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Hok Bun KU & Kam Wah CHAN Department of Applied Social Sciences

Racism and Social Inequality: Work and Employment of South Asian Ethnic Minority in Hong Kong. Hok Bun KU & Kam Wah CHAN Department of Applied Social Sciences The Hong Kong Polytechnic University. Introduction.

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Hok Bun KU & Kam Wah CHAN Department of Applied Social Sciences

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  1. Racism and Social Inequality: Work and Employment of South Asian Ethnic Minority in Hong Kong Hok Bun KU & Kam Wah CHAN Department of Applied Social Sciences The Hong Kong Polytechnic University

  2. Introduction • According to the 2001 official population census, ethnic minorities constituted 5.1 per cent of the Hong Kong population with a total of 343,950. Among them, the population of South and Southeast Asians, including Pakistanis, Indians, Nepalese, Filipinos, Indonesians and Thais, was 249,516 (Census and Statistics Department, 2002).

  3. Discrimination against South Asian people is largely unarticulated and undocumented in Hong Kong. • Making people invisible is one way of marginalizing and socially excluding them. • In 2002 we started a pilot study about the life situation of Pakistanis in Hong Kong and then in 2004 funded by the CERG Grant we continued another bigger project titled “Ethnicity and Social Exclusion – A Study on the Life Situation of South Asian Ethnic Minority in Hong Kong”

  4. It aims to understand the situation of South Asian ethnic minority groups through their hidden voices and to see what social forces contribute to the social exclusion of ethnic minority groups, as well as to understand how their racial and ethnic identities make their position vulnerable in areas such as education, employment, housing, health and social services. • We also hope to make the finding reach to the policy makers and helps them reformulate the law to outlaw racial discrimination and design services more favorable to the ethnic minority. • The paper focuses on the employment issues concerning South Asian ethnic minority groups in Hong Kong, namely the Filipinos, Indians, Nepalese and Pakistanis.

  5. Race/Ethnicity and Social Exclusion in Hong Kong • In recent years, social exclusion has been one of the important themes in policy debates in Western societies • It has also replaced the ‘underclass’ in discussions about the poor in post-industrial society. • ‘Social exclusion’ means much more than poverty because many exclusions and inequalities are embedded in everyday social interactions, social practices and social discourse.

  6. It involves not just the lack of material resources but also a multi-dimensional process in which various forms of exclusion are combined: participation in decision making and the political process, access to employment and material resources, and integration into common cultural processes. • There is a close relation between ‘ethnicity’ and ‘social exclusion’.

  7. Numerous surveys by academics, the press, and other NGOs provide incontrovertible evidence that ‘racist attitudes lie very deep’ and racial discrimination is a serious problem in Hong Kong • We do hope via this paper, South Asian ethnic minorities’ voices can be heard by the government and the public

  8. Employment Situation of South Asian Ethnic Minorities in Hong Kong Table 6: Employment Status

  9. Racial Labor Market Segmentation

  10. Table 7: Occupation and Ethnic Origin

  11. Table 8: Working hours per week

  12. Table 9: Average monthly income

  13. Table 10 Means of getting current job Note: The respondent may write more than one career chances. Total Number of Respondent = 190

  14. Table 11. Difficulties in searching for a job in Hong Kong

  15. Table 12: Time spent to find the current job

  16. Table 13. Problems at workplace in Hong Kong

  17. Color Still Matters • Racial Bias and Discrimination in job searching and at Workplace • Unequal treatment at the workplace • Unrecognized educational qualifications

  18. South Asian People’s Narratives • “Even in the newspaper recruitment ad, the requirement is not Chinese. It is an English company. Still, if you phone them for an interview, and they come to know that you’re a Pakistani, your nationality, they will just not call you. They won’t bother. They won’t even bother to give you some time. They’ll just say, ‘Okay, we’ll call you or something like that.’ And then just finish! At this point they don’t even ask you if you know Cantonese or not…Concerning Hong Kong environment and the culture, they still think that Chinese will be more adapted to the kind of society.”

  19. “Sometimes I look for jobs in Recruit. When I called them, they asked about my qualifications. After that, they asked me, ‘Who’re you? Are you a Chinese?’ I answered that my nationality is Pakistani. Then, they said, ‘Sorry, you can’t.’”

  20. “I think this is a show – the language barrier – we can call it a show. It is played in the hands of the government, non-government organizations and other firms. Whenever a South Asian who can’t read or write Chinese and goes to any firms to apply for jobs, straightly the first question is, “Do you know how to read and write Chinese?”“Sorry.” This is the show that everybody is using on everybody. I’ve seen many advertisements that state ‘good English, better job opportunities.’ Where are the job opportunities? … Any person who speaks English, you use the Chinese show. And you give the job to the one whom you want. To whom you want to give it, you give it!”

  21. Religion matters too…the kindergarten was affiliated with a church. The person frankly told me, ‘We’re afraid that you may teach your religion to our children.’ I said, ‘Why will I do so?’ [Exclaimed sadly.] Though I had kindergarten teaching experience, it’s in his mind that maybe I would teach them my religion. I see a lot of Christians preaching on streets. Some even came to our doorsteps and offered us books and things. We’ve never had these things. They’re doing that, fine, no problem. But why did he think I’d do the same? This is a barrier.

  22. Conclusion • A sense of exclusion is common for our respondents. • racism operates subtly and constitutes inequality in work and employment among South Asian people in Hong Kong. • Their life experiences in Hong Kong are shaped by discrimination, racism and differential or preferential treatment. • Racial labour market segmentation is the obvious pattern in Hong Kong. • While language and credential are two of the main problems the ethnic minorities faced in job search or at work, racial discrimination is another significant factor. • Racial discrimination in the labour market was overwhelming, and it led to unequal treatments suffered by the ethnic minorities. • Comparing to their local Chinese counterpart, the ethnic minorities received unequal/lower pay, less promotion opportunity, more workload, less job safety, higher chances of being laid off, less working benefits and are at times rejected because of cultural and/or religious practices.

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