Hong Kong finance chief upbeat on 2026 outlook after 3.2% growth

Hong Kong's finance chief has expressed optimism about the city's economic outlook for 2026, while forecasting 2025 growth to accelerate to 3.2%, surpassing earlier projections. He attributed this positive outlook mainly to anticipated growth in mainland China and Asia, along with interest rate cuts.

Hong Kong's Financial Secretary Paul Chan Mo-po struck an upbeat tone in his Sunday blog post, stating that looking ahead to next year, the city's economy is expected to maintain its positive momentum. The market generally anticipates that while the global economy may slow, it will still maintain moderate expansion. He forecast that real gross domestic product (GDP) growth for all of 2025 would accelerate to 3.2 per cent, outperforming earlier government estimates of between 2 and 3 per cent.

Chan attributed this strong performance to robust exports, resilient investments and a vibrant asset market, with these key drivers expected to sustain growth into next year. He also pledged that Hong Kong would seek to upgrade its role as an international financial centre and a trade and technology hub to take advantage of national development strategies laid down in China’s 15th five-year plan.

Hong Kong will align with national development strategies, focusing on three growth engines: finance, innovation and technology, and trade. However, his optimism was questioned by former finance chief John Tsang Chun-wah and some economists.

“Looking ahead to next year, Hong Kong’s economy is expected to maintain its positive momentum. The market generally anticipates that while the global economy may slow, it will still maintain moderate expansion,” Chan said.

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Hong Kong Financial Secretary Paul Chan presents the 2026 budget at the Legislative Council, highlighting AI and infrastructure investments amid fiscal surplus charts and public criticism over no cash handouts.
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Hong Kong budget stresses long-term investments amid public criticism

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Hong Kong Financial Secretary Paul Chan unveiled the 2026 budget on Wednesday, emphasizing investments in artificial intelligence and infrastructure while facing criticism for the absence of direct cash handouts to residents. The budget projects a surplus and includes a rare transfer from the Exchange Fund.

Hong Kong's Financial Secretary Paul Chan Mo-po said on Sunday that the city's economy showed resilience in the first quarter of 2026 amid volatility in equity and oil markets caused by war in the Middle East. Investors continued moving assets to the city, drawn by mainland China's steady economic growth and a large number of initial public offerings in Hong Kong. He noted the geopolitical landscape was complex and fast-changing, with uncertainty from the United States-Israel attack on Iran clouding the stock market.

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An opinion piece in the South China Morning Post suggests that Hong Kong's 2026-27 budget speech should clarify how the city's economic direction aligns with global and national trends, defining its place in future industries. It urges Financial Secretary Paul Chan Mo-po to explain the macroeconomic rationale behind Hong Kong's new industrial policy: large-scale investment in innovation and technology to broaden the economy.

China's first batch of hard economic activity data for 2026 exceeded downbeat forecasts, reports Seeking Alpha. Analysts note more work is required to support domestic growth amid rising inflation risks.

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During China's 2026 national two sessions, Hong Kong's role as the world's third-largest financial center drew attention. Australian scholar Warwick Powell discussed with Hong Kong CPPCC member Judith Yu how the city can leverage its 'super-connector' status to align with the 15th Five-Year Plan. Yu highlighted innovation, technology, and financial empowerment to boost Greater Bay Area cooperation.

Hong Kong’s leader has pledged to align the city with national strategies in China’s latest five-year plan and turn Beijing’s assigned “new positionings, functions and missions” into tangible outcomes to drive economic growth. Chief Executive John Lee Ka-chiu said he would lead the government in uniting society to proactively align with the 15th five-year plan, which sets China’s economic and social development targets for 2026 to 2030. His comments followed the approval of the plan’s outline by China’s top legislature.

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China has set its 2026 economic growth target at 4.5 to 5 percent, striving for better results, as announced in a government work report submitted to the National People's Congress on March 6, 2026—confirming earlier January reports of this range.

 

 

 

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