logo
Success stories from Hong Kong's ethnic minority groups an encouraging sign

Success stories from Hong Kong's ethnic minority groups an encouraging sign

Success stories from among Hong Kong's ethnic minorities do not often hit the headlines. While more individual achievers from different fields have come to notice recently, many continue to struggle to overcome stereotypes and barriers. More sustainable policy support is needed to enhance opportunities for the community.
Advertisement
The challenges faced and progress made by the community were put into perspective in a series of Post reports. The accomplishment of 28-year-old
Lamia Sreya Rahman is inspiring. Having co-founded an AI start-up and produced an award-winning wearable device for the visually impaired, the Hong Kong-born Bangladeshi earned a spot in May on the Forbes 30 Under 30 Asia 2025 Social Impact list, which recognises young people who address social issues through their work.
Separately,
Smriti Kedia shone in the city's university entrance exam with her near-perfect scores this month. The 18-year-old of Indian origin received four 5** and two 5*, the top two grades of a seven-level scale, in the Diploma of Secondary Education exam.
The two are role models for a community which is unfortunately often associated with poverty and other problems in society. We are seeing more cases of individual accomplishments, thanks in part to the continuous efforts of the government, businesses and NGOs. However, challenges remain.
Official data showed that the education indicators and living standards of ethnic minority groups are gradually improving. The school attendance rate for those aged 18 to 24 rose from 38.4 per cent to 50 per cent between 2011 and 2021, catching up with the rate of 55 per cent across the city's population. Among South Asians, 39.2 per cent attained post-secondary education in 2021, higher than the 34.6 per cent for the population.
Advertisement
Meanwhile, the median monthly income of South Asians rose by a third from HK$15,000 to HK$20,000 between 2016 and 2021, which was higher than the median income of HK$19,500 for the whole population. Among South Asians, however, Pakistanis and Nepalis earned less at HK$15,000 and HK$17,000, respectively. The median incomes of Indonesian, Thai and Filipino Hongkongers were even lower, at only HK$13,000, HK$13,500 and HK$16,500, respectively.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

China could become a high-income country this year, but can it stay one?
China could become a high-income country this year, but can it stay one?

South China Morning Post

time8 hours ago

  • South China Morning Post

China could become a high-income country this year, but can it stay one?

There seems to be a never-ending amount of scholarship and commentary on how China can escape the middle-income trap. It moved from low-income to lower-middle-income status in 2001, then to upper-middle-income status in 2010. However, China's next transition, to high-income status and joining the ranks of the club of developed countries, is much more difficult. While the jury is still out on exactly when it might happen, it is possible that 2025 is the year China becomes a high-income country . The data points to it passing that threshold this year, but the question remains whether it will address the structural challenges that could push it back down to middle-income status. It is important to define what economists mean by the middle-income trap . According to the China 2030 Report, jointly issued by the World Bank and China in 2013, only 13 out of 101 middle-income countries (classified by gross domestic product per capita) made the transition to high-income status between 1960 and 2008. The reason so few countries have been able to make the transition is the difficulty in achieving both the structural transformation and the technological and industrial upgrading needed. As economies and wages grow, the things these economies produce must advance as well. Countries that continue to make rather simple products while their wages continue to grow put themselves in an increasingly uncompetitive position in the global economy. This makes industrial and technological upgrading a major challenge that middle-income countries must overcome. If countries wish to continue developing and avoid the middle-income trap , the structure of the economy and the institutions that govern it must transform to meet the new reality created as economies and industries mature. When economies are poor and productive forces are yet to be fully cultivated, economic growth can solve most of their problems as developing countries still have the ability to grow rapidly.

Hong Kong slams Western countries over criticism of bounties for second straight day
Hong Kong slams Western countries over criticism of bounties for second straight day

South China Morning Post

time8 hours ago

  • South China Morning Post

Hong Kong slams Western countries over criticism of bounties for second straight day

The Hong Kong government has hit out at 'irresponsible remarks' by Western countries for the second straight day following its decision to pursue overseas-based activists for alleged national security violations related to a group called 'Hong Kong Parliament'. Advertisement Authorities said on Sunday that they strongly opposed and disapproved of 'smears with distorted facts' that had been communicated by officials and politicians from countries such as the US, Canada and Australia, as well as 'anti-China organisations'. 'Not only did such foreign government officials and politicians, as well as anti-China organisations, turn a blind eye to illegal acts of criminals, but also deliberately smeared and spread irresponsible remarks, in an attempt to mislead the public, about the measures and actions taken by the [Hong Kong government] in accordance with the law,' the government said. The statement followed a similar one issued a day earlier, which had slammed remarks made by UK Foreign Secretary David Lammy and Home Secretary Yvette Cooper, who had described the latest round of bounties as 'transnational repression'. Western governments and politicians have been voicing their criticism since the city's decision on Friday to place bounties on 15 activists and issue new arrest warrants for four more over their involvement in the 'Hong Kong Parliament', a group deemed subversive by authorities. Advertisement US Secretary of State Marco Rubio condemned the latest round of warrants issued for activists, including those based in his country, saying Washington would not tolerate 'transnational repression on US soil'. In Canada, Minister of Foreign Affairs Anita Anand and Minister of Public Safety Gary Anandasangaree said in a joint statement that actions taken by Hong Kong 'threaten the sovereignty of Canada and security of the people in this country'.

WAIC Shanghai: Tencent, SenseTime launch new AI models to stir up industry rivalry
WAIC Shanghai: Tencent, SenseTime launch new AI models to stir up industry rivalry

South China Morning Post

time10 hours ago

  • South China Morning Post

WAIC Shanghai: Tencent, SenseTime launch new AI models to stir up industry rivalry

Tencent Holdings and SenseTime launched new artificial intelligence (AI) models at the World Artificial Intelligence Conference (WAIC) in Shanghai on Sunday as Chinese Big Tech companies stepped up their rivalry in the field. Shenzhen-based social media and gaming powerhouse Tencent unveiled its Hunyuan 3D World Model 1.0, an open-source AI model capable of generating detailed three-dimensional environments, according to a statement. SenseTime, an AI pioneer in China, launched SenseNova V6.5, a new generation of its proprietary AI model series. Tencent said its latest Hunyuan model could create interactive, 360-degree virtual 3D scenes using natural language prompts or image inputs, thus significantly simplifying the production process for virtual reality experiences and video games. Tencent said Hunyuan was the industry's first open-source 3D world-generation AI fully compatible with 'CG pipelines' – the standard workflow used for creating 3D graphics and animations in film production, gaming and visual effects. An image generated by Tencent's Hunyuan3D World Model 1.0, unveiled at the World Artificial Intelligence Conference in Shanghai on July 27, 2025. Photo: Handout Meanwhile, SenseTime claimed SenseNova V6.5 had outperformed some of its US peers such as Google's Gemini 2.5 Pro and Anthropic's Claude 4-Sonnet. Its unveiling marked the Hong Kong-listed firm's latest efforts to double down on multimodal AI models, chairman and CEO Xu Li said at the WAIC venue. The introduction followed months after it launched the previous version called SenseNova V6, a multimodal model released in April that had outperformed OpenAI's GPT-4o across several metrics.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store