Hong Kong Financial Secretary Paul Chan Mo-po will deliver the 2026-27 budget on Wednesday, unveiling measures to accelerate economic recovery. The budget features a purple cover symbolizing strengthening economic momentum amid a volatile external environment. It arrives against heightened geopolitical tensions, including a new 15 per cent global tariff announced by US President Donald Trump, with expectations for sweeteners tempered by economists' warnings on public finances.
Hong Kong Financial Secretary Paul Chan Mo-po will deliver the annual 2026-27 budget on Wednesday, unveiling measures to accelerate the city's economic recovery after balancing the books, amid mounting expectations for more “sweeteners” in the blueprint.
The budget also marks the government’s first major test in aligning the city with mainland China’s 15th five-year plan and unveiling long-term growth initiatives. The finance chief revealed on Sunday that this year’s budget will feature a purple cover, symbolising Hong Kong’s strengthening economic momentum amid a volatile external environment.
It comes against the backdrop of heightening geopolitical tensions, following US President Donald Trump’s announcement last week of a new 15 per cent global tariff. With an earlier-than-expected operating surplus in sight, the government is under pressure to strategically invest in long-term growth engines while navigating headwinds and delivering more sweeteners, even as economists warned that public finances could not support large-scale relief measures.
Sources told the South China Morning Post that the finance chief would unveil a raft of measures to strengthen the city’s growing intellectual property (IP) economy, including investing tens of millions of dollars to establish a dedicated academy for nurturing professionals. The South China Morning Post examines how political and economic factors will shape the budget and what Hongkongers can expect from it.