Hong Kong
Occupied by the UK in 1841, Hong Kong was formally ceded by China the following year; various adjacent lands were added later in the 19th century. Pursuant to an agreement signed by China and the UK on 19 December 1984, Hong Kong became the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region of the People's Republic of China on 1 July 1997. In this agreement, China promised that, under its "one country, two systems" formula, China's socialist economic system would not be imposed on Hong Kong and that Hong Kong would enjoy a "high degree of autonomy" in all matters except foreign and defense affairs for the subsequent 50 years.

geography

location

22.15° N, 114. 10° E
Eastern Asia, bordering the South China Sea and China

area

1,108 sq km
land
1,073 sq km
water
35 sq km

land boundaries

33 km

coastline

733 km

climate

subtropical monsoon; cool and humid in winter, hot and rainy from spring through summer, warm and sunny in fall

terrain

hilly to mountainous with steep slopes; lowlands in north

elevation

lowest point
South China Sea
0
highest point
Tai Mo Shan
958

natural resources

  • outstanding deepwater harbor
  • feldspar

land use

arable land
3.2 %
permanent crops
0.9 %
permanent pasture
0.9 %
forest
0 %
other
95 %

population distribution

population fairly evenly distributed

people

population

  • 7,249,907
  • 103
    global rank

nationality

  • Chinese/Hong Konger
    noun
  • Chinese/Hong Kong
    adjective

ethnic groups

Chinese
92 %
Filipino
2.5 %
Indonesian
2.1 %
other
3.4 %

languages

  • Cantonese
    official
  • English
    official
  • Mandarin
    official
  • other Chinese dialects
  • other

religions

Buddhist or Taoist
27.9 %
Protestant
6.7 %
Roman Catholic
5.3 %
Muslim
4.2 %
Hindu
1.4 %
Sikh
0.2 %
other or none
54.3 %

birth rate

  • 8.4
    per 1,000 population
  • 217
    global rank

death rate

  • 7.9
    per 1,000 population
  • 95
    global rank

urban population

100 %

major urban areas

  • Hong Kong
    pop. 7,548,000

life expectancy

  • 83.2
    total population
  • 8
    global rank
80.5
male
86.1
female

government

country name

    conventional

  • Hong Kong Special Administrative Region
    long form
  • Hong Kong
    short form

    local

  • Heung Kong Takpit Hangching Ku (Eitel/Dyer-Ball)
    long form
  • Heung Kong (Eitel/Dyer-Ball)
    short form

government type

presidential limited democracy; a special administrative region of the People's Republic of China

independence

national holidays

  • National Day
    1 October

legal system

mixed legal system of common law based on the English model and Chinese customary law (in matters of family and land tenure)

age of suffrage

18

flag description

red with a stylized, white, five-petal Bauhinia flower in the center; each petal contains a small, red, five-pointed star in its middle; the red color is the same as that on the Chinese flag and represents the motherland; the fragrant Bauhinia - developed in Hong Kong the late 19th century - has come to symbolize the region; the five stars echo those on the flag of China

national colors

  • red
  • white

economy

overview

Hong Kong has a free market economy, highly dependent on international trade and finance - the value of goods and services trade, including the sizable share of reexports, is about four times GDP. Hong Kong has no tariffs on imported goods, and it levies excise duties on only four commodities, whether imported or produced locally: hard alcohol, tobacco, oil, and methyl alcohol. There are no quotas or dumping laws. Hong Kong continues to link its currency closely to the US dollar, maintaining an arrangement established in 1983. Excess liquidity, low interest rates and a tight housing supply have caused Hong Kong property prices to rise rapidly. The lower and middle-income segments of the population increasingly find housing unaffordable. Hong Kong's open economy has left it exposed to the global economic situation. Its continued reliance on foreign trade and investment makes it vulnerable to renewed global financial market volatility or a slowdown in the global economy. Mainland China has long been Hong Kong's largest trading partner, accounting for about half of Hong Kong's total trade by value. Hong Kong's natural resources are limited, and food and raw materials must be imported. As a result of China's easing of travel restrictions, the number of mainland tourists to the territory surged from 4.5 million in 2001 to 47.3 million in 2014, outnumbering visitors from all other countries combined. After peaking in 2014, overall tourist arrivals dropped 2.5% in 2015 and 4.5% in 2016. The tourism sector rebounded in 2017, with visitor arrivals rising 3.2% to 58.47 million. Travelers from Mainland China totaled 44.45 million, accounting for 76% of the total. The Hong Kong Government is promoting the Special Administrative Region (SAR) as the preferred business hub for renminbi (RMB) internationalization. Hong Kong residents are allowed to establish RMB-denominated savings accounts, RMB-denominated corporate and Chinese government bonds have been issued in Hong Kong, RMB trade settlement is allowed, and investment schemes such as the Renminbi Qualified Foreign Institutional Investor (RQFII) Program was first launched in Hong Kong. Offshore RMB activities experienced a setback, however, after the People’s Bank of China changed the way it set the central parity rate in August 2015. RMB deposits in Hong Kong fell from 1.0 trillion RMB at the end of 2014 to 559 billion RMB at the end of 2017, while RMB trade settlement handled by banks in Hong Kong also shrank from 6.8 trillion RMB in 2015 to 3.9 trillion RMB in 2017. Hong Kong has also established itself as the premier stock market for Chinese firms seeking to list abroad. In 2015, mainland Chinese companies constituted about 50% of the firms listed on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange and accounted for about 66% of the exchange's market capitalization. During the past decade, as Hong Kong's manufacturing industry moved to the mainland, its service industry has grown rapidly. In 2014, Hong Kong and China signed a new agreement on achieving basic liberalization of trade in services in Guangdong Province under the Closer Economic Partnership Agreement (CEPA), adopted in 2003 to forge closer ties between Hong Kong and the mainland. The new measures, which took effect in March 2015, cover a negative list and a most-favored treatment provision. On the basis of the Guangdong Agreement, the Agreement on Trade in Services signed in November 2015 further enhanced liberalization, including extending the implementation of the majority of Guangdong pilot liberalization measures to the whole Mainland, reducing the restrictive measures in the negative list, and adding measures in the positive lists for cross-border services as well as cultural and telecommunications services. In June 2017, the Investment Agreement and the Agreement on Economic and Technical Cooperation (Ecotech Agreement) were signed under the framework of CEPA. Hong Kong’s economic integration with the mainland continues to be most evident in the banking and finance sector. Initiatives like the Hong Kong-Shanghai Stock Connect, the Hong Kong- Shenzhen Stock Connect the Mutual Recognition of Funds, and the Bond Connect scheme are all important steps towards opening up the Mainland’s capital markets and have reinforced Hong Kong’s role as China’s leading offshore RMB market. Additional connect schemes such as ETF Connect (for exchange-traded fund products) are also under exploration by Hong Kong authorities. In 2017, Chief Executive Carrie LAM announced plans to increase government spending on research and development, education, and technological innovation with the aim of spurring continued economic growth through greater sector diversification.

GDP

480,500,000,000 USD
2018

agriculture products

  • fresh vegetables
  • fruit
  • poultry
  • pork
  • fish

poverty level

19.9%
2016

budget

  • 79,340,000,000
    revenue (USD)
  • 61,640,000,000
    expenditures (USD)

communications

telephones

    fixed lines

  • 4,196,061
    total subscriptions
  • 35
    global rank

    mobile cellular

  • 19,901,856
    total subscriptions
  • 59
    global rank

broadcast media

4 commercial terrestrial TV networks each with multiple stations; multi-channel satellite and cable TV systems available; 3 licensed broadcasters of terrestrial radio, one of which is government funded, operate about 12 radio stations; note - 4 digital radio broadcasters operated in Hong Kong from 2010 to 2017, but all digital radio services were terminated in September 2017 due to weak market demand (2019)

internet

.hk
country code

    users

  • 6,450,167
    total
  • 89.42
    % of population
  • 75
    global rank

energy

electricity access

100%
2016

transportation

air transport

    national system

  • 7
    registered air carriers
  • 41,867,157
    annual passenger traffic

    airports

  • 2
    total
  • 2
    paved

roadways

2,107 km
total length

military

This entry doesn't have any available military data.