Hong Kong saw lowest average salary increment in 10 years

Despite the lowest increment in a decade, Hong Hong employees can look forward to a slight pay rise next year.

Employees in Hong Kong received an average of 1.4% salary increment, the lowest rate in 10 years, according to a survey by The Hong Kong Institute of Human Resource Management.

The survey, which was released on 29 October, was conducted between January and September this year, with 128,000 full-time workers from 92 companies across 15 sectors participating.

It revealed that 69.7% of the companies polled said they had increased staff pay in 2020. And employees can expect an improved 1.7% increment in 2021.

Meanwhile, 30.3% of the employers polled reported a 2020 pay freeze although none of the management interviewed had implemented a pay cut.

The Hong Kong Institute of Human Resource Management’s vice-president Lawrence Hung Yu-yun said, “At only 1.4%, the average salary increment reflects employers’ ongoing restrained approach to budgeting before COVID-19 gets under control.

“However, organisations can show staff they are valuable stakeholders of the company and moderate pay rise is only temporary in these unusual times, by implementing more people-centric working measures.”

“Looking ahead, global economic uncertainty caused by Covid-19 continues to be a major concern for organisations, which affects their pay adjustment forecast in 2021,” Hung added.

 

Share this articles!

More from HRM Asia

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

Stay updated with the latest HR insights and events,
delivered right to your inbox.

Sponsorship Opportunity

Get in touch to find out more about sponsorship and exhibition opportunities.