Hong
Kong's
Identity crisis
To redefine itself, the city should look to Monte Carlo,
not Disneyland
By Philip Bowring. TIME
Jul 18, 2005
Should
Hong Kong aspire to be the Monte Carlo of China? The question
may seem absurd. For a start, Hong Kong is a commercial
city of nearly 7 million people; Monte Carlo a town of just
16,000.
Yet
Monte Carlo is a metaphor for things that Hong Kong should
stand for - quality, wealth, low taxes and a sort of independence.
A more
obvious comparison might be London, which, despite Britain's
decline, has maintained its global status thanks to a multinational
population and the determination of its financial markets
to see the world as their hinterland.
Hong Kong must adjust to the fact that it is not the only
capitalist city or financial centre in China, is not the
biggest port, is no longer a manufacturing hub or a unique
political anomaly in a post-imperial age.
Can
Hong Kong transform itself again, as it did in the 1950s
when it became more than a China gateway by turning itself
into a manufacturing powerhouse?
Or is
it destined to become like Rio de Janeiro? Fifty years ago,
the Brazilian city was the priciest place on the planet.
But it lost its bearings when the bureaucracy moved to Brasilia,
the bankers moved to São Paulo, and slums and drugs
trumped its topography and iconic beaches.
Hong
Kong must be itself. But what is that self at a time when
its government is making daily appeals to its people to
be more patriotic, to learn the national anthem and to emphasise
their membership of One Country over their enjoyment of
the freer of Two Systems?
The
most attractive aspect of Hong Kong is precisely that it
is so different from the rest of China. Vive la Différence!
Hong Kong should stop wanting to feel more kinship with
the likes of Wuhan and Chongqing.
Its
leaders should stop stressing cultural and racial homogeneity
and instead celebrate the roles of Nepalis, Americans, Filipinos,
Malaysians, Nigerians and, yes, British in making Hong Kong
what it is.
Will
Hong Kong's status be reinforced by Disneyland? Or is the
replication of the Magic Kingdom a desperate exercise in
copycat tourism that ignores Hong Kong's special attributes
in favour of a dated American formula that will bring scant
benefit?
I know
of no such equivalent in or around Monte Carlo - or, for
that matter, in Nice and Cannes, both of which combine glamour,
history, good food, a healthy climate and the flamboyant
luxury of megayachts.
By all means bring a casino to Hong Kong. But make it Monte
Carlo, not Macau, which today has little more visual appeal
than Shenzhen.
Hong
Kong does not need millions of low-income tourists playing
pennies on the tables or in the slot machines.
It does
not need to cover its beautiful islands with holiday villas
for businessmen and bureaucrats from Guangdong and high-rise
hotels à la Benidorm.
Will
Hong Kong's proposed multibillion-dollar West Kowloon "cultural
district" make the city an arts centre or just create
more opportunities for real estate speculation?
Without
the sparks that fly from its freedoms, Hong Kong will never
translate its cultural hopes into realities that justify
bold architectural monuments.
Will
Hong Kong celebrate its Cantonese roots, foreign influences
and its status as home for millions of Overseas Chinese?
Or will it instead buy "culture" franchises-importing
brands like Centre Pompidou and Guggenheim to bolster its
cultural cachet?
Hong
Kong, too, needs to celebrate its uniquely beautiful location
- and put money into maintaining it.
It should
recognise that quality of life should be one of its lead
attractions in a China where quantity rules and health is
sacrificed to economic growth.
Smog
and an ever-narrowing harbor are destroying a natural inheritance
that no other major coastal city in China enjoys. And Hong
Kong should take a self-interested lead in cleaning up the
Pearl River Delta.
A government
investing in Disneyland could surely spend an equivalent
amount on such a cleanup, starting with factories and power
plants owned by Hong Kong's own tycoons.
Without
maintaining the quality of life that its topography and
climate should provide, Hong Kong could gradually lose its
richest sector - financial services.
With
effort, it could be a city like Sydney, which others envy
for its combination of natural beauty, efficiency, food
and architecture. Sydney is a place where visitors can sail
a boat, swim in the harbour, smell the sea - and still do
business.
Will
China's movie starlets want to be filmed against a background
of smog? Will the new rich from China's interior, longing
for a breath of fresh sea air, flock to a smelly city?
An environment
that should be one of Hong Kong's attractions is already
driving business to Singapore, Sydney, even Tokyo.
Leave
the theme parks to Dongguan and the patriotic history museums
to Beijing. Be yourself, Hong Kong. Celebrate quality, culture,
entrepreneurship, food, efficiency, climate and scenery
- and the rich and famous will come.
(Philip Bowring is a Hong Kong-based columnist.)