Statistics
trick us once again
Hong Kong’s Census and Statistics Department
is staffed by earnest and honest statisticians and data collectors and produces
some of the most comprehensive statistics in Asia.
But the department’s just-published Summary
Results of a 2011 Population Census show what looks like politically inspired
manipulation of the data to hide embarrassing facts.
The huge hole in its numbers is laid even more
starkly bare by the February 24 release of a study by the Asia-Pacific
Foundation of Canada on Canadians in Hong Kong.
The census data purports to show separate
breakdowns of the population both by Nationality and Ethnicity. Thus 93.2
percent of the population is deemed to be Chinese nationals. The largest groups
of non-Chinese nationals are Indonesians and Filipinos (almost all domestic
helpers on short-term contracts and limited rights) with 1.9 percent each
followed by British, Indian, Pakistani, American, Australian, Nepalese, Thai
and Japanese. “Other” nationalities account for 0.8 percent.
So where in this list are the Canadians?
Beginning in 1987 with the realization that Hong Kong would be handed back to
China in 1997, and lured by generous Canadian immigration policies, tens of
thousands of Hong Kong residents migrated to the North American country. For
almost a decade, Hong Kong was the biggest source of migrants to Canada. Once
they attained the Canadian passports that would protect them from any harm if
the Chinese government proved inhospitable, they started to trickle back. Many
of these “boomerang immigrants,” as they became known, eventually returned to
the territory.
Certainly all of these Canadians cannot all be
included in “Other.” It is just that the Hong Kong government in practice is
using an ethnic label rather than a national one as defined by passport. The
Canadian survey was conducted by the Hong Kong Transition Project at Hong Kong
Baptist University with a view to estimating the number of Canadians in Hong
Kong and the extent of their links with and visits to Canada.
The survey concluded that “A conservative
estimate of total Canadian citizens living in Hong Kong is 295,390”. It further
estimates that 7.85 percent of households have at least one Canadian citizen
over the age of 18.
For sure 37 percent of the number, according
to the survey , they “never” considered Canada as home and only 16 percent
consider it home “all the time.” But such identification issues are not
supposed to enter into nationality definition. Or at any rate the data should
record dual nationality if it is claimed (which technically is not possible for
Chinese).
The desire to hide the actual nationality of
so many Hong Kong people also distorts all the other numbers – British,
American and Australian in particular. Add in ethnic Chinese who hold these and
other foreign passports and the grand total of such foreign nationals is
probably close to 500,000.
Then there those nationalities well
represented in Hong Kong but not listed separately such as Malaysians and
Singaporeans. Are ethnic Chinese from Malaysia, for example, treated as Chinese
or Malaysian? If the former, the Malaysian government would have every reason
to protest to Beijing.
The list by ethnicity is curious for another
reason, and one which suggests that the department has scant idea about the
difference between ethnicity and nationality. Indians, Pakistanis and Nepalis
are all treated as separate ethnic groups as are Indonesians and Filipinos. In
all cases the numbers are close to those of nationality. There are also
separate categories for Thais, Japanese and Other Asians. Then there is an all
encompassing category “white” which is merely an expression of skin color – and
a singularly vague one at that – and could take in people from Siberia to
Santiago to Saudi Arabia to Scotland.
The Department claims that ethnicity was a
matter of “self-determination” in the survey. But the it chose the options
which must surely have baffled many – not just the 0.4 percent of the
population who opted for “other” or declared mixed ethnicity.
All in all the statistics are doubtless
accurate but the definitions tell some damned lies.
Asia Sentinel
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