Hongkongers will not receive perks such as consumption vouchers as the government scaled back one-off relief measures offered to the public during the Covid-19 pandemic.

People in a shopping mall in Hong Kong, on June 1, 2023. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.
People in a shopping mall in Hong Kong, on June 1, 2023. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.

Finance chief Paul Chan did not mention the consumption voucher scheme when he unveiled tax cuts and other relief measures for residents while delivering his annual budget speech to the legislature on Wednesday.

Salaries and profits tax is set to be reduced by 100 per cent, subject to a ceiling of HK$3,000, which is half of last year’s HK$6,000.

The proposal would benefit 2.05 million taxpayers and reduce government revenue by HK$5.1 billion, Chan said in Cantonese.

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Chan proposed allowances for residents living on social security, the elderly, and disabled people, as well as low-income households, which he said would involve an additional cost of HK$3 billion.

Consumption vouchers or cash handouts ranging from HK$5,000 to HK$10,000 were given to residents for three consecutive years amid the Covid-19 outbreak in a bid to boost local consumptions.

Chan said earlier this month that people the government heard from during a consultation period did not think that more consumption vouchers were unnecessary. The government must also consider whether it could afford such measures, he added.

Hong Kong is expected to log a shortfall of over HK$100 billion in the current fiscal year ending in March, almost double the forecast given by the government last year.

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Hans Tse is a reporter at Hong Kong Free Press with an interest in local politics, academia, and media transformation. He was previously a social science researcher, with writing published in the Social Movement Studies and Social Transformation of Chinese Societies journals. He holds an M.Phil in communication from the Chinese University of Hong Kong.

Before joining HKFP, He also worked as a freelance reporter for Initium between 2019 and 2021, where he covered the height - and aftermath - of the 2019 protests, as well as the sweeping national security law imposed by Beijing in 2020.