Hong Kong’s low-income families cut back on food and extra lessons to cope with electricity tariff increase
- Tenants will struggle with electricity tariff increase, says member of Kwai Chung Subdivided Flat Residents Alliance
- Housewife fears gas, water and rent costs will go up after the electricity tariff increases

Tenants living in Hong Kong’s subdivided flats have said they might skip soup for dinner or cut their children’s extracurricular activities to save money for a coming electricity tariff increase.
“Everything is getting more expensive. I pretty much cut unnecessary costs the best I can,” said Connie Lo Sue-yin, 36, a housewife living in a 150 sq ft subdivided flat in Sham Shui Po with her husband and three-year-old daughter.
Lo said her family’s HK$17,000 (US$2,176) monthly income came from her 36-year-old husband, who worked as a truck driver.
The family paid HK$5,300 in rent each month and spent an additional HK$1,400 on average each month on electricity and water bills.

“We were charged HK$1.8 per kilowatt-hour by the landlord, which is already higher than other people. I bet the landlord will pass the tariff hike onto us after the power companies did,” Lo said.