UN Self-identification as 'Chinese' on the decline in Hong Kong

https://www.taiwannews.com.tw/en/news/3461919

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TAIPEI (Taiwan News) – A recent opinion poll carried out by Hong Kong University’s Public Opinion Programme (POP) revealed that people living in Hong Kong who self-identify as primarily “Hong Kongers” (香港人) is the highest it has been since 2016, reflecting the largest demographic of those surveyed at 40.7 percent.

The other main categories in the survey consisted of “Hong Konger in China” (中國的香港人) with 26.8 percent, “Chinese in Hong Kong” (香港的中國人) with 12 percent, and “Chinese” (中國人) with 17 percent.

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(Image from HKU)

Observers suggest that the crackdown on the democratic movement in Hong Kong is generating a dissonance between Hong Kongers and China, resulting in an increase in those self-identifying as primarily Hong Kongers.

The survey was conducted by random polling of 1001 Hong Kong citizens by telephone during the period from June 4 to June 7.

Some interesting findings of the survey include:

Among Hong Kong citizens aged 18 to 29 years old, only 3.6 percent self-identify as “Chinese” in a broad sense.

If the total respondents strength of identity is presented as an absolute rating of on a scale of one to ten, then the overall strength of identity as respondents as citizens of the People’s Republic of China appears to be on a steady decline.

The survey shows a "strength of identity" rating as PRC citizens as 5.85 out of 10. The highest “strength of identity as a PRC citizen” rating has ever been was 7.3 out of 10 which occurred in the summer of 2007.

Meanwhile the strength of identity as a Hong Konger rose to its highest rating ever at 8.54 out of 10.

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(Image from HKU)

The results of the full survey are organized in quite a few different ways, which can be examined at the HKU Public Opinion Programme website.
 
It was never very high to begin with.

Hong Kong was British colony after all, I don't know how people could self identify as Chinese when that country had absolutely nothing to do with the growth and success of HK.
In the early days, no, China had jack sqart to do with the economic growth of HK.
After the 1990s, China has been absolutely essential for the bloom of HK's economy and livelihood, given HK by then had next to zero production industry or agriculture.
 
Nice to see them resisting integration into a totalitarian system. Although it could also just be due to disgust at Chinese people pissing and shitting everywhere.

Shame on the Brits for abandoning them. They didn't even sign the original agreement with the communists.
 
Shame on the Brits for abandoning them. They didn't even sign the original agreement with the communists.

Pretty much all the facilities needed to keep HK running weren't in fact in HK but mainland China.

There's not exactly much the UK could have done about it TBH.
 
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Lol the British abandon their own citizens easily enough, did you really think they'd take a stand for people all the way across the globe?
Well shieet, the Brits really made a big deal with the Argentines over one small little island full of penguins.
 
Pretty much all the facilities needed to keep HK running weren't in fact in HK but mainland China.

There's not exactly much the UK could have done about it TBH.

They could have easily pulled a west-berlin airlift thing and used their NATO allies. The UK just lacked courage.
 
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