Opinion | Hong Kong’s education hub cannot be a one-market wonder

The numbers tell a revealing story. The city’s eight publicly funded universities, once primarily judged by academic output and global rankings, are now generating record income from knowledge transfer. Patents, licensing deals, industry partnerships. These are not side activities. They are becoming core business lines. Universities are no longer just custodians of knowledge. They are active market participants, packaging and monetising it.

Around them, an ecosystem is forming. Student hostels have become investment assets. Entire blocks are being

acquired, converted or purpose-built to cater to a steady pipeline of fee-paying students. Private capital has noticed something policymakers are only beginning to articulate. Education in Hong Kong is no longer just a public good. It is a growth sector.

This transformation is policy-driven. Hong Kong wants to position itself as an international education hub. Universities expand postgraduate offerings. New master’s programmes appear with impressive speed, often aligned with fashionable disciplines. Data science. Fintech. Artificial intelligence. The catalogue grows.

On paper, the strategy makes sense. Education exports are a proven economic driver. For Hong Kong, with its limited land and finite industrial base, exporting education seems a logical extension of its service economy. But there is a quiet tension beneath the surface. Who exactly is this “international” strategy built on?

A significant proportion of new enrolments, especially at the postgraduate level, come from mainland China. Hong Kong offers a hybrid experience. It is close enough to home, yet carries an international veneer. Degrees are delivered in English. Campuses feel globally connected.

Yet reliance on a single source carries risks. Tourism learned it the hard way. Retail did too – at its peak, mainland visitors accounted for nearly 90 per cent of same-day visitor spending, leaving the sector dangerously exposed when those “purse strings” eventually tightened. Concentration can deliver rapid growth but also creates structural vulnerability.

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