Showing posts with label Wilson Chow. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wilson Chow. Show all posts

Saturday, October 4, 2025

New Issue of Hong Kong Law Journal (Vol. 55, Part 1 of 2025)

HONG KONG LAW JOURNAL
Vol. 55, Part 1 of 2025
Editor-in-Chief: Prof. Eric C Ip
Deputy Editor-in-Chief: Prof. Trevor Wan
Publisher: Sweet & Maxwell


TABLE OF CONTENTS


Articles

Knowing Receipt of Shares in a Foreign Non-Common Law Company: Byers v Saudi National Bank
WMC Gummow AC...1

Whose Role? Judicial vs Legislative Protection of Minority Rights
Kemal Bokhary...5

In the Name of Public Interest: Challenging the Coroner’s Failure to Hold a Death Inquest in Hong Kong
Trevor TW Wan...11

Conditional Discharge, Statutory Interpretation and the Mental Health Review Tribunal
Daisy Cheung and Edward Lui...29

Courts and the Legislative Assembly in the Macau SAR Constitutional Crisis (2005–2009)
Luis WK Wong...47

Study on the Preventive Mechanisms for Food Safety Incidents in Hong Kong and Macao: Comparative Perspectives
Ting Zhou, Zimao Xie and Jingwen Chen...77

Can Musical Elements be Copyrightable? Rethinking the Boundaries of Copyright Protection
Xuan Shen...101

Stamp Duty in Hong Kong (1981–2024): The Evolution Waltz
Wilson Chow and Josiah Chung Ming Chan...101

Wilson Chow and Josiah Chung Ming Chan on Stamp Duty in Hong Kong (1981–2024): The Evolution Waltz (HKLJ)

"Stamp Duty in Hong Kong (1981–2024): The Evolution Waltz"
Wilson Chow and Josiah Chung Ming Chan
Hong Kong Law Journal, Vol. 55, Part 1 of 2025, pp.127 - 152

Abstract: Apart from the schedular income taxes imposed under the Inland Revenue Ordinance (Cap 112), stamp duty stands out as the only other major type of tax levied in Hong Kong. Although the current Stamp Duty Ordinance (Cap 117) (SDO) was enacted in 1981, stamp duty is indeed the oldest of the taxes administered by the Inland Revenue Department. It holds significant importance in terms of fiscal revenue generation. Initially and largely modelled on the Stamp Act 1891 (UK), the SDO was less complicated until recent extensive revisions since 2010, particularly concerning real estate transactions in Hong Kong. This article examines the evolution of stamp duty in Hong Kong, focusing on its application to real estate transactions, starting from the inception of the SDO to date. The history of land-related stamp duty has seen changes in the stages of transactions subject to duty and the duty rates, as well as the introduction of new stamp duty categories. “One step forward, one step sideways and one step back” is arguably an apt description of those changes. It also raises the question of how far those changes have effectively achieved their intended goals in the wider context of regulating housing affordability in the real estate market. In the wake of recent social unrest in Hong Kong and the impact of the COVID-19, there is a call for the government to explore outside the box for fresh approaches and perspectives to address current challenges.

Sunday, October 8, 2023

RGC Awards $4.8 Million in Research Funding to HKU Law 2023/24

Congratulations to our eight colleagues who were successful in the 2023-2024 round of research grant funding by Hong Kong's Research Grants Council (RGC). Six General Research Fund (GRF) projects were funded to study the abuse of dominance in the digital age; to examine the reformation of administrative law for the coming age of algorithmic government in Hong Kong; to evaluate the process of transnational law-making and its boundaries in trust and succession planning in Hong Kong and Singapore; to conduct field experiments of using cameras in Chinese trials; to study the implications for enhanced intellectual property protection in China through the Chinese music streaming market; to explore possible changes and impacts on the Hong Kong tax system after the social unrest, COVID-19 and PRC factor. Two Early Career Scheme (ECS) project were funded to study political crowdfunding in authoritarian regimes and to conduct a comparative study (Hong Kong, Australia, and England) of trustees’ discretionary powers in express private trusts and their possible control. The details of the new funded projects are as follows:

GRF:








Wednesday, May 12, 2021

Jingyi Wang and Wilson Chow on The Reformed Individual Income Tax Law in China: A Move towards Equity (HKLJ)

"The Reformed Individual Income Tax Law in China: A Move towards Equity"
Jingyi Wang and Wilson W.S. Chow
Hong Kong Law Journal
2021, Vol. 51, Part 1 of 2021, pp. 249-272
Abstract: China’s 2018 individual income tax (IIT) law reform introduced itemised deductions, increased the standard deduction and expanded lower tax rate bands. On the one hand, this may help reduce the income tax burden for the relatively low-income group, but, on the other hand, the tax base of IIT would be further reduced, which may also reduce the redistributive effect of income taxation. However, the dominance of income tax extracted from wages and salaries remains the same. This may be related to the different treatment of income from labour and income from capital, which benefits those with more financial resources and thus discriminate against the less prosperous. Income from employment is also subject to strict tax administration. This article evaluates the sufficiency and equity of the reformed IIT law in China. Given that the Chinese government intends to gradually increase the proportion of direct taxation in its total tax revenue, the fairness of its income tax system should be one of the prioritised areas for any future reform.

Monday, December 16, 2019

HKU Law's SSRN Legal Studies Research Paper Series (May - Dec 2019)


Vol. 9, No. 7: December 10, 2019

Table of Contents

Ross P. Buckley, University of New South Wales (UNSW) - Faculty of Law
Douglas W. Arner, The University of Hong Kong - Faculty of Law
Robin Veidt, University of Luxembourg - Faculty of Law, Economics and Finance
Dirk A. Zetzsche, Universite du Luxembourg - Faculty of Law, Economics and Finance, Heinrich Heine University Dusseldorf - Center for Business & Corporate Law (CBC)

Ilias Bantekas, Brunel University London - Brunel Law School
Pietro Ortolani, Radboud University
Shahla F. Ali, The University of Hong Kong - Faculty of Law
Manuel A. Gomez, Florida International University College of Law
Michael Polkinghorne, White & Case LLP

Johannes M M Chan, The University of Hong Kong - Faculty of Law

Alex Schwartz, The University of Hong Kong - Faculty of Law

Angela Huyue Zhang, The University of Hong Kong - Faculty of Law

Eric C. Ip, The University of Hong Kong

Shahla F. Ali, The University of Hong Kong - Faculty of Law

Albert H. Y. Chen, The University of Hong Kong - Faculty of Law


Vol. 9, No. 6: Oct 31, 2019


Table of Contents

Shitong Qiao, The University of Hong Kong - Faculty of Law

Alex Green, Faculty of Law, University of Hong Kong
Jennifer Hendry, School of Law, University of Leeds

Successful Secession and theValue of International Recognition
Alex Green, Faculty of Law, University of Hong Kong

Remedial Discretion and Dilemmasin Asia
Po Jen Yap, The University of Hong Kong - Faculty of Law


Vol. 9, No. 5: Oct 17, 2019


Table of Contents

Anna Dziedzic, The University of Hong Kong - Faculty of Law, University of Melbourne - Melbourne Law School
Cheryl Saunders, University of Melbourne - Law School

Jingyi Wang, Peking University - Peking University School of Transnational Law
Wilson Chow, The University of Hong Kong - Faculty of Law

Johannes M M Chan, The University of Hong Kong - Faculty of Law

Po Jen Yap, The University of Hong Kong - Faculty of Law


Vol. 9, No. 4: September 19, 2019

SIMON N. M. YOUNG, EDITOR

Table of Contents

Syren Johnstone, Department of Law, University of Hong Kong, Asian Institute of International Financial Law

Ross P. Buckley, University of New South Wales (UNSW) - Faculty of Law
Douglas W. Arner, The University of Hong Kong - Faculty of Law
Dirk A. Zetzsche, Universite du Luxembourg - Faculty of Law, Economics and Finance, Heinrich Heine University Dusseldorf - Center for Business & Corporate Law (CBC)

Federico Panisi, University of Brescia
Ross P. Buckley, University of New South Wales (UNSW) - Faculty of Law
Douglas W. Arner, The University of Hong Kong - Faculty of Law

Douglas W. Arner, The University of Hong Kong - Faculty of Law
Ross P. Buckley, University of New South Wales (UNSW) - Faculty of Law
Anton Didenko, University of New South Wales (UNSW) - Faculty of Law
Cyn-Young Park, Asian Development Bank
Emilija Pashoska, Universite du Luxembourg - Faculty of Law, Economics and Finance
Dirk A. Zetzsche, Universite du Luxembourg - Faculty of Law, Economics and Finance, Heinrich Heine University Dusseldorf - Center for Business & Corporate Law (CBC)
Bo Zhao, University of Hong Kong - Faculty of Business and Economics, Asian Development Bank - Economic Research and Regional Cooperation Department (ERCD)

Ross P. Buckley, University of New South Wales (UNSW) - Faculty of Law
Emilios Avgouleas, University of Edinburgh - School of Law
Douglas W. Arner, The University of Hong Kong - Faculty of Law

Dirk A. Zetzsche, Universite du Luxembourg - Faculty of Law, Economics and Finance, Heinrich Heine University Dusseldorf - Center for Business & Corporate Law (CBC)
Ross P. Buckley, University of New South Wales (UNSW) - Faculty of Law
Douglas W. Arner, The University of Hong Kong - Faculty of Law


Vol. 9, No. 3: June 11, 2019


Table of Contents

Han Zhu, Centre for Chinese Law, The University of Hong Kong Faculty of Law

Kelvin Hiu Fai Kwok, The University of Hong Kong - Faculty of Law
Ernest Lim, National University of Singapore (NUS) - Faculty of Law

Han Zhu, Centre for Chinese Law, The University of Hong Kong Faculty of Law 
Albert H. Y. Chen, The University of Hong Kong - Faculty of Law

Kelvin Hiu Fai Kwok, The University of Hong Kong - Faculty of Law

Douglas W. Arner, The University of Hong Kong - Faculty of Law
Dirk A. Zetzsche, Universite du Luxembourg - Faculty of Law, Economics and Finance, Heinrich Heine University Dusseldorf - Center for Business & Corporate Law (CBC)
Ross P. Buckley, University of New South Wales (UNSW) - Faculty of Law
Janos Nathan Barberis, The University of Hong Kong - Faculty of Law


Vol. 9, No. 2: May 10, 2019


Table of Contents

The Future of Data-Driven Finance and RegTech: Lessons from EU Big Bang IIDirk A. Zetzsche, Universite du Luxembourg - Faculty of Law, Economics and Finance, Heinrich Heine University Dusseldorf - Center for Business & Corporate Law (CBC)
Douglas W. Arner, The University of Hong Kong - Faculty of Law
Ross P. Buckley, University of New South Wales (UNSW) - Faculty of Law
Rolf H. Weber, University of Zurich - Faculty of Law

A Network Theory of PatentabilityLaura G. Pedraza-Farina, Northwestern University School of Law
Ryan Whalen, The University of Hong Kong - Faculty of Law

The Age of Remix and Copyright Law Reform
Yahong Li, The University of Hong Kong - Faculty of Law

Re-Conceptualizing ‘Object’ Analysis Under Article 101 TFEU: Theoretical and Comparative Perspectives
Kelvin Hiu Fai Kwok, The University of Hong Kong - Faculty of Law

What are Law Courses for? Striking a Balance between Professional and Liberal Education GoalsDanny Gittings, University of Hong Kong, College of Humanities and Law, School of Professional and Continuing Education, The University of Hong Kong, Faculty of Law

From Global to Anthropocenic Assemblages: Re-Thinking Territory, Authority and Rights in the New Climatic RegimeDaniel Matthews, The University of Hong Kong - Faculty of Law

Tuesday, September 24, 2019

Jingyi Wang & Wilson Chow on Individual Income Taxation Reform in China: What Is the Real Change? (SSRN)

"Individual Income Taxation Reform in China: What Is the Real Change?"
Jingyi Wang and Wilson Chow
June 2019
Abstract: Individual income tax (IIT) contributes to the national fiscal revenue in China, although not in such a large portion as that in more developed jurisdictions. The year 2019 saw the most significant IIT reform in China since 1994. For the first time, itemized deductions and personalized costs are taken into account in calculating the IIT liability. The schedular system is also moving to the model of integrated income. This article first summarizes, from a theoretical perspective, why and how individual income is taxed and questions whether there exists an ideal model for the IIT. From a historical perspective, it attempts to look into the reasons that triggered the latest IIT reform and considers its appropriateness in the Chinese context. In evaluating the pros and cons of the reform, this article makes reference to experiences from other relatively more mature taxation systems including Hong Kong. While the reform may help modernize the Chinese tax system, this article concludes by calling for further reforming measures.

Thursday, October 11, 2018

New Issue of Hong Kong Law Journal (Part 2 of 2018)


Editor-in-Chief: Professor Rick Glofcheski
Associate Editor: Professor Albert Chen
Publisher: Sweet & Maxwell

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Comment


Analysis



Articles











Chinese Law




Book review
Maritime Law and Practice in China, Liang Zhao and Lianjun Li Anselmo Reyes   783


Click here to read the abstracts of each article. Hong Kong Law Journal is published by Sweet & Maxwell. Full text is available on Westlaw.

Jingyi Wang & Wilson Chow on Capital Gains Tax with Hong Kong Characteristics (HKLJ)

"Capital Gains Tax with Hong Kong Characteristics: Desirability, Feasibility and Design"  
Jingyi Wang & Wilson Chow
Hong Kong Law Journal
Vol. 48, Part 2 of 2018, pp 555-576
Abstract: Hong Kong is known for its simple, low-rate tax system. Its current scheduler income tax mechanism dates from the 1940s and is based on a much older income tax system developed in the United Kingdom. When capital gains tax (CGT) was introduced in the United Kingdom in 1965, no similar step was taken in Hong Kong. The economic and social conditions underlying the original design of the system have changed dramatically over the years and will continue to change, but the system itself has seen little reform to keep pace with these changes. Furthermore, in recent years, Hong Kong’s housing market has become one of the world’s least affordable, which exerts a profound influence on the prospects of the city and its people, particularly the younger generation. The tax measures taken by the Hong Kong government to tackle the situation focus solely on levying stamp duty on residential property transactions. This article argues for the need for a CGT in Hong Kong with a view to reduce speculative property investment, stabilise the housing market and alleviate the social division. The stamp duty modifications in recent years show that the tax system in Hong Kong is not immune to change and that Hong Kong people are not necessarily resistant to such change. This article also suggests a design for the proposed CGT, based mainly on its equivalent in the United Kingdom but taking into account the circumstances peculiar to Hong Kong.

Thursday, January 25, 2018

Wilson Chow on Legal Interpretation of Tax Law: Hong Kong (new book chapter)

"Legal Interpretation of Tax Law: Hong Kong"
Wilson Chow
in Robert  F. van Brederode & Richard Krever (eds.), Legal Interpretation of Law (Wolters Kluwer, 2017), ch 9
Introduction and Background: Three themes introduce this chapter, and they inform us why legal interpretation of taxation law in Hong Kong has evolved in the way it has.  They are historical development (which explains the reliance placed by Hong Kong courts on precedents from comparable common law jurisdictions and illustrates that, in different periods of Hong Kong's legal history, different approaches to statutory interpretation have evolved), simplicity and stability (which explains why Hong Kong 'tax law' in many key areas is found in case law, rather than statutory intervention; which supports the comparatively recent adoption by the courts of a practical and purposive approach to statutory interpretation; and which, as well shall see, has not been inimical to the interests of the Revenue) and low taxation rates (which, in part, explains the antipathy apparent in the courts to 'tax avoidance' transactions and which, in turn, reinforces the purposive approach).

Chow, Ng & Jen on Experientialization of Legal Education in Hong Kong (new book chapter)

As a former British colony, the legal system in Hong Kong is deeply rooted in and influenced by the common law tradition, and culture of England and Wales. Even its model of legal education and training was first guided by the English Report of the Committee on Legal Education, under the chairmanship of Sir Roger Ormrod, in 1971. Hence a vocational year, the Postgraduate Certificate in Law (PCLL), following the three year undergraduate law curriculum that was to be recommended in England and Wales was also implemented in the first law school in Hong Kong - the University of Hong Kong (HKU) - in 1972. The larger picture has not changed much despite the handover of Hong Kong in 1997 to People's Republic of China, which is a civil law jurisdiction. Nevertheless, like every other legal transplant which typically starts with the adoption of legal rules which work elsewhere and often continues to modify, develop and evolve in order to suit the particular jurisdictional social and cultural context, Hong Kong has also seen an extended four-year instead of three-year, LLB, joint degree programmes with law, and the degree of Juris Doctor (JD), all of which are not typical features of the traditional English common law educational framework and, with the exception of the lengthened LLB, are just other examples of legal transfer from outside Hong Kong...

Sunday, September 25, 2016

Wilson Chow & Michael Ng on Using E-Simulation Platforms in PCLL (EJLT)

Wilson Chow & Michael Ng
European Journal of Law and Technology
2016, Vol. 7, No. 1, pp. 1-21
Abstract: Education has been undergoing significant changes in the past decade. Some universities have been taking advantage of information technology in order to enhance the interactivity and the degree of realism in their experiential learning environment. More recent legal education and training reviews and current scholarship, including the latest discourse on disintermediation of legal education, readily assume the tech-enablement of students’ learning experience via the use of technology. This article argues, through a reflective and empirical study of the adoption and adaptation of an e-learning platform by the Department of Professional Legal Education of the University of Hong Kong (HKU) in its Postgraduate Certificate in Laws programme (“HKUPCLL”), that the use of technology can possibly turn out to be another unwelcomed intermediary in the disintermediation process if it is not adaptive to the students’ needs and expectations which may be shaped by their evolving e-behaviour, different background and cultural particularities. It further proposes to modify the disintermediation discourse by embracing this possibility of inhibition, so that it can become a suitable model to assess the effectiveness of use of technology in legal education.  Click here to download the full article.

Tuesday, April 19, 2016

New Law Projects Funded by HKU Seed Funding for Basic Research

Congratulations to our nine colleagues who recently obtained grants from the HKU Seed Funding for Basic Research.  A total of more than $0.5 million was awarded in funding.  The project topics range from crowd-funding, China's anti-monopoly law to the law and policy of creative industries and innovation in Hong Kong.  The details of the awarded projects are as follows (in no particular order):
1.  The Case for Crowd-Funding in Hong Kong, Alexa Lam
2. Dispute Resolution in China: Litigation, Arbitration, Mediation, and their Cross-Interactions, Weixia Gu  
3. Analysis of Intellectual Property Licence Refusals under the Chinese Anti-Monopoly Law, Kelvin Kwok 
4. Should Directors Be Accountable to Shareholders?: A Critical Reassessment, Ernest Lim
5. How Can Copyright Law Best Promote the Public Interest? Perspectives from the Google Digital Library Litigations in China and the United States, Haochen Sun
6. Asian Courts in Dynamic Democracies, Po Jen Yap 
7. A Comparative Study of Civil Sanctions Against Money Laundering, Simon Young
8. Professionalism, gender and culture - empirical and comparative study of professional attributes using standardized clients in professional legal education, Wilson Chow
9. A Study of the Law and Policy for Creative Industries and Innovation in Hong Kong, Richard Wu

Wednesday, November 11, 2015

Renovating the Hong Kong Revenue Regime (Report on International Conference)

The Taxation Law Research Programme (TLRP) at HKU ran the Fourth TLRP International Conference recently, on Saturday, 31 October 2015. The conference title was: Renovating the Hong Kong Revenue Regime. The convenor of the conference, Richard Cullen has compiled a report on the event. One highlight of the conference was the review of significant new tax policy initiatives within Mainland China. Conference presenters from the Mainland noted how these changes present possible major new opportunities for the HKSAR as China moves towards an increasingly capital-export based economy. Other comments suggest, however, that Singapore may be well placed to benefit also – especially if the HKSAR continues to experience significant (political) difficultly with new, macro-policy implementation.
THE REPORT
RENOVATING THE HONG KONG REVENUE REGIME

INTRODUCTION
The Taxation Law Research Programme (TLRP) in the Faculty of Law held its Fourth International Conference, entitled Renovating the Hong Kong Revenue Regime on Saturday, October 31, 2015.
     The TLRP was established in 2007, within the Faculty’s Asian Institute for International Financial Law (AIIFL), to foster general and comparative Taxation Law and Policy research focused, above all, on the HKSAR and Mainland China. The TLRP is, in many respects, built upon the foundations of advanced Tax Law research first introduced in Hong Kong - at HKU - by the late Professor Peter Willoughby in the 1970s, supported, in particular, by Professor Andrew Halkyard (now an Adjunct Professor in the Faculty).
     The conference was opened by Professor Gary Meggitt, Director of AIIFL.

HISTORICAL CONTEXT
The conference title used the term Revenue Regime (RR) rather than “Tax System” because Hong Kong has, ever since 1842, relied notably on non-tax sources of revenue. The Hong Kong RR has, in many respects, proved to be remarkably successful for over 170 years resulting a in a low tax, simple system, unique within the developed world. So successful, in fact, that the HKSAR typically holds savings of up to 2 years total Government expenditure within its Fiscal Reserve Fund. 
     When British Hong Kong was established, formally, in 1842, the primary source of public revenue was meant to be derived from the retail sale of opium, above all to the rapidly growing Chinese community. Briefly, the new Hong Kong Government planned to establish such a revenue stream by selling monopoly opium retail rights to the highest bidder - which was the model successfully deployed in the slightly earlier British Singapore Colony. Hong Kong also copied the Singapore free port model (thus excluding customs duties as a revenue source).
     In fact it took around 40 years before opium income became a serious contributor to public revenues in Hong Kong. This proved not to be a crucial problem, however, as revenues from (leasehold) land sales and other land-related revenues (including lease conversion premiums) more than made up for opium-income shortfall.
     From 1842 to this day, the RR in Hong Kong has benefitted from revenues resulting from Government land sales and other major land-transaction revenues to an extent found in no other comparable jurisdiction.
     The conference title also stressed “renovation” of the HKSAR system. For the reasons just briefly outlined, there is a widely shared view that the RR is not in need of radical or wholesale reform - especially given the levels of great complexity many years of such reforms have produced in Tax Systems right across the developed world.
     As it happens, the HKSAR Basic Law also spells out, in Articles 107 and 108: that Hong Kong shall strive to adhere to the low tax policy of British Hong Kong; and that it should keep a rein on public expenditure and avoid deficit financing. Article 106 additionally stipulates that the Mainland and HKSAR revenue systems must be kept strictly separated.

CHALLENGES & RESPONSES
Past performance is no guarantee of future, long-term fiscal robustness, however. This is especially so, given the challenges facing the HKSAR. These include an ageing population - combined with prominent expectations related to education, career opportunities, health care, housing and environmental improvement (for example). 
      Associate Professor Wilson Chow (HKU) presented an analytical review of the findings from a preliminary survey of attitudes in Hong Kong towards the existing RR, perceived (revenue-sensitive) public policy concerns and possible renovation options. Professor Richard Cullen (HKU) followed up this demonstration with a short summary of certain discussion topics.
      A lively debate followed centred on the issues raised in the presentations, “bookended”, as it were, by those stressing the need for the HKSAR to take the greatest care to avoid the trap of advanced-welfarism (seen in many developed countries) – and by those stressing the need for the RR to be put to work far more seriously to address the striking community inequalities within the HKSAR.
      A further highlight of the conference was the special contribution made by a range of leading Mainland Tax Policy scholars from Xiamen University (Professor Yang, Bin; Professor Zhu, Yansheng and Dr. Doreen Qiu, Dongmei), Sun Yat Sen University (Prof. Yang, Xiaoqiang) and the Haikou College of Economics (Ms. Li, Xin). These contributions made two things clear: (a) how very rapidly Tax Policy development (and implementation) is advancing in the Mainland; and (b) how these moves towards a more developed (and internationalized) system present some special, interaction opportunities for the HKSAR. These developments are unfolding within China’s relatively new, “One Belt, One Road” outward-focussed, economic development model.
     The overall themes and the robust tone of the conference were established by the, keynote speakers, Professor Adrian Sawyer (University of Canterbury, New Zealand) and Professor Nolan Sharkey (University of Western Australia) – two of the leading Tax Law & Policy academics in Australasia. They each provided a series of first rate comparative insights. 
      Nolan Sharkey’s presentation (which combined an informing review of relevant Tax Policy developments in Singapore and China) raised an important point which resonated with observations made by the Mainland scholars. The EU and the USA have found it beneficial to retain internal, separate low-tax / low regulation jurisdictions (Luxembourg (EU) and Maryland (USA) for example). Beijing’s overall positive view of the HKSAR as a low tax / low compliance cost regime of significant use to China as its economy modernizes towards a capital-export model fits well with this established approach. 
     As Professor Sharkey noted, this Mainland policy stance could indirectly also benefit Singapore. Singapore has a strong tradition of high integrity, responsive institutions. It is fundamentally connected at all levels to the globalized economy and it is, overall, well trusted by Beijing. Singapore’s competitive Tax Regime thus may increasingly operate within a “de facto” or “alternative Hong Kong” zone. 
     Unfortunately, the great difficulty experienced with implementing major new policies in the HKSAR over the last several years could stand in the way of Hong Kong taking best advantage of these Mainland Tax Policy changes. Thus, the potential opportunities highlighted by the Mainland scholars at the conference could yet be taken up more effectively by Singapore. 
     A central “take-away” from Adrian Sawyer presentation related to how New Zealand’s responded to its near-bankruptcy experience of the 1970s: by undertaking a highly successful, major re-setting of its Tax System. This level of wholesale reform remains unmatched, within the last several decades, anywhere else in the developed world.
      Hong Kong, fortunately, has never flirted with bankruptcy – on the contrary. Yet there are many sound lessons to be drawn from the New Zealand experience in terms of forging a constructive renovation consensus.
      Taxation Systems, for many years, have largely been regarded in an instrumental way. That is, they are seen as a primary, multi-faceted tool of government policy implementation, above all. Most modern Tax Policy research explicitly or implicitly adopts this perspective. But Taxation Systems can also properly be viewed as part of the crucial political foundations of any given jurisdiction (the work of Prof. Xu, Yan (The Chinese University of Hong Kong – formerly at HKU) has demonstrated this most clearly with respect to Mainland China, for example). This conference made it plain that the RR in the HKSAR is both: a key instrument of policy implementation; and a pivotal part of Hong Kong’s unique political-economy identity.

POSTSCRIPT
Apart from the presenters noted above, the conference attracted academic participants from a range of other Hong Kong and offshore institutions, including: The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Lingnan University, Hong Kong Shue Yan University, The University of Otago in New Zealand and The University of New South Wales and Monash University in Australia.
      It was particularly pleasing to see a strong delegation of students (studying Tax Law) from Sun Yat Sen University (in Guangzhou) at the conference. Students from HKU and other universities also attended. 
      One of the many active participants was Mr Yeung, Wai Hong, a publisher with Next Media, who is an economist by training. He noted after the event that: “The conference you organized should be a required assignment for every practitioner in my business”.
      The conference concluded with an informal dinner on the Saturday evening for speakers and others involved in the conduct of the conference - followed by yum cha on the following day at the Jumbo Floating Restaurant (JFR) in Aberdeen. In both cases, conference topics dominated the conversation – though in more relaxed circumstances. The accompanying photo shows members of the conference group waiting for the water-taxi back to Aberdeen, outside the JFR.  Power Point Slides from the conference can be found on the TLRP Website.