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Task Force on Study Plans Global Promotion of Study in Hong Kong's Initiative and Internationalisation Efforts

HK

Task Force on Study Plans Global Promotion of Study in Hong Kong's Initiative and Internationalisation Efforts
HK

HK

Task Force on Study Plans Global Promotion of Study in Hong Kong's Initiative and Internationalisation Efforts

2026-04-17 21:55 Last Updated At:04-18 13:47

Task Force on Study in Hong Kong holds second meeting

The Secretary for Education, Dr Choi Yuk-lin, today (April 17) chaired the second meeting of the Task Force on Study in Hong Kong, to summarise with the Task Force members the achievements of the Study in Hong Kong Week and discuss the work in promoting the internationalisation of basic education.

To further consolidate Hong Kong's status as an international education hub, and promote Hong Kong's higher education and the "Study in Hong Kong" brand globally, the Government has designated from February 23 to March 1 this year as Study in Hong Kong Week. As a flagship event of Study in Hong Kong Week, the Asia-Pacific Association for International Education 2026 Conference and Exhibition showcased Hong Kong's unique strengths as an international post-secondary education hub with the largest scale and highest number of participants since the association's establishment in 2004. Moreover, the first International Symposium of the Alliance of Universities of Applied Sciences (UAS) has been successfully held. Serving as an important platform for scholars from around the world, the Symposium explored how the UAS can foster cross-sector collaboration in driving innovation and nurturing talent, and highlighted Hong Kong's strengths in vocational and professional education and training.

Dr Choi said, "Establishing Hong Kong as an international hub for high-calibre talent has long been the target of the Education Bureau (EDB). We are committed to strengthening the supporting role of education in science, technology and talent development. While consolidating Hong Kong's 'golden reputation' of education, we are also actively participating in the development of the Northern Metropolis University Town, continuously promoting the 'Study in Hong Kong' brand, facilitating the expansion and quality enhancement of educational institutions, and driving the high-quality development of Hong Kong's education sector."

Dr Choi continued, "We would like to express our gratitude to the Director of the Hong Kong and Macao Work Office of the Communist Party of China Central Committee and the Hong Kong and Macao Affairs Office of the State Council, Mr Xia Baolong, for his recent message to Hong Kong's higher education institutions, in which he urged them to fully leverage the strengths of Hong Kong's education brand advantages and its international characteristics. The Government will proactively algin with the National 15th Five-Year Plan to continuously invest in education, and support the development of the post-secondary education sector in Hong Kong in a holistic manner. Accordingly, the Task Force on Study in Hong Kong, through its extensive global network, will help institutions further strengthen collaboration and synergistic elements to attract more outstanding students and scholars to study or conduct research in Hong Kong, thereby contributing to the innovation and optimisation of the higher education sector and the development of world-class disciplines."

Building on the robust development of internationalisation in post-secondary education in Hong Kong, the Government is further expanding basic education to advance the development of Hong Kong as an international education hub, extending the "Study in Hong Kong" brand to primary and secondary schools. The meeting reviewed the Study in Hong Kong: Southeast Asia Education Tour in March, which was the first tour organised by the Hong Kong Direct Subsidy Schools Council, and noted the work of the delegation in promoting the strengths of Hong Kong's basic education and the unique characteristics of Hong Kong's Direct Subsidy Scheme Schools to international audiences through holding seminars and meetings with education officials overseas.

Moreover, the members of the Task Force introduced their workplan for 2026 at the meeting and exchanged views on the workplan and ways to enhance the promotion of the unique strengths of Hong Kong's post-secondary and basic education.

This meeting was conducted online. Dr Choi thanked all the Task Force members, including various overseas Hong Kong Economic and Trade Offices and Mainland Offices, for proactively promoting the "Study in Hong Kong" and "Study Tour in Hong Kong" brands as well as the Belt and Road Scholarship on different occasions such as thematic exhibitions, education forums and Lunar New Year celebratory events to guests worldwide during the Study in Hong Kong Week. The EDB will continue to maintain close communication and co-operation with the Task Force members and will invite other stakeholders, such as representatives from post-secondary institutions, to participate in the Task Force meeting as needed with a view to formulating strategies for building Hong Kong as an international education hub.

The Secretary for Education, Dr Choi Yuk-lin (third right), today (April 17) chaired the second meeting of the Task Force on Study in Hong Kong to summarise with the Task Force members on the achievements of the Study in Hong Kong Week and discuss the work in promoting internationalisation of basic education. Source: HKSAR Government Press Releases

The Secretary for Education, Dr Choi Yuk-lin (third right), today (April 17) chaired the second meeting of the Task Force on Study in Hong Kong to summarise with the Task Force members on the achievements of the Study in Hong Kong Week and discuss the work in promoting internationalisation of basic education. Source: HKSAR Government Press Releases

Speech by FS at HKICPA x IFAC PAIB Conference

Following is the speech by the Financial Secretary, Mr Paul Chan, at the HKICPA x IFAC PAIB (Professional Accountants in Business) Conference today (April 18):

Stephen (President of the Hong Kong Institute of Certified Public Accountants (HKICPA), Mr Stephen Law), Josephine (Chair of Professional Accountants in Business Advisory Group, International Federation of Accountants (IFAC), Mrs Josephine Okui Ossiya), Kelvin (Chairman of the Securities and Futures Commission, Dr Kelvin Wong), distinguished guests, ladies and gentlemen,

Good morning.

It is a great pleasure to join you today at the Professional Accountants in Business Conference, co-organised by the HKICPA and the IFAC. For those who have travelled from afar, a very warm welcome.

The theme of today's conference - PAIBs at the helm of change - is timely and compelling. We are living through an era of rapid, and often disruptive, transformation. Powerful forces are reshaping the global economy and redefining how businesses compete, invest and manage risk.

Global shifts and forces of change

First, geopolitics. The logic of globalisation that prevailed for decades is being rewritten. As geoeconomic fragmentation intensifies, trade and investment patterns are shifting, and supply chains are being reconfigured in response to tariffs, trade barriers, and security concerns.

At the same time, the Global South is playing a more prominent role in global growth. With youthful demographics, expanding middle classes, and rising consumption, it will be an increasingly important source of demand and new markets.

Second, technological disruption. AI is reshaping every sector and redefining competitiveness. Agentic AI - together with advances in cloud computing and robotics, is moving from tools that assist people to systems that can plan, decide and execute. This will reshape business models and productivity. For businesses, AI competence and literacy are now essential.

Third, green transition. Despite policy twists and turns in individual countries, decarbonisation and green transition remain mainstream global priorities. Recent conflicts in the Middle East have also strengthened the case for energy diversification. Meeting climate and energy-security goals will require trillions of dollars of investment, and this will create new value chains across renewable energy, electric vehicles, energy storage and sustainable construction.

Hong Kong: resilience and opportunity

Ladies and gentlemen, these forces are changing the global business landscape. For Hong Kong, they also create new space to grow, because our strengths match what the world increasingly needs.

The unique advantages under "one country, two systems" remain our enduring strength. In an increasingly fragile and volatile world, Hong Kong offers stable, predictable policies - a safe harbour and a destination for growth. The strength of our stock market and IPO activity, the growth in bank deposits, and the continued expansion of our asset and wealth management sector in the past couple of years all reflect that confidence.

Meanwhile, our opportunities will also continue to expand alongside the development of our country, China, under the 15th Five-Year Plan. The Outline of the Plan places a strong emphasis on building a modernised industrial system and advancing technological self-reliance. In the coming few years, we can expect remarkable progress and breakthroughs in areas such as AI, semiconductors, quantum computing and aerospace.

China is also deepening high-level two-way opening-up under the dual circulation strategy. It is building a larger consumption market. This will support greater flows of goods, services, capital and talent between the Mainland and the world.

Meanwhile, green transition will remain a defining theme of China's development.

We are determined to seize the opportunities ahead. The HKSAR Government is preparing its first Five-Year Plan, which will set out a holistic vision and concrete action plan to strengthen Hong Kong's development over the next five years and more. Meanwhile, in this year's Budget, I have set out AI+ and Finance+ as two key strategies for our next stage of economic development.

AI+

On AI+, we are committed to applying artificial intelligence to empower and transform key sectors of our economy: to create value, to boost productivity and competitiveness, and to deliver better products and services for the people. To steer this effort, I announced in the Budget that we will set up the Committee on AI+ and Industry Development Strategy, which I chair. As a start, we will focus on life and health technology and embodied AI, where Hong Kong has strong advantages in research capabilities and real-world application environment.

Talent is the cornerstone of this endeavour. We have therefore launched the AI Training for All initiative to promote broad-based understanding and adoption of AI across society - so that professionals, including accountants, students and the wider community are ready to seize the opportunities of the AI age.

Finance+

On Finance+, our aim is to deepen and broaden Hong Kong's financial markets and services - not only in equities, green finance, and asset and wealth management, but also in areas such as fixed income and currencies market, for which we launched a roadmap last year.

Above all, our goal is to strengthen Hong Kong's financial ecosystem - broader, deeper, and more sophisticated - to better serve the real economy, especially innovation and technology companies at different stages of development. We have long been a premier fund-raising destination for high-quality companies in the region. With more Mainland companies pursuing global expansion through Hong Kong, we are enhancing our listing regime, such as reviewing the weighted voting rights structure, with a view to attracting more Mainland and international companies to list, and raise capital here. CATL (Contemporary Amperex Technology Co Limited), the world's largest IPO last year, is a good example.

As Asia's No. 1 green and sustainable finance hub, Hong Kong can do more to channel capital to credible green and transition projects, and help bridge the significant global financing gap.

In driving the Finance+ strategy, demand for a new generation of professional services will also accelerate, including those in valuation and risk assessment of emerging assets - such as intellectual property and data assets - as well as related accounting, auditing and assurance services.

To deliver these strategies, we must continue to attract enterprises and nurture the best talent. In this regard, Hong Kong has introduced a re-domiciliation regime to make it easier for them to establish their corporate home in Hong Kong, while maintaining legal continuity and business operations. Several high-profile insurance companies have already made the move, signalling a strong vote of confidence in Hong Kong's business and regulatory environment.

We are determined to attract the best tech companies to enrich our tech ecosystem here. Among our efforts, we have set up the Hong Kong Investment Corporation, HKIC, with $62 billion as seed capital. The HKIC co-invests with partners in hard technology, biotechnology, and new energy. For every dollar it invests, it has leveraged eight dollars of long-term international capital.

Meanwhile, nurturing local talent remains our core priority. For the accounting profession, we are grateful to the HKICPA - and the IFAC as well - for working together to keep our talent pool at the forefront of global best practice.

We will continue to attract high-calibre professional talent to Hong Kong, to support our city's development. Indeed, our various talent admission schemes have received over 600 000 applications. More than 400 000 have been approved, and over 280 000 individuals have arrived.

A bright future for PAIBs

Ladies and gentlemen, I am confident that PAIBs, whether you are from Hong Kong or elsewhere, will find vast opportunities in this city. On a final note, as a professional accountant myself, I would like to take this opportunity to offer three observations to fellow accountants as we navigate this era of change.

First, strengthen digital and AI literacy. In the age of digital intelligence, the finance function will be more automated in routine tasks, but more demanding in analytics, scenario planning, and strategic insight. Human-machine collaboration will become the norm. PAIBs must proactively build their digital and AI capabilities, understand how data and algorithms enable informed decisions, and use AI tools intelligently and responsibly.

Second, better understand shifting geopolitics and economic patterns. Businesses will increasingly rely on PAIBs to assess risks, manage exposures, and advise boards on complex cross-border issues - from regulation and tax to sanctions, sustainability and reputational risk.

Third, and above all, uphold the highest standards of integrity and professional ethics. Trust is the foundation of markets and institutions. No matter how far technology evolves, the ultimate responsibility rests with people. PAIBs are guardians of that trust, and they are instrumental in maintaining rigorous financial reporting, strong internal controls, sound risk management and effective corporate governance.

I am sure you will hear further insights from other speakers at this Conference. On this note, I wish this Conference every success, and all of you good health and continued success in the years ahead. Thank you very much.

Speech by FS at HKICPA x IFAC PAIB Conference Source: HKSAR Government Press Releases

Speech by FS at HKICPA x IFAC PAIB Conference Source: HKSAR Government Press Releases

Speech by FS at HKICPA x IFAC PAIB Conference Source: HKSAR Government Press Releases

Speech by FS at HKICPA x IFAC PAIB Conference Source: HKSAR Government Press Releases

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