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Education in Hong Kong
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Hong Kong labour chief rejects review of non-local graduate visas despite job slump

Chris Sun defends talent and graduate visa schemes, citing shortage of local degree holders despite 61 per cent drop in entry-level roles

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Secretary for Labour and Welfare Chris Sun says Hong Kong cannot rely solely on local graduates as the workforce shrinks, amid calls to review visa schemes. Photo: Dickson Lee.
William Yiu

Hong Kong’s labour minister has dismissed calls to review the city’s immigration scheme for non-local graduates or tighten talent scheme requirements, despite a sharp decline in entry-level roles, arguing that the workforce is shrinking and the number of local degree holders is insufficient to meet demand.

Secretary for Labour and Welfare Chris Sun Yuk-han also said the Employees Retraining Board, which will be rebranded as “Upskill Hong Kong” later this year, could adopt a new focus to help highly qualified young people “transform” and find jobs.

He told the Legislative Council on Wednesday that the number of full-time vacancies suitable for university graduates fell from about 80,000 in 2022 to around 31,000 in 2025, a drop of 61 per cent.

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“Among them, roles more affected by automation technology, such as administration and information technology and programming, recorded more pronounced drops of nearly 90 per cent and 80 per cent, respectively,” he said.

“The widespread application of AI has begun to have an impact on the demand for entry-level positions … In fact, all major global economies are facing similar structural challenges amid the popularisation of AI.”

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He cited a study by the International Data Corporation, which found that more than 60 per cent of surveyed enterprises worldwide indicated they would reduce hiring for entry-level positions within the next three years due to artificial intelligence (AI) automation technologies.

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