Hong Kong’s fresh graduates ‘earning 9.8% more than peers did 5 years ago’, with economist pointing to race for talent amid brain drain
- Think tank finds median monthly salary for graduates aged 20 to 24 rose to HK$17,424 last year from HK$15,856 in 2017, an almost 10 per cent increase
- Scholar says employers could be paying more to plug talent gaps amid brain drain, but warns graduates’ good fortune unlikely to last as overseas competition rises

Fresh university graduates in Hong Kong are earning almost 10 per cent more than their peers did five years ago, a think tank has said, with an economist attributing the trend to employers paying out more for talent amid a recent brain drain.
An analysis of 35 years of census data by pro-establishment think tank New Youth Forum found the median monthly salary for graduates aged 20 to 24 rose to HK$17,424 (US$2,224) last year from HK$15,856 in 2017, a 9.8 per cent increase.
The figure from 2022 is the third highest across the 35-year period, comparable with fresh graduate earnings of HK$17,426 back in 1997. The lowest level over the time frame was HK$14,796 from 2012.
Associate Professor Billy Mak Sui-choi, of Baptist University’s department of accountancy, economics and finance, said a recent outflow of local talent could mean some employers were willing to offer higher salaries rather than operate short-staffed.
“If employers have to choose between [hiring] someone to share the workload or saving on salary expenses, they will choose the former,” he said.
But Mak warned that local graduates would face increasing pressure as authorities sought to bring in more talent from overseas to tackle the brain drain.
The increase in entry-level salaries for fresh graduates was unlikely to continue in the coming years as local talent would be forced to compete against those brought in from overseas under the city’s various special visa schemes, he said.