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BackWhy Hong Kong subsidies should go towards food, not fuel
Why Hong Kong subsidies should go towards food, not fuel
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SCMP Economy03.05.2026Opinion2 dk okumaChina

Why Hong Kong subsidies should go towards food, not fuel

Rather than encourage energy consumption amid the effects of the Iran war, the city should also speed up the move to greener public transport

En resumen

  • The author argues Hong Kong should not renew the HK$3 per litre diesel subsidy (HK$1.8 billion) when it expires at end-June, instead using funds to accelerate electrification of public transport, particularly minibuses.
  • The piece critiques the subsidy as fiscally unsustainable and distorting market forces, noting the Middle East war has closed the Strait of Hormuz, creating global oil shortages.

Resumen generado por IA

Por qué importa

Hong Kong introduced a HK$3 per litre diesel subsidy amid rising fuel prices caused by the Middle East conflict. The subsidy costs HK$1.8 billion and expires at end-June. The government task force also recommended a 50% cut in tunnel tolls for commercial vehicles.

Tamaño de fuente

Hong Kong should not renew the HK$3 per litre diesel subsidy when it expires at the end of June. Instead, it should use the funds to launch a crash programme to accelerate electrification of public transport, starting with the minibus fleet.

The crisis in the Middle East has had a serious impact on fuel prices. In response, a government task force has recommended a package of measures to provide temporary relief, including the diesel subsidy to be paid directly to local fuel companies and a 50 per cent cut in tunnel tolls for commercial vehicles. There is no relief for petrol-driven vehicles or private cars. The diesel subsidy alone will cost HK$1.8 billion (US$229.7 million).

While the measures are no doubt well intended and will be welcomed by the public in the short term, there are several fundamental problems with such subsidy schemes. This one in particular has weaknesses, not least that sooner or later – in this case, quite quickly – it will become fiscally unsustainable. There are other, more compelling areas where a degree of subsidy might become inevitable and which should have priority.

The problem all subsidy schemes have in principle is that they distort market forces. The increase in prices is telling us that it is more difficult to export oil and gas from the Gulf because of the war launched by the United States and Israel against Iran. Around a fifth of the world's oil passes through the Strait of Hormuz but because it is now effectively closed, there is a global shortage which is pushing up prices. Softening the blow by limiting retail price increases is all very well, but it does nothing to shorten the war.

This brings us to the next weakness: nobody knows when the war will end, not even the participants. The two sides are far apart in their negotiating positions, and even the task of getting talks going is proving difficult. The one round facilitated by Pakistan was conducted indirectly, with both sides conveying their stance to the intermediary and indirectly to each other via the media.

The only thing we do know for certain at this stage is that even when the fighting stops, it will take a long time – many months at least – for the infrastructure damaged by the hostilities to be repaired.

Qué observar

Perspectiva de IA — posibilidades, no hechos

  • The diesel subsidy will likely be extended or modified in some form

    Probable · En semanas

  • Hong Kong will accelerate public transport electrification plans

    Posible · En meses

Preguntas abiertas

  • Will the government adopt the author's recommendation to redirect funds to electrification?
  • How will commercial vehicle operators cope without the subsidy?
  • When will the Iran war end?

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This article was originally published by SCMP Economy.

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