were beginning to emigrate to the UK, Canada and United Statesin large numbers due to the uncertainty of thehandover in 1997. From 1980 to 1986, an estimated 21,000 people left Hong Kong permanently every year. Beginning in 1987, the numbers rose sharply to 48,000 people a year.[3]

Culture

[edit]
Tuen Mun Town Hall, a performing arts centre opened in 1987

Education

[edit]

In the early 1980s, Hong Kong's education system could only accommodate 2% of the youth who wanted to seek higher education. It was not until 1989 that the government decided to expand the programmes domestically. Prior to this, it was expected that higher education should be gained abroad.[4]

Two special institutes opened to train young athletes and performers, respectively. TheJubilee Sports Centre opened in 1982 while theHong Kong Academy for Performing Arts was founded in 1984 to educate students of the performing arts, music, and related technical professions.

Entertainment

[edit]

The mid-1980s saw the popularising of theWalkman. It was one of the key factors in contributing to the rise of thecantopop culture.Leslie Cheung,Anita Mui andAlan Tam were among the biggest pop stars. Other shows related toSuper Sentai andTransformers were translated and broadcast regularly. The franchising of toy stores such asToys "R" Us flooded the malls of Hong Kong. Japanese import stores likeSogo inCauseway Bay also madeHello Kitty a cultural icon.

The performing arts received a boost in the 1980s with the opening of numerous newUrban Council performance venues including theTsuen Wan Town Hall (1980),Tuen Mun Town Hall (1987),Sha Tin Town Hall (1987),Hong Kong Cultural Centre (1989) andSheung Wan Civic Centre (1989).

Cinema

[edit]

Domestic movies in the 1980s would putHong Kong cinema on the international map.Jackie Chan was recognized for his acrobatic displays and his stunts, along with his Peking Opera friends, who were also some of the heaviest hitters in the industry,Yuen Biao andSammo Hung. Hong Kong stunts were some of the greatest trademarks the industry had. The comedy genres were also popular with actors such asMichael Hui,Richard Ng,Eric Tsang, andJohn Shum.Chow Yun-fat was known for his collaborations withJohn Woo which set the standard fortriad films likeA Better Tomorrow andThe Killer. Some of the most famous movies of the decade were films likePolice Story,A Better Tomorrow,Aces Go Places,Winners & Sinners, andProject A.

Natural disasters

[edit]

In the 1980s, there were 10 Typhoons which had a signal of number 8 and 1 Typhoon 10, The 3 worst typhoons wereTyphoon Ellen,Typhoon Gordon andTyphoon Joe. The longest typhoon 8 was Severe Tropical Storm Lynn which had Typhoon 8 status for 28 hours and 45 Minutes.

Politics

[edit]

Reforms

[edit]

Major democratic reform began in 1984. Following the historic meeting in 1979 betweenDeng Xiaoping and then governorMurray MacLehose, aGreen Paper: the Further Development of Representative Government in Hong Kong was issued by the colonial government in July 1984. It included proposals aimed at developing a system of more localised government, which included the introduction of indirect elections to the LegCo (Legislative Council) the following year.[5] TheSino-British Joint Declaration stated that "the legislature of the [Hong Kong Special Administrative Region] shall be constituted by elections"; then British Foreign SecretaryGeoffrey Howe further promised the democratic process would start "in the years immediately ahead", but they stalled due to opposition from Beijing, local business interests as represented by Executive Council, and the British Foreign Office under the pretext that it would bring chaos to Hong Kong.[6] Declaring that "full weight be given to representation of the economic and professional sectors essential to future confidence and prosperity of Hong Kong", the government proposed 12 seats of the Legislative Council were to be elected the following year.Martin Lee andSzeto Wah, later to become leading democrats, were among those elected in 1985.[7]

Democracy activists – pressure groups, religious groups and community organisations – attended a mass rally atKo Shan Theatre inHung Hom in November 1986. The rally was a milestone in Hong Kong's fledgling pro-democracy movement. One of the participating groups, calling themselves the 'group of 190', demanded direct elections for LegCo in 1988, and a faster pace of democratic development after the Handover.[5]

In 1987, many surveys indicated that there was more than 60% popular support for direct elections. The government, under governor David Wilson, issued anothergreen paper in 1987 proposing directLegCo elections for 1988. However, the proposal was ruled out after a government consultation concluded that people were 'sharply divided' over its introduction that year.[8]

Tiananmen Square protests

[edit]

In 1989, following the death ofHu Yaobang and the spread ofnationwide protests in China, Hong Kong witnessed an unprecedented wave of political movements.[9] Students, professionals, journalists, religious groups, unions, and artists organized marches, petitions, hunger strikes, and fundraising campaigns to support Beijing and mainland protesters.[10]

In May 1989, public participation reached historic levels. On May 21, "one million Hong Kong citizens participated in a parade which lasted for eight hours in support for the mainland students", and theHong Kong Alliance in Support of Patriotic Democratic Movements of China was formed.[11] On May 27, theConcert for Democracy in China raised HK$12 million. The next day, another massive demonstration was held with 1.5 million participants.[12][13]

The massacre in Tiananmen Square on 4 June 1989 shocked the public. More than one million residents demonstrated to express their sorrow,[14] with citywide strikes and memorial vigils.[15][16] Public confidence in China's promise of "one country, two systems" collapsed sharply.[17][18] These events permanently reshaped Hong Kong's political landscapes, fueling distrust towards Chinese central government andlocalism.

Economy

[edit]
A flatted factory building in Tuen Mun, completed 1989
North Point Estate, 1989

Manufacturing

[edit]

In the early 1980s, younger Hong Kong workers began avoiding the manufacturing industry entirely. Hong Kong's on-going evolution away from manufacturing picked up steam during the decade, as production's share of the economy fell from 22.8% in 1980 to 16.7% ten years later. Replacing it was a greater reliance on services, which rose from 68.3% to 75.4% of GDP. The fastest growing sectors were foreign trade, logistics and communications and general personal and community services.[1] The lack of investment in domestic industry, along with China'seconomic reform, began opening up manufacturing to the mainland. Middle-aged men and women who had spent decades in manufacturing were suddenly left with no place to go.[19]

Real estate

[edit]

In 1960, theUniversity of Hong Kong andHong Kong Technical College were one of the first schools to offer real estate education, but the curriculum was considered a sub program. In 1981, theUniversity of Hong Kong became the first institution to be accredited by theRICS. It was the first step in connecting real estate education and the industry itself.[20] By 1983, 61% of capital investments belonged to the real estate sector. The amount of money entering the communities for infrastructure expenses in the 1980s eclipsed the sum of all real estate investments from 1940 to 1979.[21] An up-to-date understanding of the industry along with the high-density population provided many with the opportunity to capitalise on realty sales. Areas likeLan Kwai Fong were improving at the time and became an "alternative" or "open" avenue to attract people who wanted things to be different.[22] If construction was not open before, many areas found themselves redeveloping.

Finance

[edit]
Hong Kong 10 cents observe
Hong Kong 10 cents reverse featuring Elizabeth II
Hong Kong 10 cents of 1987 featuringElizabeth II

The lack of foreign-exchange control, and low tax, contributed to the competitiveness of Hong Kong's economy. Though a floating rate, coupled with panic about intensified political talk of the handover, sent consumer confidence to an all-time low, causingBlack Saturday in 1983. The end result was that Hong Kong adopted alinked exchange rate system. The exchange rate between theHong Kong dollar and theUnited States dollar was fixed at HKD $7.8 = US$1. TheHong Kong Monetary Authority's exchange fund was responsible for keeping the market rate stable.[23] In the short period from just a decade previously, inflation would also increase from 5% in the 1970s to 12.7% by 1983.[24]

Transport

[edit]

The Modified Initial System, the first line of theMass Transit Railway (MTR), was officially opened byPrincess Alexandra in February 1980. Over the course of the 1980s the MTR expanded rapidly. Anextension to Tsuen Wan opened in 1982, while the more technically challengingIsland line opened in 1986. The new metro system was instantly successful at attracting heavy patronage.

In addition, the much olderKowloon–Canton Railway (KCR) was fully modernised in the early 1980s. It was double-tracked and electrified. New stations were built to serve growing new towns and new housing estates, while many several older stations were closed. The KCR also opened anew light rail network in 1988 to link the new towns ofYuen Long andTuen Mun.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abThe data are all fromhttp://www.censtatd.gov.hk
  2. ^Fosh, Patricia, et al. (Eds) (2000).Hong Kong management and labour: Change and continuity. London: Routledge.ISBN 0-415-22269-9.
  3. ^Manion, Melanie (2004).Corruption by Design: Building Clean Government in Mainland China and Hong Kong. Harvard University Press.ISBN 0-674-01486-3
  4. ^Lee, Wingon; Postiglione, Gerard A (1997).Schooling in Hong Kong: Organization, Teaching and Social Context. Hong Kong University Press.ISBN 962-209-439-2
  5. ^abCheung, Gary (14 November 2009), "Universal suffrage an elusive goal",South China Morning Post
  6. ^Vittachi, Nury (5 September 2014)."Hong Kong, City of Broken Promises". Asia Sentinel. Archived fromthe original on 29 October 2014.
  7. ^Cheung, Gary (18 Jan 2010), "Functional seats plan mooted a month after Deng, MacLehose met",South China Morning Post
  8. ^"How Hong Kong's business elite have thwarted democracy for 150 years".South China Morning Post. 18 October 2014.Archived from the original on 3 November 2014. Retrieved29 October 2014.
  9. ^吳仁華 (1 May 2019).六四事件全程實錄(全套) (in Chinese (Taiwan)). 允晨文化(景芸).ISBN 978-986-97555-0-4.
  10. ^"特寫:香港「六四」導賞團──尋找1989年香港支援民運的蹤跡".BBC News 中文 (in Traditional Chinese). 3 June 2017. Retrieved17 June 2025.
  11. ^Lo Sonny Shiu-Hing, “The Role of Political Interest Groups in Democratization of China and Hong Kong: The Hong Kong Alliance in Support of Patriotic Democratic Movements of China”,The Journal of Contemporary China 22:84 (2013) pg 929
  12. ^"顯示團結力量爭取民主自由 全球二百萬華人 大遊行聲援學運 香港創一百50萬人遊行紀錄" (in Traditional Chinese).華僑日報第一版. 29 May 1989.
  13. ^陸嘉敏; 尹錦輝; 蘇凌峰 (28 May 1989)."新聞報導".TVB (in Traditional Chinese). Archived fromthe original on 9 June 2011. Retrieved12 October 2011.
  14. ^Hong Kong 1990 - Report for the year 1989. Hong Kong: Government Printer. 1990.ISBN 9620200802.
  15. ^林振東 (3 June 2016)."【六四影像】 89年躁動的香港 黑白圖輯".香港01 (in Chinese (Hong Kong)). Retrieved17 June 2025.
  16. ^"後六四香港:北京整頓前夕,本地左派揚言立足香港推愛國民主".recall-hk. 1 June 2024. Retrieved17 June 2025.
  17. ^Peyraube (4 June 2009)."Heurs et malheurs du mouvement étudiant chinois en France" (in French). La Presse Anarchiste. Archived fromthe original on 17 December 2020. Retrieved28 December 2013.
  18. ^許文英."中國對香港民主權利論述分析"(PDF) (in Traditional Chinese).國立政治大學. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 13 October 2014. Retrieved28 December 2013.
  19. ^Salaff, Janet W. (1995).Working Daughters of Hong Kong: Filial Piety Or Power in the Family. Columbia University.ISBN 0-231-10225-9
  20. ^Schulte, Karl-Werner (2001).Real estate education throughout the world: Past, present and future. Springer Publishing.ISBN 0-7923-7553-X
  21. ^Renaud, Bertrand; Pretorius, F; Pasadilla, B. (1997).Markets at work: Dynamic of the residential real estate market in Hong Kong. Hong Kong University.ISBN 962-209-438-4
  22. ^Lui Tai-Lok, "The malling of Hong Kong", in; Mathews, Gordon; Lü, Dale (2001).Consuming Hong Kong. Hong Kong University Press.ISBN 962-209-546-1
  23. ^Ngai, J. et al (2005).Economics and You 5. Manhattan, Hong Kong, 2005.
  24. ^Jao Y.C. (1998).Money and finance in Hong Kong: retrospect and prospect. Singapore University Press.ISBN 978-981-02-3481-2
History
Geography
Politics
Public services
Economy
Transport
Society
Culture
Culture
Science and technology
History
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=1980s_in_Hong_Kong&oldid=1333469462"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2026 Movatter.jp