Title of article :
Globalization, de-industrialization and Hong Kongʹs private rental sector
Author/Authors :
Ngai Ming Yip، نويسنده , , Adrienne La Grange، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Pages :
11
From page :
996
To page :
1006
Abstract :
A number of scholars have identified a changing role for private rental housing, as it becomes a more mainstream tenure to house the insecure rich and poor alike in globalizing cities. Hong Kong is an important global city and is experiencing rising rates of social polarization associated with globalization generally, its articulation with the Chinese economy specifically and the impact of the Asian Financial Crisis in 1997. Our empirical research suggests that Hong Kongʹs private rental sector has responded to and articulates with the cityʹs specific globalization trajectory. It increasingly houses the highly paid, highly skilled but relatively insecure elite and the low paid, low skilled and very insecure underclass, for whom prospects of public housing or home ownership are diminishing. Private renters are younger, more mobile and house both top-end and bottom-end ethnic minorities. The traditional role of private renting and large scale obsolete inner-city housing stock, combined with the aggressive development of up-market and highly desirable private housing estates makes the sector particularly adept at meeting the needs of Hong Kongʹs hour glass shaped global society. We anticipate that the size of the private rental sector will increase, albeit from a low base and that its hour-glass shape will become more pronounced.
Keywords :
globalization , Private renting , Hong Kong
Journal title :
HABITAT INTERNATIONAL
Serial Year :
2006
Journal title :
HABITAT INTERNATIONAL
Record number :
748716
Link To Document :
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