
Get elderly housing right and Hong Kong's silver economy can take off
announced dozens of measures to promote the 'silver economy' and address the needs of the city's ageing population. These cover
five main areas : boosting consumption, developing tailor-made products, promoting quality assurance of 'silver' products, strengthening financial and insurance protection, and encouraging older residents to re-enter the job market.
These are all good intentions, but it also begs the question: where is the infrastructure needed to support the measures?
An important part of this is suitable housing and a community that encourages ageing Hongkongers to live well and be productive for as long as they would like to be.
In 2015, the Housing Society built
The Tanner Hill development for aged living, offering world-class facilities. The flats are well-designed, with clever use of compact space, and come with safety measures like grab bars and anti-slip bathroom mats, plus access to user-supported cooking facilities.
The premises include clinics offering both Western and Chinese medicines, a library, restaurant, swimming pool, gym and access to services like banking, plus seats in the common lifts. It would be a no-brainer to house outlets there to offer
'silver products' to this exclusive community.
But what about those of less modest means? Perhaps we can consider a hybrid living model. Hong Kong could design such a housing estate in three parts. One section of flats could be fitted out with facilities aimed at independent living for senior residents. This would cater to those who want their privacy while maintaining access to medical support, including silver products and services as needed. NGOs could help.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


South China Morning Post
an hour ago
- South China Morning Post
China Evergrande to delist in Hong Kong, marking a watershed in country's property crisis
China Evergrande Group on Tuesday said that its Hong Kong shares will be removed on August 25 following the stock exchange's delisting decision, which the company does not intend to have reviewed. The world's most indebted property developer was informed by the local bourse on Friday that its listing would be cancelled for failing 'to fulfil any of the requirements' to resume trading, the company said in a filing. Evergrande's shares have been suspended from trading since January 29, 2024 – the same day a Hong Kong court ordered its liquidation after it failed to present a viable restructuring plan. Under the exchange's rules, a company that remains suspended for 18 consecutive months is subject to delisting. This would mark the end of Evergrande's 16-year trading status in Hong Kong, which spanned an era when the company was the poster child of China's property boom. The Guangzhou -based developer fell from its perch in 2021 after Beijing rolled out the so-called three red lines policy, which reined in overleveraged developers to cool down the mainland's housing market. The company, which amassed more than US$300 billion in liabilities at its peak, defaulted on its offshore bonds in late 2021, sparking global concerns about spreading the contagion from China's housing downturn.


South China Morning Post
an hour ago
- South China Morning Post
Cancer scientist Feng Gensheng leaves US for China as Trump cuts funding
Distinguished cancer expert Feng Gensheng has returned to China this month after 40 years in North America, mostly in the United States. Advertisement Feng, who was promoted to distinguished professor at the University of California, San Diego (UCSD) earlier this year, has joined the Shenzhen Bay Laboratory (SZBL) , where he will serve as director of the Cancer Research Institute. SZBL is a research platform established by Guangdong province and the southern city of Shenzhen to build leading science and technology innovation centres. Feng's research focuses on the mechanisms of liver cancer recurrence and immunotherapy for liver cancer. His most important contribution to the field is the discovery of SHP2, a new kind of enzyme. This type of enzyme can affect the stability of proteins and regulate the activity of other enzymes, which helps us understand the regeneration and differentiation mechanisms of various cells. Advertisement Feng, a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), confirmed he had returned to China.


South China Morning Post
2 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
Hong Kong to look at mosquito-eat-mosquito strategy to tackle chikungunya fever
Hong Kong authorities will explore the use of a mosquito-eat-mosquito strategy deployed by the mainland Chinese city at the epicentre of a recent outbreak of chikungunya fever to control the disease's spread, with one more imported case recorded on Tuesday. Secretary for Environment and Ecology Tse Chin-wan told lawmakers at a special meeting on Tuesday that the government planned to test biological control strategies to curb the spread of the chikungunya virus in Hong Kong, which had recorded six imported cases since August 2. But he acknowledged that the government would have difficulty deploying these tech-driven methods immediately because they required time to develop. The latest case was recorded on Tuesday, involving a 31-year-old man who had stayed in Foshan, the Guangdong province city hit by an outbreak, between August 1 and 3. He returned to Hong Kong and developed a fever, rashes and joint pain on August 8. The next day, he visited Shenzhen and sought medical help there on August 10 but was not hospitalised.