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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

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Connie Lo at home in Sham Shui Po. Lo lives with her husband and daughter in a subdivided flat. Photo: Xiaomei Chen

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.

Zeng Xiaobao at home in Sham Shui Po. Zeng lives with her husband and two children in a subdivided flat. Photo: Xiaomei Chen
Zeng Xiaobao at home in Sham Shui Po. Zeng lives with her husband and two children in a subdivided flat. Photo: Xiaomei Chen

“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.

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