| The
Liberation of the Chinese Woman — and the Chinese Entrepreneur
How the
free market freed women
and entrepreneurs in Hong Kong.
The visitor to Hong Kong today
sees a bustling hive of energy where even the New Yorker is a slowpoke.
It’s a place where people of all races and cultures live and
work in harmony. It’s also a place where, even before the
change of sovereignty from Britain to China in 1997, the gweilos
[“long-nosed barbarians”] were being displaced in all
spheres of human action by locals. [Under British rule, only the
government lagged behind — only there could the criterion
of race override the criterion of ability.]
Hong Kong is one of the most successful
multi-racial societies in the world. But this is a relatively recent
development.
The major difference between Hong
Kong and other peaceful multi-racial/multi-ethnic societies like
the United States (or Australia) is that in the US minorities, over
time, lose their separate tribal identities and become members of
a single tribe: Americans.
There remains some differentiation
based on whether your ancestry was Irish, Polish, African, or Asian.
But by the third or fourth generation, all these groups share one
thing in common: they are culturally and linguistically Americans,
and have lost the language and to a large degree cultural affinities
of their parents.
But in Hong Kong, the different
ethnic, linguistic and national groups maintain their separate identities:
there is no (or very little) “absorption” of minorities
into the Chinese majority.
The best example is the Indian
minority, which has existed in Hong Kong almost since the British
arrived in 1841. More than any other group, including the Chinese,
they have resisted “westernization” and kept their original
cultural, linguistic and religious traditions intact.
Historically, Hong Kong shares
many similarities with other former British colonies. First, of
course, is the British heritage of common law. Second, a history
of racial inequality (“dogs and Chinese not allowed”
— actually a sign on a park in Shanghai, but it applied just
as much to Hong Kong): white was superior to yellow because the
reins of power were, of course, in British hands.
But racial [or tribal] prejudice
went far deeper than white vs. Chinese. Indians kept to themselves
(and, as a continuing minority, remain the most culturally cohesive,
and “unwesternized” group). Eurasians were despised
by both whites and Chinese (any Chinese girl seen with a gweilo
was, “by definition,” a whore). As a result, Eurasians
(like Indians) formed a separate community and lived in specific
area.
And then there were tribal divisions
amongst Chinese, based primarily on dialect [language].
Hong
Kong’s racial/
class structure
Until the 1950s and early 1960s,
Hong Kong’s social structure was a replica of Britain’s
class system, except that “class” was defined by “race.”
Whether in government or business, the Chinese were second-class
citizens in their own country. In the police force, for example,
a Chinese could get to sergeant, while all the officers were British.
In the British “hongs” which dominated Hong Kong business,
an invaluable — and highly rewarded — employee was the
“compradour,” or the Chinese go-between who mediated
and negotiated the business affairs of the company between the British
managers and the Chinese employees and suppliers. But no way could
a Chinese become “taipan.”
Naturally, the Chinese resented
being the underclass, and riots and strikes broke out occasionally,
especially in the years following the 1911 revolution in China.
There was one important exception
to this general rule that the tribes and races didn’t mix:
in the marketplace.
While a Chinese or Indian could
never become “taipan” in a British “hong,”
he could start his own “hong” — and even put the
British out of business. The legal system of common law and property
rights meant that the arena of the marketplace was color-blind.
And, of course, the “language” of the marketplace —
money, profit and loss — has no terminology for tribe, or
race, or prejudice.
The
liberation of the
Chinese woman
As the 1950s began, the tribes
of Hong Kong remained separate and apart socially. In business,
price and quality were the only considerations. Banks would finance
a promising entrepreneur — even if they’d never invite
him to tea.
But the most marked change caused
by the forces of the market was the altered status of the Chinese
woman: not only did inter-racial barriers disappear, at the same
time the market also liberated the Chinese woman from her subservient
state.
In all societies — except
the mythical Amazons — woman was subservient to man. And so
too in China. Daughters were always less valued than sons —
often, female children were (and sometimes still are) killed at
birth, especially if times were hard. A new wife moved in with her
husband’s family, where, often, she was treated not much better
than a slave — especially by her new mother-in-law (until,
of course, she became the mother-in-law). No woman could
become an official of the empire because only men could take the
all-important civil service exam.
In Hong Kong, this Chinese “cultural”
attitude to woman was, in one aspect, recognized in law. Chinese
men (but not men of other races) could keep concubines (“junior
wives”) and take tax deductions for them and their children
on the same basis as the first wife. This provision of the law lasted
until the early 1970s.
Most tribal and other barriers
were not legal but social, as each cultural group maintained its
own customs despite the “challenge from the marketplace.”
One “index” of this change (or “westernization”)
was dress.
Well before the 1950s, most Chinese
men had ceased to wear the traditional Chinese long gown in favor
of western suits. But only on the “swinging sixties”
did the Chinese woman begin to discard the traditional Chinese garb
in favor of the unending variety of western dress.
One factor was economic: Hong Kong
had become a source of cheap textile products for export to the
west. But only in the 1960s, within Hong Kong, did ready-made western
clothing become cheaper than the tailor-made Chinese.
More important was the effect of
rising affluence on the freedom of the Chinese woman (and, of course,
on the freedom of all other individuals). As more women were employed
at higher rates of pay, they achieved the economic independence
to escape the cultural restrictions imposed by the Chinese male.
Or, in the specific context of any individual woman, the restrictions
imposed by her parents.
With no government-imposed impediments
to any person choosing to live where they wished, with whom they
wished, only cultural barriers remained to be overcome. Meaning:
the disapproval of one’s parents, elders, and peers.
As the Chinese woman was no longer
economically dependent on her parents and/or prospective husband,
she was now free to reject an arranged marriage; and so free to
choose her own partner — or none at all.
She was now free to and capable
of moving out of the restrictive life placed on her by her parents.
She displayed this new independence in small ways, such as dress;
in major ways such as living with someone of a different race; or
in perplexing ways, such as starting her own business — hitherto,
a completely male domain.
Evidence of this change of status
comes from the number of women in business at executive or ownership
level. A recent [in 1986] survey of Asian countries showed more
women in Hong Kong in business than anywhere else. I believe (from
observation only) that in Hong Kong there are more female business
executives than anywhere else in the world (per capita). And yet,
just 30 years earlier, women in Hong Kong were the “naturally
subservient race.”
The
rise of the Chinese entrepreneur
In 1949, when the communists won
China’s civil war, Hong Kong was still a sleepy colonial outpost.
The main business center on the China coast was not Hong Kong but
Shanghai.
The communist victory caused a
massive influx of refugees into Hong Kong. Among the refugees was
an incredible concentration of entrepreneurial talent and capital.
It was this “first wave” of entrepreneurs who began
to transform Hong Kong into the dynamic, entrepreneurial city the
visitor sees today.
Most of these entrepreneurs, in
the main Shanghainese, were already established businessmen. Some
had lost all their assets, but using their contacts and talents
they were quickly back in business.
But the truly aggressive entrepreneurs
came in the “second wave,” from the tens of thousands
of people who fled across the border from China to freedom, usually
arriving in Hong Kong without a penny in their pockets. People like
Fung King-hey, who started Sun Hung Kai Securities, and Li Ka-Shing,
who built Cheung Kong — in both cases, from nothing.
Hong Kong also attracted entrepreneurs
from all over the world, of all nationalities — in the way
that flowers attract bees.
From 1949, although the British
“hongs” prospered, it was the Chinese businesses —
Shanghainese and Cantonese — which grew most rapidly. This
entrepreneurial activity was not confined to a select few. For every
entrepreneur who made a billion dollars, hundreds made millions
— and tens of thousands made far more money than they could
ever achieve as an employee. (Indeed, a major problem in Hong Kong
can be getting good middle management staff: almost everyone with
an ounce of talent starts their own business.)
What allowed this enormous entrepreneurial
activity was the laissez-faire attitude of Hong Kong’s British
rulers. Hong Kong was in the lucky position of having an indeterminate
political future. Since Britain leased the major part of Hong Kong’s
area from China, Hong Kong could not become an independent nation.
So Hong Kong was spared developments in other British colonies,
where Britain aggressively handed over power to local elites, who’d
usually been trained in the “virtues” of interventionist,
socialist government at the London School of Economics (or, in the
case of Idi Amin, at Sandhurst).
As Chinese businessmen grew in
numbers and wealth, the social barriers of the adapted British “class”
system slowly broke down. British clubs removed their restrictions
on admitting members who were not white. Eurasians were no longer
pariahs — and inter-racial marriages became commonplace. The
“old elite” of British government officials and “taipans”
eroded in significance — partly as Chinese became members
of this “elite”; primarily as a “new elite”
of wealthy Chinese businessmen displaced it in significance.
And, as Hong Kong became a “consumer
society,” the dominance of the Chinese increased in all areas
— for the obvious reason that the Chinese, being 98% of the
population, represented the mass market.
An ironic example is that when
the British-dominated government issued TV broadcasting licences,
it required each licencee to operate an English-language station:
in effect, to subsidize the English-speaking minority. However,
the majority of viewers, even for the English-language stations,
are Chinese, so programming on all channels is determined by the
tastes of the Chinese majority.
The
triumph of the
Chinese entrepreneur
The culmination of these cultural
changes took place in the 1980s — on the Hong Kong stock market.
In the marketplace, the new Chinese
firms — together with American, Japanese and other multi-nationals
— came to dominate business. Management of the British “hongs”
tended to be sleepy by comparison — living in a world that
had long gone where to be British was to automatically be superior.
The 1980-82 recession brought out
these weaknesses, and losses or low earnings were reflected in weak
share prices. Chinese entrepreneurs were quick to realize their
advantage, and snapped up British “hongs” which had
fallen on hard times. Sir Y.K. Pao bought out Wheelock Marden; and
backed by the Hong Kong & Shanghai Bank (money in a free market,
remember, is color-blind) Li Ka-Shing took over Hutchison Whampoa.
(The bank was pretty prescient: today Li Ka-Shing is one of the
wealthiest men in the world.)
Only two British “hongs”
still remain under British control: Swire Pacific (which owns Cathay
Pacfic Airlines), which didn’t make serious business mistakes
and whose shares are tightly-held by the Swire family; and Jardine
Matheson, which only avoided succumbing to a takeover bid through
its cross-ownership with another then-ailing British firm, Hong
Kong Land.
Postscript:
By the time Britain handed Hong Kong back to China
in 1997, to judge by the Hong Kong stock market this transformation
was complete: the overwhelming majority of companies that make up
the Hang Seng Index of Hong Kong stocks were locally owned and run.
Copyright
© 2005 by Mark Tier
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