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HK seeks women workers as aging population looms
Last Updated: 2013-11-07 13:30 | CE.cn
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By Li Hongmei

Hong Kong is seeking to attract more homemakers into the workforce as an aging population and low fertility rates threaten to curb economic growth.

More than half a million women homemakers in the city are between the ages of 30 and 59, representing a "huge potential," Florence Hui, the undersecretary for home affairs, said late yesterday at a Bloomberg seminar in Hong Kong.

Female labor-force participation in Hong Kong has stalled at under 50 percent in the past decade as inadequate childcare services and rigid working hours held back workers. With the elderly expected to make up 30 percent of the population by 2041, the government wants more women to join the workforce.

"The aging population and the low fertility rate are giving rise to a population deficit which means that we have to make it possible for women to go and participate," Anna Wu, chairman of the Hong Kong Mandatory Provident Fund Schemes Authority, said in an interview yesterday.

The Asia-Pacific region loses about US$89 billion a year in unrealized output by excluding women from parts of the economy, according to the United Nations. Fifty-seven percent of Hong Kong employers are having trouble finding the right staff, the most since 2008, according to a report by ManpowerGroup.

Attracting more women into the labor force would be crucial as Hong Kong edges to a demographic turning point where its workforce will shrink.

Hong Kong will have a shortfall of 14,000 workers in 2018, assuming the city's economy expands at 4 percent a year, the Census and Statistics Department said last year. With a higher growth rate, the deficit could reach 163,800 employees.

About 100,000 women are working part-time in Hong Kong, twice the number of men.

The proportion of people aged 65 and older will account for 30 percent by 2041, up from 14 percent last year, Financial Secretary John Tsang said in February. The number of residents in the workforce is expected to decline to 49.5 percent by 2041, from 58.8 percent in 2012, according to the government.

Only a significant increase in productivity could offset the negative impact of a smaller workforce on growth, the government wrote in a recent consultation paper.

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