Business | Check your privilege

China’s Communist Party chips away at Hong Kong business houses

The territory’s tycoons are falling out of favour

|HONG KONG

TO GET A sense of how Hong Kong’s magnates and China’s Communist Party have coexisted, consider Tung Chee-hwa. When his family shipping concern, Orient Overseas Container Line (OOCL), faced bankruptcy in the mid-1980s, a Chinese state-owned bank swooped in to bail it out. Mr Tung became the territory’s chief executive after Britain handed Hong Kong back to China in 1997, until protests pushed him out of office in 2005. In 2017 he cashed out of OOCL through a $6.3bn sale to Cosco, another state-owned giant.

This article appeared in the Business section of the print edition under the headline “Check your privilege”

Race in America

From the May 22nd 2021 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from Business

A surreal scene with a striped bowl holding the Statue of Liberty's torch, surrounded by floating, distorted faces and small planets.

Donald Trump’s America will not become a tech oligarchy

Reasons not to panic about the tech-industrial complex

A simple robot face with rolls of cash as eyes. The robot has a smiling mouth and a small antenna on top. The design is minimal, with black outlines on a light background.

OpenAI’s latest model will change the economics of software

The more reasoning it does, the more computer power it uses


Protesters in favour of TikTok stand outside the United States Capitol.

TikTok’s time is up. Can Donald Trump save it?

The imperilled app hopes for help from an old foe


The UFC, Dana White and the rise of bloodsport entertainment

There is more to the mixed-martial-arts impresario than his friendship with Donald Trump

Will Elon Musk scrap his plan to invest in a gigafactory in Mexico?

Donald Trump’s return to the White House may have changed Tesla’s plans