The Myth of Hong Kong Capitalism

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  • Опубликовано: 22 ноя 2024
  • Support PolyMatter & watch this video ad-free on Nebula: nebula.tv/vide...
    Sources: pastebin.com/p...
    Twitter: / polymatters
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    Music by Graham Haerther (www.Haerther.net)
    Audio editing by Eric Schneider
    Motion graphics by Vincent de Langen
    Writing & Direction by Evan
    This includes a paid sponsorship which had no part in the writing, editing, or production of the rest of the video.
    Music by Epidemic Sound: epidemicsound.com
    Video supplied by Getty Images

Комментарии • 2 тыс.

  • @PolyMatter
    @PolyMatter  3 года назад +232

    ⭐️Watch the bonus video: “How Corporations Vote in Hong Kong” on Nebula, which is just $15/year and includes CuriosityStream, here: curiositystream.com/polymatter

    • @zyansheep
      @zyansheep 3 года назад +3

      Thanks for another awesome vid (* ^ ω ^)

    • @hughmungusbungusfungus4618
      @hughmungusbungusfungus4618 3 года назад +2

      So, yes, Hong Kong is no longer an exemplar of free market enterprise. Because it no longer has free market enterprise. Regulations a free market do not make.

    • @GyacoYu
      @GyacoYu 3 года назад +3

      Time to talk about Afghanistan, bro. I know you like to talk about our neighbors, but you have tried two wrong neighbors at the very wrong time.
      -From Mainland China

    • @gilmore6168
      @gilmore6168 3 года назад +1

      I can’t afford nebula

    • @YungBrough118
      @YungBrough118 3 года назад +2

      Hi, the link you provide for sources in the description doesn't work, may I get a new link to sources for this video? Thanks!

  • @AntoneII
    @AntoneII 3 года назад +1787

    The greatest thing I’ve learned from this video is that the richest Hong Konger literally has a ”ka-ching” in its name.

    • @--julian_
      @--julian_ 3 года назад +67

      I heard it more like cash-in but yeah lol

    • @cobytang
      @cobytang 3 года назад +112

      It's Ka-Shing.

    • @---iv5gj
      @---iv5gj 3 года назад +58

      It's pronounced "Lay Gah Sing" but whatever

    • @apollo1694
      @apollo1694 3 года назад +12

      No? It's Lei Ga Shing. Jesus Christ people on the internet have such a shitty understanding of Chinese

    • @Charles-tr5xn
      @Charles-tr5xn 3 года назад +71

      @@apollo1694 it's a joke... Hold your horses

  • @fatmanmobile
    @fatmanmobile 3 года назад +908

    "The privately-owned Jockey Club is granted a total monopoly on gambling, which, in exchange, sprayed charity around the city in a way only guilt can explain" too good

    • @geoffreycharles6330
      @geoffreycharles6330 3 года назад +24

      I can't understand what exactly he meant but ok.

    • @Kanthannic
      @Kanthannic 3 года назад +20

      @@geoffreycharles6330 Study more ok?

    • @cloudynguyen6527
      @cloudynguyen6527 3 года назад +80

      @@geoffreycharles6330 it means the gambling corp can earn as much profit then put those profit into city's charity based on their guilt. Literally mean, they donate because they feel like it

    • @darparniox
      @darparniox 3 года назад +18

      @@cloudynguyen6527 I think the HKJC is registered as a charity, so any profit actually needs to be given away

    • @cloudynguyen6527
      @cloudynguyen6527 3 года назад +1

      @@darparniox ah, glad to know. That's actually cool

  • @harriswong2137
    @harriswong2137 3 года назад +1921

    I was born and raised in Hong Kong. The monopoly/duopoly seem a completely normal thing in my life; and the laissez faire economy is something that is commonly taught in high school.
    It is through the critical lens from somebody not from Hong Kong, in that I can realise things that I grow up with or take as a simple fact may not be that simple at all.
    Thank you for encouraging me to be more critical towards what is happening in my home city and in the world.

    • @mikec1651
      @mikec1651 3 года назад +27

      Harris I am likely a good deal older than you, this is something that will happen throughout your life and often has disappointment attached to it. m

    • @fosahistorica2537
      @fosahistorica2537 3 года назад +56

      Give me your Hong Kong citizenship get me out of Latin America please .

    • @li_tsz_fung
      @li_tsz_fung 3 года назад +12

      @@fosahistorica2537 I don't mind if the system allows

    • @canto_v12
      @canto_v12 3 года назад +31

      Watching these videos, as well as paying close attention to Hong Kong's political crises of the past few years, has vastly improved my understanding as an HK-American, of what HK is, and what HK is not.
      When we learn more about our home, we can think of new ways to make it better.

    • @li_tsz_fung
      @li_tsz_fung 3 года назад +9

      @@canto_v12 Yes, only if we can make a difference under's CCP control

  • @HowMoneyWorks
    @HowMoneyWorks 3 года назад +1324

    This is just so well done. Excellent video, Evan!

    • @noahnoah2747
      @noahnoah2747 3 года назад +12

      How come Hong Kong had 98% of commercial banking concentrated in one institution in 2003? Compared to 78% in mainland China, it seems like it's more authoritarian and stratified.

    • @zsmith4853
      @zsmith4853 3 года назад +1

      I seconded this.

    • @epicmatter3512
      @epicmatter3512 3 года назад +9

      It is an extremely good quality, just like your videos!

    • @HowMoneyWorks
      @HowMoneyWorks 3 года назад +8

      @@epicmatter3512 😊😢 why are people so amazing

    • @evanlaplant4348
      @evanlaplant4348 3 года назад +2

      Thanks

  • @ks5331productions
    @ks5331productions 3 года назад +496

    “No, corporations legally cast ballots.”
    **flashbacks to Functional Constituencies**
    edit: mom im famous

    • @PatheticTV
      @PatheticTV 3 года назад +9

      Hey another HK bus fan like me :)
      Yes, the functional constituencies are so dumb.
      PS amazing pfp

    • @300blackcats
      @300blackcats 3 года назад +14

      and the fact that they get to vote for the chief executive, while citizens dont get to do so

    • @ks5331productions
      @ks5331productions 3 года назад

      @@PatheticTV thancc

    • @KS2996
      @KS2996 3 года назад

      :o

    • @J0seph13
      @J0seph13 6 месяцев назад

      No you aren't

  • @zzz4854
    @zzz4854 3 года назад +275

    Chaebols in South Korea: Finally a worthy opponent, our battle will be legendary.

    • @MrFruitPrimate
      @MrFruitPrimate 3 года назад +21

      Prewar Japanese Zaibatsus want their playbook back.

    • @metal_brrr_2005
      @metal_brrr_2005 3 года назад +4

      Cannot wait for the future corp wars lol

    • @chongjunxiang3002
      @chongjunxiang3002 3 года назад +8

      @@metal_brrr_2005 You mean that Ancapistan 3d cartoon lol
      Can't wait for McNuke to discover the market in North Korea.

    • @dongster529
      @dongster529 3 года назад +3

      ​@@metal_brrr_2005 What you mean wait?
      The 2019 riots were backed by the HK Corporatocracy against mainland regulations that affected them.
      They effectively weaponized the already present dormant unhappiness(ironically partly created by the Corporatocracy) against an easy big bad, the mainland.
      From my perspective, it was 2 bad guys fighting it out and using the civilians as fodder, many cynical adults saw through it, which is why they used the naïve kids for the extreme stuff.

    • @zidorovichburblyatya2862
      @zidorovichburblyatya2862 3 года назад +1

      @@dongster529 HK corporates supported by NED though.

  • @haydenchan1388
    @haydenchan1388 3 года назад +585

    I have to say, as a Hongkonger, I love all of these episodes about Hong Kong 👍🏻👍🏻

    • @yourfriendlyneighborhoodla2091
      @yourfriendlyneighborhoodla2091 3 года назад +18

      What are your thoughts on the recent security law

    • @dr.floridaman4805
      @dr.floridaman4805 3 года назад +30

      Mainlander moved to hong kong by the CCP or a true native?
      Security law. You have the freedom of speech.
      You have the right to address grievances to the government.
      You have the right to freedom of religion, even falun gong.
      Xinjiang province is not China.
      Tibet is not China.
      Taiwan is the rightful government of China.

    • @sinoroman
      @sinoroman 3 года назад +25

      @@dr.floridaman4805 fg member?

    • @p.9227
      @p.9227 3 года назад +16

      Me too. It allows me to see how outsiders view Hong Kong and help me to recall stuff I learnt in Liberial Studies class.
      Even though I didn't like the subject, it did taught me something I wouldn't actively learn elsewhere. It's sad that the subject is being changed into a brainwashing propaganda.

    • @yerri5567
      @yerri5567 3 года назад +36

      @@dr.floridaman4805 "Mainlander moved to hong kong by the CCP or a true native?"
      No such thing as "true native". They all migrated there in the past 2 centuries

  • @C.Dankertsen
    @C.Dankertsen 3 года назад +1170

    this channel is the definition of quality over quantity

    • @zyansheep
      @zyansheep 3 года назад +22

      So are many other educational channels...

    • @sinoroman
      @sinoroman 3 года назад +11

      This channel is a bit biased like R Life Lore

    • @AxxLAfriku
      @AxxLAfriku 3 года назад +1

      NO! NO! NO! Many people say I am sick in the head. NOOOO!!!! I don't believe them. But there are so many people commenting this stuff on my videos, that I have 1% doubt. So I have to ask you right now: Do you think I am sick in the head? Thanks for helping, my dear aa

    • @Rugbiii
      @Rugbiii 3 года назад +1

      He doesn’t do it for money, that’s the key to having a great channel, not relying on it for income.

    • @zyansheep
      @zyansheep 3 года назад +18

      @@sinoroman all channels are biased, its only human. What sets channels apart is how well they cite their sources, and how willing they are to admit mistakes.

  • @Nainara32
    @Nainara32 3 года назад +753

    The distinction between "corporatism" and "free-market capitalism" is one worth exploring. It's important to note that Milton Friedman and other expounders of ideological "free-market capitalism" strongly supported government intervention to prevent or break up technical monopolies.

    • @ibrahimsiali2419
      @ibrahimsiali2419 3 года назад +137

      @@SmallBeanImperialist I don't think you understood his comment. Milton Freidman and the dries (those who supported free market policies in the 70s) advocated for monopolies and oligopolies to be broken up by government, preventing wealth from being concentrated in the hands of few, and ensuring greater market competition. Which would also reduce prices. The common man wins if Milton ever had his way.
      (The dude I was replying to deleted his comment, so chill)

    • @MC_MMV
      @MC_MMV 3 года назад +61

      When there is government, Corporatism will always exist. The government interferes to ‘protect’ us (the consumer), but in reality there only do it because of lobbyists from large businesses bribing them. Why does Amazon now want regulation in their field of business? It’s because it keeps the start ups from expanding as it is more difficult for them. For this reason, I am an anarcho capitalist. If you’re worried about monopolies, why don’t you point your finger to your government? I believe in voluntarism, you should choose your life - the government has no authority over yourself.

    • @user-dw1zb3fh5n
      @user-dw1zb3fh5n 3 года назад +59

      @@ibrahimsiali2419 Milton Friedman made a living selling propaganda to the naive

    • @shaamsolanki2881
      @shaamsolanki2881 3 года назад +56

      @@MC_MMV Unless you're fourteen you're views might be a symptom of severe learning disabilities

    • @urphakeandgey6308
      @urphakeandgey6308 3 года назад +46

      Some of the staunchest of capitalists or free-market thinkers will basically say corporations can't exist in a free market, because corporations are legal entities assigned by government, not the market, and given protectionism.

  • @schumanhuman
    @schumanhuman 3 года назад +576

    This analysis whilst makes some good points misses probably the key reason for Hong Kong's success. Whilst deeply flawed the main reason for Hong Kong's growth is it mainly finances itself via corporate land leases, which allow it lower taxes on productivity. Most (edit not most but a large %) of the people are housed in public housing (admittedly inferior to Singapore's) , which also drives down worker costs.
    The high stamp duty also effectively nationalises a % of land/housing, as the liability of the tax comes off the capitalised price, though far less efficiently than an annual land tax would and their remaining private housing sector is still highly speculative.
    In short Hong Kong use land as a tax base (something Friedman did get right) as well as in part treat it a public good. Hong Kong is then perhaps best described as a quasi Georgist model but lacks the democratic and fully efficient tax system which would allow the people to prosper more equitably. Scrapping the remaining taxes on productivity and replacing leases, stamp duties etc with an annual land value tax and then sharing a portion of the revenues as a dividend al Alaska's permanent fund would allow the prosperity to not only grow further but be shared more equitably.

    • @via45
      @via45 3 года назад +6

      Agreeed

    • @shotelco
      @shotelco 3 года назад +7

      Interesting. Could you explain the Hong Kong:
      Ad Valorem Stamp Duty (AVD) for Residential Property vs. Non-Residential Property
      Special Stamp Duty (SSD)
      Buyer’s Stamp Duty (BSD) and double Stamp Duty?
      And the ongoing annual property tax rate?
      From the outside looking in, the Government ultimately, and perpetually owns all property - as there is no exclusive authority to determine how a resource is used by a citizen (What happens if a citizen can't pay their property taxes?). Thus, there are no real "property rights."

    • @ifeelverygood
      @ifeelverygood 3 года назад +24

      Only those who are lucky enough to making below a certain amount can apply for public housing and the waiting times are over a decade. I'm not sure you know what you're talking about.

    • @shotelco
      @shotelco 3 года назад +16

      @@ifeelverygood This is why I structured my comment as a QUESTION. I don't know and I wanted to learn more. It's also why my comment was in response to the statement made by _schumanhuman._ Your response is irrelevant, immaterial, and incompetent as it does not address the question(s) I posed at all.

    • @leojei
      @leojei 3 года назад +31

      I guess this explains why it is due to the failure of their public housing policy that led to the devastatingly bad living condition for a sizeable portion of the population. I always thought it was because of the government limit land supplies and thus choked the whole housing market, causing price to raise significantly. It sounds to me the intention is to leave the private housing market to the riches while public housing to the poor. It sounds good and it did provide affordable housing to what became the middle class (my family was one who benefited by it) at first. But, it relies heavily on the continuation of supply in public housing that the government simply couldn’t supply, forcing the middle class (and higher) who can no longer afford or just find it cheaper to go with public housing, to flood the public housing waiting list. My brother finally got his public housing after waiting for 10 years (he went back to town in 2007, tho), finally taking a huge financial burden off his shoulder. The rental market was just brutal that he wasn’t able to save any money at all, and we were all praying that he would get public housing as a relieve of his situation. This probably is the reality of a lot of people there too and also a bunch of ppl who were the original target population of such public housing policy are now being pushed to rent coffin-sized space within a flat to sleep/live…
      All in all, I guess the only thing the government can do is to significantly expand their public housing supply, magically.

  • @forestreee
    @forestreee 3 года назад +763

    Hong Kong seems like the most cyberpunk-ish place on earth.

    • @stevenoviedo541
      @stevenoviedo541 3 года назад +78

      It is.

    • @waldofelix29
      @waldofelix29 3 года назад +135

      Kowloon Walled City that once existed in Hong Kong was super cyberpunk-ish.

    • @tav5771
      @tav5771 3 года назад +64

      Shanghai and Shenzhen are strong contenders

    • @floppingtuna2022
      @floppingtuna2022 3 года назад +60

      @@tav5771 Chongqing looks cyberpunkish at night too

    • @yohaneschristianp
      @yohaneschristianp 3 года назад +26

      Shanghai was more cyberpunkish than HK before the war. Many SHers also fled to HK after communist takeover.

  • @vennonetes4805
    @vennonetes4805 3 года назад +157

    This "corporatocracy" reminds me of the Venetian Republic (and Genoese etc... "Maritime republics" in general) and its focus on trade and commerce inevitably linked with the merchant oligarchy.

    • @Amelia_-qy9nz
      @Amelia_-qy9nz 3 года назад +4

      As a person born and living in Hong Kong right now this is pretty much true now that I'm thinking about it

  • @matthewmatthew638
    @matthewmatthew638 3 года назад +160

    It's also good to note that HK, a hilariously unequal place where conglomerates run everything and the government is *at best* ambivalent toward its peoples wellbeing. One of the few benefits publically provided is....a decently well-functioning public healthcare system and great public transportation infrastructure, would be good for policymakers and politicians in some other countries to take note...

    • @mylim4020
      @mylim4020 3 года назад +10

      While public transports service is very reliable compare to other cities, companies like MTR is part of the problems too.

    • @PatheticTV
      @PatheticTV 3 года назад +3

      @@mylim4020 the Transport Department is corrupt. They always cut services and raise fares for buses, then make the MTR more convenient. They cause damage to BravoBus(NWS) and KMB, and make the MTR better

    • @bw1678
      @bw1678 3 года назад +18

      @@PatheticTV So same with America, except here it's the car lobbyists screwing up public transportation so driving is the only real option.

    • @ManakoFeba
      @ManakoFeba 3 года назад +3

      as who born and living in Hong Kong,
      I can agree at 'great public transportation infrastructure', although the public transport, KMB, MTR is monopoly, and have some controversial pricing, you can reach almost everywhere in Hong Kong via public transports, MTR, KMB, minibus, etc. within 1-2hours
      I doubted that public healthcare system is healthy, while private healthcare are not as affordable to middleclass, public healthcare are usually in shortage. Booking for medical services are usually for months, or worse, 1-2 years. And now, Covid-19 is putting HK's public healthcare to it limit, and I doubt that the tension can last in the long run

    • @Amber-bw1ou
      @Amber-bw1ou 2 года назад +8

      Well-functioning public healthcare system? Our public medical system is continuously overwhelmed and on the brink of collapse. No offense.

  • @anasadeelallawala4156
    @anasadeelallawala4156 3 года назад +111

    This is really interesting and informative. There’s a lot of stuff in this which I didn’t know about before. Kudos to poly matter and keep up the great work👍👍

  • @imbleu1067
    @imbleu1067 3 года назад +213

    As someone from Hong Kong, it always surprised me when travelling overseas how cheap food is. You hear people complaining about how expensive food is in Sydney, Moscow, Amsterdam, Paris, London etc and when I go to supermarkets there, I am always shocked by how cheap food is in comparison. Took me until I was 20 to realise that it wasn't that food was cheap everywhere else, but that food was just expensive in Hong Kong.

    • @nictse500
      @nictse500 3 года назад +40

      How the fuck is food expensive in Hong Kong. Have you BEEN overseas??? Living the US for 14 years, unhealthy fastfood meals are around 12-16 USD. Lunch from local restaurants in Hong Kong is like HKD$40 -$120. In Europe a McD big Mac is like $10 euro. Wtf are you even talking about

    • @hoco27
      @hoco27 3 года назад +8

      for the longest time my Dad said Japan was more expensive than HK. Then we went and it was so much more affordable even compared to HK.

    • @pineapplesareyummy6352
      @pineapplesareyummy6352 3 года назад +22

      ​@@nictse500 I am guessing he was a foreign expat in HK (his profile says South Africa), and not a Chinese HK'er. For all the crap people have to put up with on house prices and substandard living spaces, at least food is affordable in Cafe de Coral or any 茶餐廳. Foreign expats (unless they were Filipino/Thai/Indonesian maids) don't go to these places. People who live in Discovery Bay, send their kids to international schools (who can't speak a word of Cantonese even after growing up there), and shop at supermarkets selling organic food probably would find everything expensive.

    • @kakiuw7543
      @kakiuw7543 3 года назад +12

      @@nictse500 Dinning out is is super cheap in HK. But for food in supermarket, meat and vegetable in London are like half price compare to HK.

    • @rayl3575
      @rayl3575 3 года назад +4

      @@hoco27 japan was more expensive back in the 90s. But their economy has been stagnant since the bubble popped. Their food prices remained relatively the same for the past 30 years.

  • @xxyanlixx
    @xxyanlixx 3 года назад +58

    Corporatocracy sounds about right. In a city this small, the early successful entrepreneurs likely monopolized the daily commodities, thus the rich gets richer. Then makes the government impossible to not bend for them.

    • @canto_v12
      @canto_v12 3 года назад +6

      Only an authoritarian government would be able to break Hong Kong's monopolies, but we all know that's not gonna happen anytime soon. For all the sob stories of "oppression" from the protesters and rioters who are sore from getting the nightstick, Hong Kong is still a VERY laissez faire city, in fact, one of the leading examples as this video explains.

    • @ttuliorancao
      @ttuliorancao 3 года назад

      @@canto_v12 oh, it's coming soon. Hong Kong autonomy ends in 2049. Just 28 more years and the authoritarian communist party of China will be fully governing Hong Kong and will do as it pleases them

    • @canto_v12
      @canto_v12 3 года назад +3

      @@ttuliorancao China has changed so much in the past 20 years, would be folly to assume it will stay static for the next 30.

    • @ttuliorancao
      @ttuliorancao 3 года назад +3

      @@canto_v12 static I doubt, but China has a tradition of authoritarianism with no democracy since time immemorial. Even Taiwan, that boasts about being democratic, was a dictatorship for most of the period since WW2. And Hong Kong, c'mon, that's anything but democratic. Companies control the legislative process by their direct vote. It's anything but a democracy

    • @user-ls4cs1wd2w
      @user-ls4cs1wd2w 3 года назад

      @@ttuliorancao what are you talking about? China is one of the few places on Earth where popular revolt and opinions have mattered for millenia. Today it's a dictatorship but it has a long history of being way more democratic than any European country until the 20th century. One example is the first emperor of the Han Dynasty, who was originally a commoner and rose to prominence after a popular revolt. Compare that to western countries where revolutions always end up with the elites winning

  • @tangkicheung6301
    @tangkicheung6301 3 года назад +203

    As someone born and raised in hong kong, I honestly thought all of this was normal and was very much reasonable. But from what I see, if you are a lower class would suck as high rent and grocery cost etc., but your life as a middle class or higher citizen, your life is reasonably good here. Although yes, we don’t get to pick which companies we get our services from. But from what we see, most things are reasonably priced.

    • @djinn666
      @djinn666 3 года назад +44

      Median income in HK is quite a bit lower than places like the US after adjusting for purchasing power. Even worse if you also adjust for hours worked.

    • @canto_v12
      @canto_v12 3 года назад +20

      @@djinn666 HK has weaknesses that prevent it from reaching American levels of average income. Those include lacking America’s huge supply of illegal labour, small land size and closed borders stopping free migration of talent, an overrreliance on old, less innovative industries like shipping and business management, etc.

    • @GiantDude
      @GiantDude 3 года назад +29

      If people realize that monopolies make the market not-free anymore. When you lose choices, you pay more and get less. You work more and receive less. This is why Hong Kong citizens are not as well off as the citizens in other countries not dominated by monopolies to the same degree. This is also why the whole world is so afraid of FB, Twitter, Amazon etc monopolies.

    • @EarthForces
      @EarthForces 3 года назад +22

      @@GiantDude indeed. If you want to see the best and worst features of laissez-faire capitalism. Look no further than to Hong Kong. I guess even though I am generally for free-markets and capitalism, one should consider the great contributions of so-called "socialists" (I prefer to call them reformists) that allowed a means for us plebs to balance the scales between us and the global corporatocracy.
      For all its faults, the US model might be the most balanced in principle but sadly is eroded away as tech monopolies and their allies are getting stronger in overall influence to what is the "American Project".

    • @Destroyerofcopers
      @Destroyerofcopers 3 года назад +1

      @@canto_v12 Agree with all except the illegal labour part, how does that let America have a higher median income?

  • @johnpijano4786
    @johnpijano4786 3 года назад +252

    "Some countries even describe corporations as legal "People""
    America and Citizens united has left the room.

    • @professorhal8098
      @professorhal8098 3 года назад

      Well it’s asking 15 dollars a month to learn more from him so not much to talk about

    • @npai6612
      @npai6612 3 года назад +1

      Well, "legal people" is the direct translation of corporation from East Asian languages. Nothing to complain

    • @neeneko
      @neeneko 3 года назад +12

      I think they all pretty much do that, it is a core component of things like contracts and property ownership.

    • @christianmoore7109
      @christianmoore7109 3 года назад +9

      that's necessary for all sorts of important things. Corporate personhood is good if you like accountability.

    • @flakgun153
      @flakgun153 3 года назад

      All citizens United says is that corporations, unions, and other associations have the same free speech rights as everyone else.

  • @jabba233hutt3
    @jabba233hutt3 3 года назад +62

    “Non-permanent residents pay 30%, effectively blocking non-resident from own any homes.”
    Oh, I can hear the laugh of Shenzhen natives even here in Vancouver.

    • @habibbialikafe339
      @habibbialikafe339 3 года назад

      Is there a tax in Shenzhen?

    • @jabba233hutt3
      @jabba233hutt3 3 года назад +7

      @@habibbialikafe339 Yes, but the hyperinflation is scarier than the taxes.

    • @fludblud
      @fludblud 3 года назад +1

      Oh, you mean Hongcouver?

    • @habibbialikafe339
      @habibbialikafe339 3 года назад

      @@jabba233hutt3 u think it will crash?

    • @Destroyerofcopers
      @Destroyerofcopers 3 года назад

      Doesn't Vancouver also have some policies to prevent foreign billionaires from buying multiple homes?

  • @johnc1014
    @johnc1014 3 года назад +15

    People often bring up "monopolies" as a critique of free market capitalism.
    Yet, by definition, government-created monopolies mean that part of the economy isn't a free market.
    In a truly free market, monopolies can only exist if one company can somehow manage to provide a particular product at such high quality and/or low price that no one else is able to compete.
    That can be possible by creating more efficient production methods or business practices, in general.
    But, it can also be possible by a company selling at a loss for a time so as to get rid of competition that simply can't sell at that low a price. This predatory pricing, however, is inherently unsustainable. And, the moment they increase their prices that opens the door for competition to once again return.

    • @CrazyWeeMonkey
      @CrazyWeeMonkey 3 года назад +2

      Monopolies can and have existed in free-market economies and its not a rare occurrence either. A company does not need to have a better product, they just need to have more money & resources than everyone else. Monopolies are inherently a part of free-market capitalism and are one of the many reasons why it's a flawed economic system.

    • @johnc1014
      @johnc1014 3 года назад +5

      @@CrazyWeeMonkey Ok, can you go into more detail?
      Give some specific examples.
      How would a single company having a lot more money and resources lead to them becoming a monopoly?
      There are plenty of companies existing today that meet that criteria, yet are far from monopoly status.
      You claim monopolies are inherent to free-market capitalism. In what way is that the case? I fail to see that.
      The one main example I can think of here is Standard Oil. This company became a monopoly in the U.S. by making their production processes so efficient that few others even attempted to compete. Rockefeller cut every cost he could in order to offer customers the lowest price possible.
      This is exactly what free-market capitalism aims for.
      Yet, Standard Oil was broken up by the U.S. government for engaging in "unfair practices" like price-cutting that drove smaller competitors out of business.
      In other words, they broke up the company because it could offer customers lower prices than anyone else.
      In this way, I can see monopolies being an intentional result of a free-market. But, that is far from being inherent. More often, a free-market breeds numerous competitors offering very similar products at very similar prices to one another.

    • @CrazyWeeMonkey
      @CrazyWeeMonkey 3 года назад

      @@johnc1014
      Monopolies can be created (and often have been) by buying out other companies or using your resources to purposely undercut competitors out of business.
      Without regulations in place, nothing stops companies from doing any of the things listed above, nor does it stop them from committing espionage against other companies.
      Standard Oil became a monopoly because it bought out it's competition.

    • @johnc1014
      @johnc1014 3 года назад +3

      @@CrazyWeeMonkey Sure, one company can buy others if they have the funds to do so. You say "buy out," which makes me think of a failed business with a large sum of debt being bought my a more successful business.
      There's nothing wrong with that.
      Of course, your fear would be the lack of competition leading to inflated prices and lower quality. But, a monopoly raising prices or lowering quality would open the door for new competitors to take away that monopoly status.
      In our present reality, government frequently creates monopolies and sets regulations that bar new competition. But, in a free market, there is no such government regulation.
      The only way a single company can maintain a monopoly is by continuing to provide adequately low prices and high quality for customers. No regulation is needed here.
      Now, you do bring up a good point about "espionage." Firstly, it's the duty of any individual or business to ensure their own security to some degree.
      You shouldn't just leave your door wide open for anyone to enter at will.
      That said, certain actions should absolutely be illegal and punishable through a justice system.
      If a business commits theft, fraud, espionage, or any other such crime, they should absolutely be held criminally liable.
      That isn't regulation prior to a crime, but rather criminal penalty imposed after the commission of a crime.

    • @Morris-c8f
      @Morris-c8f 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@johnc1014bros writing way to much so I didn't read but you asked for an example of a monopoly. American Company, the famous MaBell. (proper name was Western Electric I think) it was a telecom company which owned all the telephone lines in America. You cannot just enter that business because it would require you to build an entirely separate network of wires across the country. This cost is far too high and as such nobody bothered trying to enter the market, additionally Bell would cut prices in areas where new company's somehow sprung up and then buy out the newly bankrupt company's increasing their market share. Why aren't they around now? Government intervention had to break them up, not the,"glorious hand of the free market"

  • @ziksy6460
    @ziksy6460 3 года назад +34

    Being anything but middle class or above must really suck in Hong Kong

    • @ericli2936
      @ericli2936 3 года назад +1

      But you do have choices to succeed. Many people still make it well if you have the will.

    • @developmentallychallenged
      @developmentallychallenged 2 года назад +2

      That's most places in the world sadly. Even in America.

    • @nikhilpranav6915
      @nikhilpranav6915 2 года назад

      Billionaires who "disappeared":

    • @sibinmathew7985
      @sibinmathew7985 2 года назад

      As opposed to where ?

  • @isheanesunigelmisi8400
    @isheanesunigelmisi8400 3 года назад +14

    I checked last night to see if there was a new video I had missed in my notifications, been a fan so long that I have an internal Polymatter clock

  • @SH-sz4jh
    @SH-sz4jh 3 года назад +7

    the video would only be more comprehensive if the major real estate developers such as Sun Hung Kei Prop, New World etc were mentioned. They are the monopolies in the real estate which enjoyed so many privileges in Hong Kong. The unbelievably high housing prices are also one major reason for the inequality here. On top of that, the video was contradicting the reality a bit when it talks about economic freedom. It is no longer guaranteed since 2020 after the national security law had been implemented. Anyway, it was lovely to see a lot of footage from the old Hong Kong. Our home has changed a lot for bad these years because of the government. Good to reminisce the old times. Thank you for making this on Hong Kong.

  • @dunnowy123
    @dunnowy123 3 года назад +30

    Free market capitalism in East Asia is so wildly different than what we in the West (specifically North America) think of as "free market" capitalism. It's almost always more paternalistic than we imagine; there is a respect for success and those who get big, stay big.

    • @PrograError
      @PrograError 3 года назад +4

      it comes from a place of "face".
      if you fail as a big company, you lost "face"
      so hence the incentive to success, and to be conservative even at government levels. and that includes the CCP.

    • @ninjamusic9554
      @ninjamusic9554 3 года назад +5

      And those big corporation stay big not because of fair competition, but because of discrimination by the British

  • @GrandAudio
    @GrandAudio 3 года назад +63

    The quality content from this channel is just amazing.

    • @thetruegrand
      @thetruegrand 3 года назад

      💯

    • @irasingh2498
      @irasingh2498 3 года назад

      🟦SERCH ADITYA RATHORE- HE ALSO MAKES INFORMATIVE CONTENT LIKE POLYMATTER

  • @VandalAudi
    @VandalAudi 3 года назад +39

    When you give corporates permanent shares on the parliament.

    • @theuglykwan
      @theuglykwan 3 года назад +4

      It's just like the US system but they are more blatant about it. Limiting banking etc to one seat each might be better than having all of them potentially bought.

    • @Amelia_-qy9nz
      @Amelia_-qy9nz 2 года назад

      And corporations can vote on the chef executive while the citizens don't get a say

  • @hautakleightontam771
    @hautakleightontam771 3 года назад +11

    You could easily make a third video on the monstrous state of Hong Kong housing and property. There is a good reason why the city is currently the second most expensive place to live in the world.

    • @randomcow505
      @randomcow505 Год назад

      I don't get where this is coming from, I lived there for a while and soon am moving back permanently
      yes house prices are ridiculous but if you move away from central and rent it gets very reasonable
      2-bedroom apartment for, 10000hkd per month, thats the same size as my apartment currently in the uk

  • @elcastorgrande
    @elcastorgrande 3 года назад +7

    "People of the same trade seldom meet together, even for merriment and diversion, but the conversation ends in a conspiracy against the public, or in some contrivance to raise prices.” Adam Smith, 1776

  • @toast1797
    @toast1797 3 года назад +7

    That's an insanely well researched video, there are things that I didn't even know as a Hong Kong citizen

  • @laurenconrad1799
    @laurenconrad1799 3 года назад +52

    "The food truck can't move." Kind of defeats the purpose of the word, truck, huh? Like, why bother with those wheel things?

    • @WanderTheNomad
      @WanderTheNomad 3 года назад +12

      It's for the aesthetic. It's not allowed to move, but it theoretically could.

    • @hlever2111
      @hlever2111 3 года назад +12

      As visited one before, food trucks are only allowed to sell food in designated places, so what meant by “can’t move” is “can’t move and sell food”, but those trucks can pack everything and drive to another designated place to sell though.

  • @mdgun
    @mdgun 3 года назад +3

    I'm from HK and I actually gained insight to my hometown watching this video! Very well done!

  • @sebastiangruenfeld141
    @sebastiangruenfeld141 3 года назад +15

    Awesome videos as always. Could you please do a video on how Singapore manages to have some of the worlds best education, infrastructure, healthcare, etc while only spending 17% of their GDP whereas countries like the US and Germany need to spend 30-40% in order to compete?

    • @jubberdada
      @jubberdada 2 года назад +3

      Their GDP is much higher because it includes heavy amount of services and finance revenue that can scale a lot better for a tiny population. It can’t exactly be imitated on a country scale

    • @lzh4950
      @lzh4950 2 года назад

      Generally I think Singapore's gov't spends more on longer-term/supply side policies, with less populist pressure for shorter-term solutions e.g. unemployment benefits. Instead of pensions the gov't also forces workers to maintain saving accounts for retirement, with employers legally required to chip in too except for foreign staff (which has also led to reports of discrimination against locals as employers might thus find foreigners cheaper to hire).
      For education 1 thing I can think of is that Singapore has more economies of scale (EOS) due to its high population density, so it could serve its population with fewer bigger schools that'd then need less principals & other staff, each typically with close to 2000 students, & before 2016 some classrooms were shared with 2 classes, 1 with morning-only lessons & another with afternoon-only lessons. Once a school's population drops below ~500 I estimate, the gov't will close it down/merge it with another school due to loss of EOS (e.g. _Chai Chee_ Secondary had 3 classes for each of its 4-5 grades (Secondary 1-5; equivalent to 7-10th grade) (~20-40 students each) when it was merged with another school). Personal experience has been that there's quite a lot to be taught & teachers often don't have much time to clarify all students' questions (& I heard that they work pretty long hours too), so many also spend more on private tuition to make up for that.
      For healthcare I heard the gov't is quite selective on the range of medicines it subsidises, but unsubsidized ones I heard can get quite expensive. It also encourages more self-reliance by forcing citizens & PRs to maintain saving accounts for healthcare (MediSave) & get insurance (MediShield Life is the gov' one & you can add on with private insurance, though the gov't has controversially tightened its coverage to fight what it claims is a "buffet mentality"). Another controversy is that the range of doctors on insurers' panels (i.e. those whose treatments they're willing to insure) is more limited, with other doctors' coverage dropping significantly I heard. Subsidies can be quite selective too e.g. to qualify for them, you won't be allowed to choose which doctor to see in a public hospital, unless you're elderly, & you can't be referred to there by a private doctor (as opposed to one in a gov't polyclinic i.e. a supersized public GP/dispensary that works shorter hours), & dental procedures plus health checkups are often uninsurable & unsubsidizable.
      For infrastructure, the gov't can sometimes be more conservative e.g. a neighbourhood may exist for up to 30-40 years before it's served by a train station, while it also charges a 30% tax on water bills (which goes up to 45% if your consumption exceeds a certain amount, unless you're a commercial user). Think we might be 1 of the few countries worldwide to tax CNG too.

  • @hlever2111
    @hlever2111 3 года назад +8

    7:18 not only 2 bus companies in Hong Kong
    Transport International owns KMB (Kowloon and NT) and LWB (NT to airport)
    Bravo Transport owns NWFB and Citybus (HK island, latter one does also airport - kowloon services)
    Lantau Island also has NLB, to make up the 5 franchised bus companies in Hong Kong, with numerous small non-franchised companies.

    • @PatheticTV
      @PatheticTV 3 года назад +2

      Sometimes though, the same route is served by both KMB and CTB/NWFB, making them both compete for best service

  • @blanchjoe1481
    @blanchjoe1481 11 месяцев назад +2

    Dear PolyMatter, Thank you once again for a well researched and developed piece. Milton Friedman argued that a company’s sole obligation to society is to make money without breaking the rules. “....There is one and only one social responsibility of business, “to use its resources and engage in activities designed to increase its profits so long as it . . . engages in open and free competition without deception or fraud...". This economic model is akin to a car engine on blocks in a garage. It is fed fuel and turns a fly wheel, as a result operates ( and pollutes ) easily and freely. This is because there is no "load" on the engine. As a living economic system, capitalism will create whatever environments are necessary to prevent any "load" from being applied to the engine, and prevent any restrictions of the flow fuel. However capitalism is not a society.
    A society is a collection of individuals who exist inside and outside of the capitalistic model. Individuals and corporations are not one in the same. What the needs are if a capitalist system, and corporations, and not always those of a society, and they often do not coincide. Friedman argued that social needs and capitalistic freedom were one and the same, however an engine turning over in a garage on blocks runs well, but performs no work. Taxes, Fees, and Regulations are the power train that allows the engine to perform effort.
    One of the predominate issues ( that you did point out ) representing Hong Kong's vast success was an seemingly endless supply of legal, and illegal, labor who earned very, very low wages. Much like the past English Industrial, and the current US Food Industries, an stream of low wage workers fueled all three economies.

  • @MindLaboratory
    @MindLaboratory 3 года назад +111

    Giving a few counter examples doesn't rule out HK being the most capitalist place on Earth. If you did a video of counter examples of capitalism in the US the video could be 10 years long but it's still relatively capitalist compared to most other places.

    • @WanderTheNomad
      @WanderTheNomad 3 года назад +4

      @@irasingh2498 lol, not when you're spamming the same shit in multiple comment threads. And to make it even worse you're doing it in all caps.

    • @TheLastScoot
      @TheLastScoot 3 года назад +13

      Yeah I thought this would be the answer given. Australia and New Zealand are two countries that were higher up than the US in both lists, and they've got universal healthcare, strong labor protections, etc.

    • @ArawnOfAnnwn
      @ArawnOfAnnwn 3 года назад +5

      @@WanderTheNomad That's a bot. Ignore it.

    • @WanderTheNomad
      @WanderTheNomad 3 года назад

      @@ArawnOfAnnwn weird that the spam message is specific to this one channel. Usually they just make a message that they can spam anywhere.

    • @AureliusLaurentius1099
      @AureliusLaurentius1099 3 года назад +16

      @@TheLastScoot
      I'd always like to argue the US have been more corporatist(which has nothing to do with corporations) than capitalist since FDR implemented the New Deal.

  • @foxtailedcritter
    @foxtailedcritter 3 года назад +55

    Yay another video.
    Also Goodluck trying to boycott a company there. You're funding them one way or the other.

    • @PrograError
      @PrograError 3 года назад +1

      well... in some ways it's hurting them, but by supporting the local smaller players as protest it works as a personal thing...
      human are funny... always making pits and drawing lines...

  • @JohnCroucherAU
    @JohnCroucherAU 3 года назад +6

    I visited Hong Kong for the first time few years ago. It is an awesome city. I would love to go back.

  • @itsdanielmac
    @itsdanielmac 3 года назад +28

    Amazing as usual

    • @tyvamakes5226
      @tyvamakes5226 3 года назад

      A rather unusual taste for a driver channel

    • @tommalfoy8539
      @tommalfoy8539 3 года назад

      Wow itsdanielmac itself
      Fancy seeing you here!!

  • @RichFlemingRealtor
    @RichFlemingRealtor 2 года назад

    @polymatter ... Great and interesting video! This is one of my favorite channels and a major reason I signed up for Nebula.

  • @ARandomDonut
    @ARandomDonut 3 года назад +6

    I saw the title and was confused. It all makes sense now. The pieces just fit, I don't know how I missed it.

  • @jimmywest8684
    @jimmywest8684 3 года назад +18

    So if Hong Kong wasn't a democracy during the colonial era, when was it ever a democracy?

    • @cbrtdgh4210
      @cbrtdgh4210 3 года назад +19

      hey democracy is a core value of the CCP. It's democratic as part of China okay. Go review your 12 socialist core values on Xi's app please.

    • @raptorfromthe6ix833
      @raptorfromthe6ix833 3 года назад +11

      it wasnt a democracy but it did have a rule of law im pretty sure during the cold war era it was actually one of the strongest

    • @Croz89
      @Croz89 3 года назад +1

      I think from about 1985 there was a plan to gradually introduce representative democracy to HK. I don't know how corporate votes got involved.

    • @canto_v12
      @canto_v12 3 года назад +10

      It never was and no historian ever claims that it was. Probably a common misunderstanding and a poor assumption that a democratic Britain would rule over a democratic colony.........NOPE!

    • @canto_v12
      @canto_v12 3 года назад +5

      @@Croz89 Yep, when Britain got flatly denied their request to keep Hong Kong in 1984, they finally realised how bad they looked, never having given Hong Kong an elected governor. They had until 1997 and never did it.

  • @BigBadBurrow
    @BigBadBurrow 3 года назад +18

    7:42 Towngas's logo looks errr 'interesting'.

    • @irasingh2498
      @irasingh2498 3 года назад

      🔴SERCH ADITYA RATHORE- HE ALSO MAKES INFORMATIVE CONTENT LIKE POLYMATTER

    • @bigtall25
      @bigtall25 3 года назад +8

      As someone who has grown up in HK you have now ruined cooking with gas for me.

    • @jaychung1380
      @jaychung1380 3 года назад +1

      I see it now..

  • @ayush.kumar.13907
    @ayush.kumar.13907 3 года назад +121

    continuing with letting corporates have such a large say in legislature was a mistake for Hong Kong in hindsight, as China used that same system to appoint their own Chief Executive despite losing popular vote by the Hong Kong citizens.

    • @bobs_toys
      @bobs_toys 3 года назад +15

      The CCP made it very clear that if a democratic system was introduced, they would invade.
      So not really a mistake so much as a least bad option.

    • @luizcastro5246
      @luizcastro5246 3 года назад +6

      china agreed to hong kongs democracy system exactly because they could take power more easily, this is by design.

    • @bobs_toys
      @bobs_toys 3 года назад +2

      @@luizcastro5246 they hit the roof when some democratic changes were made before handover. What was there until they realised that if it was vaguely possible to lose an election, they would lose was a system they designed themselves that they didn't think they could ever lose.

    • @ArawnOfAnnwn
      @ArawnOfAnnwn 3 года назад +40

      @@bobs_toys Those democratic changes were made BECAUSE of the handover. The British tried to negotiate a way to keep the territory. When the Chinese said no, they left them a little going away present. HK was never a democracy even under the British, so it's funny when people talk about it as if it was. Looks like the British once more succeeded in leaving a mess, as they have in so much else of the world.

    • @bobs_toys
      @bobs_toys 3 года назад +13

      @@ArawnOfAnnwn I do like how you ignore the CCP's threats to invade Hong Kong if the British ever changed its colonial status by doing things such as introducing democracy.
      As was highlighted in my first response, which you undoubtedly read but ignored.
      Why do you feel the need to be dishonest?

  • @yadavrkaran874
    @yadavrkaran874 3 года назад

    This much work done on single video is fabulous.
    Watching this video is like traveling into past history of hong Kong.
    2022 plan to visit Hong Kong fixed

  • @JasonParmar
    @JasonParmar 3 года назад +4

    Amazing thumbnail, that’s little homage to “the fast moving SAR” 🙌🏽

    • @champanzee6486
      @champanzee6486 3 года назад

      @Great Cow God 🐮 You’re probably a Dalid too.

  • @abdullahshariff3201
    @abdullahshariff3201 3 года назад +16

    Hmm left out the housing problem in hongkong ? People literally live in a box

  • @Koala1203
    @Koala1203 3 года назад +57

    Hong Kong: The Most Capitalist Place on Earth?
    China: "Not anymore."

    • @RyanMiller-ej8ri
      @RyanMiller-ej8ri 3 года назад +3

      So sad😞

    • @yerri5567
      @yerri5567 3 года назад +32

      Koala1203 I dont understand why people keep saying that? HK was the most capitalistic place on earth when they had ZERO democracy. What makes you think it still wont be in the future?

    • @irasingh2498
      @irasingh2498 3 года назад

      🟩SERCH ADITYA RATHORE- HE ALSO MAKES INFORMATIVE CONTENT LIKE POLYMATTER

    • @None-do2qn
      @None-do2qn 3 года назад +15

      After seeing this video now I am wondering what was the Democracy hongkongers we’re fighting for

    • @captaindak5119
      @captaindak5119 3 года назад +12

      @@yerri5567 I get the impression that a lot of the people who comment on his videos tend be "hurr durr China bad" rather than being rational.
      There are even some comments claiming he is pro CCP propaganda, even though he put "Glory to Hong Kong" in one of his videos and mocked Xi and Carrie Lam in another.

  • @vinuwijemanna7076
    @vinuwijemanna7076 3 года назад +5

    I believe two things can be true at once. It is true that Hong Kong was relatively free to more restrictive business environments as pre 1980s UK. This laissez faire policy framework has been instrumental in its growth no matter the intentions behind the implant. You can easily make the distinction with poor countries that were on par with Hong Kong in the 1950s like Sri Lanka or even some parts of India. It can also be true it is adversely affected by the plutocratic nature of its government. Most of the duopolies you mentioned were really ‘technical’ monopolies which are only hypothetical. They are all government enforced licensing schemes. It is imperative that we view these ideologies in a more nuanced way than a heavily edited 90 minute documentary which generalizes a lot of things.

  • @THEEck5000
    @THEEck5000 3 года назад

    This is one of the best channels in be come across on RUclips, and that’s saying a lot.

  • @warnercheng5564
    @warnercheng5564 3 года назад +37

    For anyone who’s curious about this topic, I’m a hongkonger and this is literally the history before 2020

    • @ToXristianikoKanali
      @ToXristianikoKanali 3 года назад +2

      unfortunately....true

    • @lu881
      @lu881 3 года назад +1

      Are you planning on leaving HK in the future, or are you gonna take your chances when you eventually go back to your true owners on the mainland?

    • @PatheticTV
      @PatheticTV 3 года назад +1

      @@lu881 I’m a Hong konger and my family is not planning to move, here’s why:
      1. My parents both have jobs here
      2. I still need to finish secondary school
      3. We have elderly grandparents that we must be there for and can’t adapt to a new place
      4. All my friends and a lot of my family are here
      5. I love the freedom of being able to go out whenever I want, wherever I want, without worrying about needing a car OR Covid. The fact of the matter is almost no places in the world have this.
      5. Where would I even go? To me it’s nit worth sacrificing all these things above to start a new life in another country.
      OBVIOUSLY I understand why people are moving, and I wish them nothing but the best of luck. And OBVIOUSLY I am not happy with the encroachments on freedom we are facing. But until I finish school at least, I’m staying.

    • @yerri5567
      @yerri5567 3 года назад +5

      @@PatheticTV "And OBVIOUSLY I am not happy with the encroachments on freedom we are facing"
      What encroachments on freedom? You mean the freedom China gave you guys that the British didnt?

    • @lu881
      @lu881 3 года назад +1

      @@PatheticTV
      Your level of self-awareness is pretty impressive, considering that you're only in secondary.
      I hear what you're saying.
      Your reasons sound realistic.

  • @economicinfo823
    @economicinfo823 3 года назад +3

    Hey I took his course! The free to choose one, it’s super good 👍

  • @avadhutpatil9
    @avadhutpatil9 3 года назад +9

    Me: How many videos will you make related to China?
    Polymatter: YES

  • @pineapplesareyummy6352
    @pineapplesareyummy6352 3 года назад +13

    As a Hong Kong expat (born in 1981, therefore I've seen both the British era and after handover in 1997), I am surprised this is a fair and accurate video about the city, minus the usual condescending Western propaganda. Yes, it is true HK is a corporatocracy. It is neoliberalism on steroids that will make even Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher blush. Believe me, being ranked #1 "free-est economy in the world" by the Heritage Foundation is a DUBIOUS distinction you do not want. The only comment I have against your video is you didn't show the real estate situation. Namely, we are the most unaffordable housing market in the world. Poor people literally live in cages, while large numbers of people live in micro-flats of 200 sq. ft. I would not be able to afford an apartment if I ever returned to the city, for example. My aunts have an apartment of their own because my grandparents bought it 50 years ago. The entire system is designed to funnel money to the top. It used to be British tycoons; since handover, it is now ethnic Chinese (Hong Kong) tycoons at the top, but the effect is the same. This massive inequality (we have one of the highest GINI indices in the world) and unaffordability of living costs is the reason for the riots blowing up in 2019. I actually saw it coming. Every time I visit my relatives, I can tell from taxi drivers how difficult live has become. But where people get it so wrong is that HK is screwed not because of China but because of the system left behind by the British. At least your video has the courtesy to state the fact HK was never at any point a democracy - I am shocked that there are even young HKers who don't know this fact (maybe they are just too young and ignorant). As for me, I literally can't wait until 2047 comes. The Mainland is literally light years ahead of HK in competent governance. Shenzhen is now an economic success story which overtook HK a long time ago. Yet, because the CCP implements certain laws on property developers, and that the CCP does not rely on land sales to prop up an artificially low tax rate (which incentivises juicing up property prices), Shenzhen's property prices are still a fraction of HK's, and they are far better developed, happier, and a more balanced city. I don't plan to ever go back to HK. If I do return to China, I'll choose to live in a more spacious, better run, more affordable city on the Mainland.

    • @pineapplesareyummy6352
      @pineapplesareyummy6352 3 года назад +5

      ​@@cheesemccheese5780 It is the latter by far. Hong Kong is dense, but not without precedence in the rest of the world. Singapore is even denser than Hong Kong, and they don't have the real estate problem that HK has because Singapore's government runs public housing for Singaporeans, and they have regulations so foreign property speculators don't compete for the same stock of housing as locals.

    • @pineapplesareyummy6352
      @pineapplesareyummy6352 3 года назад +2

      ​@@cheesemccheese5780 I said being the free-est economy in the world is dubious because like all things, there must be BALANCE! Too much of the free market and not enough regulations, and not only do you end up with monopolies, there are also social question like economic inequality, degradation of the environment, etc., which are not normally quantified (or even considered) by the "free market". A society has to strive for a balanced approach which fosters social cohesion and social harmony. With a society like Hong Kong, the pendulum obviously swung too far in the direction of the "free market", and not enough attention paid to the actual lived experience of its people.

    • @pineapplesareyummy6352
      @pineapplesareyummy6352 3 года назад +5

      ​@@cheesemccheese5780 That's utter nonsense! Big businesses want LESS regulations, not more, for good reason. And it is also good reason for PEOPLE to want more regulations to protect the consumer, to protect the environment, etc. Excessive economic inequality is the precise reason why countries are falling apart, why governments have become dysfunctional, why societies is increasingly at war with itself. As the West reverts to the inequality level it last had in the 19th century, its politics has also become as toxic and dysfunctional as it were then. Africa's situation might be improving because they are starting to enforce their regulations against poaching. None of these have anything to do with the "free market".

    • @pineapplesareyummy6352
      @pineapplesareyummy6352 3 года назад +2

      @@cheesemccheese5780 Oh, and there is absolutely no evidence Afghanistan was ever second least unequal. I just looked up the GINI indices for various countries. Afghanistan doesn't even have a number, presumably due to lack of reliable data. The most unequal countries are concentrated in Latin America and sub-Saharan Africa. And they are a mess for good reason.

    • @nerd2544
      @nerd2544 3 года назад

      hong kong sure may be a ultra capitalistic hellhole with a grossly corrupt and incompetent government and dominated by giant corps (I'm sure you're very familiar with this), and the people especially the upper middle class reek of this mindset too, but no way in hell is China or their megacities a better place to live in. everything from the building, food and product quality to the pollution to the lack of freedoms and total government infiltration and control to just the mindset and culture there these days. singapore is a better option.

  • @imaginarymax183
    @imaginarymax183 3 года назад +1

    Great job. I'm from Malawi, which was shown at 2:49, though it's a bit jarring to see both Nyasaland and Malawi shown in the same frame as if they are two different countries since they are under two different rulers, but I admit that doesn't take away from the video.
    Pro tip, though: the "Nya-" in Nyasaland is one syllable, not two. Good attempt, though.

  • @karlbaresic4091
    @karlbaresic4091 3 года назад +26

    Why are government maintained monopolies called flaws of capitalism when it's literally government regulation of the market?

    • @canto_v12
      @canto_v12 3 года назад +7

      These are not "government maintained" in the sense that the corporations basically determine market regulation (or lack thereof). Capitalism at its finest. Take what you can and control who you can.

    • @Destroyerofcopers
      @Destroyerofcopers 3 года назад +11

      Because they exist due to the corporations being allowed complete control in the first place without ever breaking up monopolies.
      Corporatism is just the result of what happens when you allow unlimited freedom to the corpos and then they end up taking over the government.

    • @sebastienholmes548
      @sebastienholmes548 3 года назад +1

      @@Destroyerofcopers wrong, that is so vary wrong.

    • @jokababy69
      @jokababy69 3 года назад +5

      @@sebastienholmes548 then why does it inevitably occur under every capitalist system without Govt intervention i.e. trust busting

    • @sebastienholmes548
      @sebastienholmes548 3 года назад +1

      @@jokababy69 because they had government intervention.

  • @Andy-em8xt
    @Andy-em8xt 3 года назад +17

    I don't think saying Hong Kong's capitalism was a result of historical happenstance rather than intention really refutes Milton's theory. Hong Kong is extremely capitalist in most areas, except maybe freeing up land use for housing. The fact there are "monopolies" or duopolies makes sense. Corporations will consolidate until the most efficient economy of scale is achieved. This is especially true in sectors like electricity and transit.

    • @useless_name
      @useless_name 3 года назад +4

      If yiu believe that large mono(or duo-)polies result in an efficient economy, you are clearly wrong.

    • @pineapplesareyummy6352
      @pineapplesareyummy6352 3 года назад +2

      That IS what eventually happens when capitalism and the free market are taken to its natural conclusion. Eventually, there will be one player who will conquer all the others, and then there will be a monopoly.

    • @gabriell7640
      @gabriell7640 3 года назад +3

      @@useless_name They sometimes do. There's a difference between a natural monopoly and an artificial one. The later is made through governmental coersion while the former is made through people just prefering their services and products to others (aside from some exceptions). An example is Google, people say it is a monopoly because it totally dominates the search engine market, and they are right, but that doesn't make it inneficient or bad for the consumer, to the contrary, it's precisely why it is a monopoly: people prefer it to their competitors. The biggest proof of this is that the n1 most searched for term in Bing (one of it's largest competitors) is Google... ¿If people just prefer the service or product that one company (or two) make, and this results in a "monopoly", is this really something bad or inefficient?

    • @user-ls4cs1wd2w
      @user-ls4cs1wd2w 3 года назад

      It isn't a free market if two companies dominate a market

    • @sumonechan8514
      @sumonechan8514 2 года назад +1

      @@pineapplesareyummy6352 This. Wholeheartedly.
      As a fellow Konger I have witnessed too many cases like that happening right in front of my eyes. Unregulated free market ALWAYS results in monopoly or duo-poly eventually. Winners always win and winners take all.

  • @rogan6947
    @rogan6947 3 года назад +5

    The map at @6:29 confused me so for longer than I'd care to admit. I saw the red as land first.

    • @Jordan-ko4xr
      @Jordan-ko4xr 3 года назад +1

      I thought hmm that sea looks like Indonesia then I realized

  • @lumptydumpty6992
    @lumptydumpty6992 3 года назад +9

    Love the channel, gotta say one thing. There are no licenses, exclusive rights, etc... in a free market. Then it wouldn’t be a ‘free market,’ which is why contrary to popular belief, monopolies and oligopolies cannot exist within a free market. Charge above market equilibrium, and competition will arise and undercut. You need state-installed barriers to entry to enforce such higher prices.

    • @natnew32
      @natnew32 2 года назад +1

      Well that's the thing. Smaller firms just might not be able to compete with larger ones, even ones that charge above equilibrium, just by virtue of being small. Expanding operations can, depending on the circumstance, decrease average cost and allow the firm to charge lower prices. Small operations don't have this luxury, but monopolies very much do. So tiny firms can't charge below a certain price without making a profit, but monopolistic firms might be able to. Equilibrium might be even below that, but it doesn't matter- the monopoly will charge whatever makes them the most profit, which probably isn't equilibrium and, depending on the market, might be still too low for smaller firms. This is called a "Natural Monopoly".

    • @SpencerYT138
      @SpencerYT138 2 года назад

      There have been no real world examples of a natural monopoly forming outside of the keynesian and neo classical economic theory you site.
      Many of the monopolies that have been used as examples, have been either firms that received subsidies at the tax-payer's expense, nationalised industry or aren't even a monopoly by definition.
      For example, Standard Oil; they have been labelled a monopoly despite their shrinking market share, that at one point held 90%, falling by atleast 30% within the span of a few years, all before the anti trust case against them ever occured.
      Just because a company can be large, does not imply that they own 100%, which is the true definition of a monopoly.
      Not only that but smaller firms will not simply cease to exist without regulation, as you forget that a major factor in the economy is the sheer amount of competitors.
      Given if predatory pricing theory were true and the competitors disappeared for the monopoly to jack up prices again supposedly, caused by zero regulation across the board, that would theoretically mean there will be no barriers to entry in the market.
      Meaning, both foreign and domestic competitors would spring up again to reap the rewards of an expensive market, forcing the monopoly to lower it's prices a second time, which no firm can afford to do for a long time, no matter how large they are.
      There cannot be a perpetual monopoly, as there will be constant price wars between competiting firms with no barriers to entry in place.
      The best way to establish a monopoly is to regulate your competitors, with fees, licensing, intellectual property, imminent domain and subsidies towards the monopoly.

  • @LZentertainments
    @LZentertainments 3 года назад

    Fantastic video. Keep it up, I've learned so much from PolyMatter

  • @noahrichardson691
    @noahrichardson691 3 года назад +1

    Bro I love your vids and they're great to listen to while I'm driving or cooking. You should make some longer-form content on things that won't fit well into shorter episodes too!! But I have to say, the topics haven't had much variety lately. I would love to learn about a wider variety of topics because you do such a great job on all your vids in every way. Keep it up!! I hope you enjoy making these vids and are proud of them 👍👍

  • @yuju1004
    @yuju1004 3 года назад +3

    NWFB is more like a "subsidiary" of CTB, since they mainly focus on CTB more and both are under a company called Bravo Bus. So the main players should be KMB and Bravo Bus or KMB and CTB+NWFB

    • @PatheticTV
      @PatheticTV 3 года назад +1

      NWFB and CTB are sister companies. NWFB is technically the successor of CMB as it took over its remaining tenders.

    • @yuju1004
      @yuju1004 3 года назад

      @@PatheticTV yup

  • @villevalste1888
    @villevalste1888 2 года назад +3

    The purpose of a government in an ideal Capitalistic system is to break up monopolies as they inevitably form. Not doing this turns an otherwise free and entrepreneurial society into a Corporatist Oligarchy as evidenced by Hong Kong and arguably the US as well. Meanwhile pre-WW1 US would be evidence of how well a government, that does what it's supposed to, could foster the ideal Capitalistic society.

  • @Joseph-mw2rl
    @Joseph-mw2rl 3 года назад +5

    For me, a Hong Konger having only 1 or 2 brands of supermarket in the entire city just seems so natural to me. We even call markets like MarketPlace and Oliver's "鬼佬百佳", meaning "white people park n shop"

    • @CoryPchajek
      @CoryPchajek 11 месяцев назад

      I mean, the fact that Costco and Walmart are not viable in Hong Kong should really say something.

  • @reithreithreith
    @reithreithreith 3 года назад

    I'm waiting for a video about this precisely. Thank you for this. :D

  • @inihility
    @inihility 2 года назад +1

    Great video, as a Hong Kong native this highlights a lot of truth about the city.

  • @TheOneAboveAllx
    @TheOneAboveAllx 2 года назад +6

    It's interesting to note that monopolies can only exist with the help of the government...(exclusive license, ip,etc) without government intervention capitalism dose not give birth to monopolies

    • @bri1085
      @bri1085 2 года назад +5

      That's just not true

    • @kurteisner67
      @kurteisner67 2 года назад +2

      That's literally false, where did you get this strange notion from?

    • @CoryPchajek
      @CoryPchajek 11 месяцев назад

      Monopolies thrive WITHOUT government intervention. But it’s always tricky either way. They broke up Bell and all the little babies reformed into megacorps a little while later.

  • @derekyael2487
    @derekyael2487 3 года назад +66

    I lived in a city near Hong Kong,I can clearly feel that part is complete socialism and part is complete capitalism.

    • @Noukz37
      @Noukz37 3 года назад +12

      A fellow Shenzhener? :-)

    • @grozaphy
      @grozaphy 3 года назад +5

      @@Noukz37 isnt youtube banned in china

    • @ciarankelly3726
      @ciarankelly3726 3 года назад +20

      @@grozaphy yeah but you can just use a vpn

    • @MC_MMV
      @MC_MMV 3 года назад +15

      It’s called Corporatism. The government looks after the big businesses for bribes from lobbyists. It helps both parties stay in power whilst the general population loose. Solution: get rid of the government and let competition thrive

    • @derekyael2487
      @derekyael2487 3 года назад

      @@Noukz37 Yup

  • @pojkeee
    @pojkeee 3 года назад +6

    I clicked on this video thinking it was gonna be about monopoly

  • @djngdhn
    @djngdhn 3 года назад +1

    there's also the political element as well
    and now i'd say it foreruns the economic decisions

  • @jamesyang4898
    @jamesyang4898 3 года назад +2

    Thank You so much! Hong Kong is such an economiclly unfriendly City for most of its residence compared to anywhere else from the world.

  • @phantomthiefirwin9631
    @phantomthiefirwin9631 3 года назад +75

    HK USED to be the most capitalist place on earth. But nowadays idk.

    • @dr.floridaman4805
      @dr.floridaman4805 3 года назад +6

      Makes me think this channel accepted money from the CCP propaganda arm.

    • @agonbelallari755
      @agonbelallari755 3 года назад +16

      @@dr.floridaman4805 Ah yes, socialism with Chinese characteristics is surely about to cause chaos in this corporate-run region.

    • @nfwolf20
      @nfwolf20 3 года назад +9

      @@dr.floridaman4805 yeah…a channel accept CCP money would put “Glory to Hong Kong” at the end of one of his video

    • @yerri5567
      @yerri5567 3 года назад +10

      Phantom Thief Irwin "HK USED to be the most capitalist place on earth. But nowadays idk"
      If it USED to be the most capitalist place on earth without ANY democracy, what makes it still wont be even with hypothetically absolutely zero democracy?

    • @YashSharma-wu7kr
      @YashSharma-wu7kr 3 года назад +1

      Looks like you didn't even watched the video

  • @tonymatic1704
    @tonymatic1704 3 года назад +4

    Funny how people think that no goverment will solve their problems when it only solves problems of the rich people

  • @fosahistorica2537
    @fosahistorica2537 3 года назад +3

    Well , we need to know the economic phenomenon of Excessive duplication , in this phenomenon , the are many companies providing the same services, but , this services are too saturated of companies and the market results in few companies in a market , for example, if Hong Kong had a lot of electricity companies , it will by too complicated for people and for the city itself had a good service in a so saturated market

  • @ericpang0721
    @ericpang0721 6 месяцев назад +1

    Appreciate the cover of Hong Kong, but as a HongKonger this video completely missed one point.
    Even tho hk is definitely extremely corporatised and have a lot of monopoly. The actual free market is the option of price point we have for the same product. For example a simple head of broccoli, you can get it at a higher-end supermarket like Taste and Market Place for up to 30hkd per head. For mid-price supermarket like Wellcome and Parking it will price around 15hkd. For local wet market though, it can go as low as 5hkd.
    The situation of the same product sold in different price ranges based on what kind of business it’s place in is very common for us.
    “Oh I can get this for a cheaper price at ______” is quite ingrained in a lot of people when it comes to budgeting and price comparing.
    So I find this video to be quite misleading since you didn’t mention all of the small businesses most HongKonger shop at. Wet Market, 藥房(local drug store), mum and pap shop, etc

  • @abdellahafkir
    @abdellahafkir 3 года назад +3

    It’s has to be said that the big corporations in the west have a wet dream that’s reality in Hong Kong. So many companies in the west would love to have 80% or more market share. But it’s for the better because competition is a good thing , it leads the market into a completely open market where the best price/quality/branding eventually takes their earned share of the market.

  • @sebbychou
    @sebbychou 3 года назад +16

    "Li KA-CHING" is a fitting name for the richest man...

  • @novacgenene2360
    @novacgenene2360 3 года назад +35

    7:00 charity at a rate only guilt could explain 😂

  • @jon962-g9w
    @jon962-g9w 3 года назад +8

    You're all having those great business yt channels but not being able to see that having 2 products (nebula and curiosity stream) is hurting you. Merge and take solid positioning for god sake.

  • @haojunyou8372
    @haojunyou8372 3 года назад +2

    Brilliant analysis! I should have known better than to read youtube comments tho.

  • @fellzer
    @fellzer 3 года назад +3

    *"I CHOSE HONG KONG"* -Andrew Ryan

  • @David.Marquez
    @David.Marquez 3 года назад +6

    Seeing this video pop up on my homepage straight up made my day better

    • @dr.floridaman4805
      @dr.floridaman4805 3 года назад

      The CCP has destroyed the free market economy of hong kong.
      Communism does that. Now they arrest and send to work camps hong kongers that still practice free speech. Freedom of religion. Or free market trade practices.

    • @vertrex8062
      @vertrex8062 3 года назад

      @@dr.floridaman4805 ChiNa is the GreATest, the WHOlE wOrld ShoUld strive TO bE lIke ChiNa and CubA!

    • @irasingh2498
      @irasingh2498 3 года назад

      ◻️SERCH ADITYA RATHORE- HE ALSO MAKES INFORMATIVE CONTENT LIKE POLYMATTER

  • @joma5721
    @joma5721 3 года назад +3

    I don’t think whoever wrote this knows what capitalism is. Hong Kong’s capitalism isn’t a “myth”, rather all the things mentioned are just natural byproducts of a capitalist mode of production. To say “Hong Kong isn’t capitalist because the way it’s organised is actually bad” is to say that “my definition of capitalism is what happens when an economy or country is good”, which is laughable.

  • @SmallBeanImperialist
    @SmallBeanImperialist 3 года назад +12

    Hong Kong and China are great examples of how bad we are at analyzing and teaching political systems. China being state capitalist country(with fascist tendencies) but being called communist contry and Hong Kong being regulated autocratic corporatocracy but being called laissez-faire capitalist country. It's almost like it's better to analyze system from perspective of distribution of social power and conflict between groups rather than 2 axis political analysis . Because when you start doing this, you will see that both system in Hong Kong and China are created for privileged class, just along different lines

    • @Brick-Life
      @Brick-Life 3 года назад +1

      China is not facist

    • @jnusslein6301
      @jnusslein6301 3 года назад +2

      Japan Germany Italy are fascism states.

  • @andrewmagdaleno5417
    @andrewmagdaleno5417 3 года назад

    Good stuff, thanks Evan!

  • @RonaldMcPaul
    @RonaldMcPaul 3 года назад +1

    6:30 "oh the blue part, that must be the land"

  • @John-thinks
    @John-thinks 3 года назад +3

    But did all these monopolies exist when Milton Friedman was praising about it?

  • @Winston_Chu
    @Winston_Chu 3 года назад +12

    Damn polymatter really loves Hong Kong 🇭🇰 and Singapore 🇸🇬

  • @s4098429
    @s4098429 3 года назад +7

    You’re combining history from before the British handover with history from after the British handover. You can’t say Hong Kong from these two time periods was the same. No where in the video did you explore business monopolies from before the British handover, the most important time period for your argument.
    Mixing facts from 1980’s and 2020’s to build a narrative, whether correct or not, is bad journalism.

    • @class6aa
      @class6aa 2 года назад

      That because for the big companies before and after the return doesn’t make much difference. The political change is huge, but business / financial regulation changes are almost negligible before and after the return. As the video is purely talking about business / financial regulation, there’s no point mixing politics in it.

  • @elieweiss1049
    @elieweiss1049 2 года назад +2

    These videos are better than class

  • @Grantos1ea
    @Grantos1ea 3 года назад +1

    I was in Hong Kong in '80 and '81. I loved it there. It had its problems but it was a great place to visit. Sadly I'll probibiy never return.

  • @andrewofaiur
    @andrewofaiur 3 года назад +3

    Gotta be honest, I'm confused about all the positive feedback on this video.
    It begins by claiming milton friedman may have been wrong about hong kong, then proceeds to provide nothing of his work. Most of the points are overgeneralizations without context and at times subjective. This is one of those examples where high quality production can mask over actual substance. I don't want to sound overly critical or have anything against this channel, but if you begin with a claim that someone might be wrong, you have to discuss that person's claims to derive any merit

    • @atermnus1286
      @atermnus1286 2 года назад

      I recently discovered this channel and I feel like it's a channel that is followed by bots or it's like some sort of propaganda outlet with a huge budget to back it up.
      None of the videos make sense, they make over-generic statements and the topics seem to range vastly, most youtubers have like at least some form of topic-core but this seems to be all over the place, covering politics, socio-economics, history and some times even tv programs or modern pop culture stuff.
      This channel feels really weird.

    • @andrewofaiur
      @andrewofaiur 2 года назад +1

      @@atermnus1286 You know what, your intuition rings true. This channel takes the artistic/presentation style of other big name channels that cover economics/politics/history but the actual content quality is nowhere close.

  • @chchan644ggu5
    @chchan644ggu5 3 года назад +5

    As a Hongkonger, indeed, some information has been kind of incompleted but still informative. It is always not easy to talk about such a big and complicated topic. For example, as a gateway between Western Countries and Mainland China may be the truly important reason for the success of Hong Kong. Thanks for the video!

  • @ppg7373
    @ppg7373 3 года назад +26

    If we than compare average income to costs of living Great Britain regains it’s greatness in comparison.
    So we see again that competition is more important for capitalism to work than tax breaks.
    edit: oh and they work way more huh

    • @victorb1
      @victorb1 3 года назад +2

      Actualy, no... HK's PPP per capita (i.e. accounting for costs of living) is considerably higher than the UK's... (they do work crazy hours tho)

    • @8is
      @8is 3 года назад +2

      All government needs to do for capitalism to work is to create a fair environment companies can compete in. Most of the time, the government doesn't need to do anything for this to be fulfilled.

    • @thelouster5815
      @thelouster5815 3 года назад

      ew Such a libertarian thing to say.

    • @8is
      @8is 3 года назад

      @@thelouster5815 yes

    • @8is
      @8is 3 года назад +1

      @Aidan Collins Free-market capitalism benefits the mutual exchange of goods and services for money between producers and consumers. The people involved in the production of goods and services are happy they can put in the work of producing something they can sell for more than the effort of producing it. The people who then buy these services or goods are happy because they, in turn, would rather have the service or good than the money they cost to produce.
      These two groups actually consist of the same people as everyone produces something in exchange for something else and vice versa. The people who really benefit are those who can produce something very valuable for little effort, but this is simply dictated by the nature of the market. The current technical revolution, for example, has allowed a small number of people to create a lot of useful things using smaller workforces, which has led to greater inequality where a smaller group produces more value. There isn't anything particularly special about free-market capitalism that incentivizes this, it's the nature of the market that dictates this, free-market capitalism simply incentivizes more effective ways of producing goods and services.

  • @trndsttr7585
    @trndsttr7585 3 года назад +2

    Any system is good as long as people don't suffer. But cage homes in Hong Kong scare me.

  • @mouadchaiabi
    @mouadchaiabi 3 года назад +2

    If this video disturbed you, search for Hong Kong coffin houses on RUclips.

    • @pineapplesareyummy6352
      @pineapplesareyummy6352 3 года назад

      Or just look up poor elderly people who live in cages. That's what happens when you let capitalism / corporatism / oligarchism run to its natural conclusion and all the wealth gets concentrated in only a few hands.

  • @evanmaier2551
    @evanmaier2551 3 года назад +13

    I can't believe the richest man in Hong Kong's name is "ka ching" like a cash register.

    • @rayanrizwan9611
      @rayanrizwan9611 3 года назад

      As a singaporean when I found this out I burst into laughter

  • @canto_v12
    @canto_v12 3 года назад +6

    @5:24 contains one of the most important statements for people who are wary of Hong Kong's recent crises: "Contrary to what many believe, Hong Kong was *never* democratic."
    This video demonstrates how Hong Kong is the perfect example of separating capitalism from democracy.

    • @Venusupreme
      @Venusupreme 3 года назад +1

      Unfortunately, now HKers have even less freedom than they ever did before. :(

    • @PatheticTV
      @PatheticTV 3 года назад +1

      @@Venusupreme yes. Now, we have less freedom in our speech and expression

    • @canto_v12
      @canto_v12 3 года назад +1

      @@Venusupreme It is undeniable that Hong Kong lost a few in terms of absolute quantity. However, IMO Hong Kong had freedoms that would never fly in many other countries, and now that those are being taken away, it is more on par with what other countries will tolerate.
      No modern, stable country would tolerate a unilateral attempt to secede, for example. Spain and Catalonia are the perfect example, and if you want to go back further in time, even the American Civil War is a great example. Also, having random unelected "pro-democracy figures" jet-set to a trade partner country, access its leadership and say "Hey, please sanction my country because they suck" is sort of unprecedented.
      Throughout the unrest of 2019, a common slogan on the internet and the streets was "death to all cops and their families." Living in California, I don't think a protest movement using this sort of slogan would last very long, and the fact that riot police didn't kill anybody in Hong Kong makes that slogan even more ridiculous.
      The fact that these unusual "freedoms" lasted for so long in Hong Kong is actually sort of incredible, and especially under the sovereignty of an authoritarian country like China.

  • @raz2936
    @raz2936 3 года назад +4

    Hong Kong is a great city. "The oriental pearl"

  • @gwyn.
    @gwyn. 3 года назад

    Food trucks not allow to move, but you can have their food.
    Cargo ships not allow to be on water, but you can store your cargos.
    passenger planes not allow to fly, but you can drive around the airport with it.