4.

salary levels in Hong Kong are far from uniform.

Administrative Officers receive salaries considerably

better than their UK counterparts. But this is less true

of the Police. They form the majority of HMOCS members

in Hong Kong, and will be crucial to our ability to

administer Hong Kong in the next few years.

You suggest that under your scheme HMOCS officers will

enjoy retirement benefits that will never fall below those of their UK counterparts. In fact, your proposal for the trigger

at 26:1 to operate only after taking account of all pension

income from Hong Kong and the ODA, would result in many

policemen's pensions being safeguarded at levels well below those of their UK counterparts.

5.

You suggest that Hong Kong should contribute to funding any scheme. This has been discussed exhaustively. It is simply not an option: Hong Kong's Legislative Council would

not approve the funds to discriminate in favour of

expatriates. To force Hong Kong to pay would provoke a constitutional crisis as well as precipitate a further row with the Chinese, who would see this as asset-stripping by

the UK.

6. My proposal is for a traditional compensation scheme and a

sterling pension safeguard set at HK16:£1 (the-current

то

exchange rate is HK$11: £1 and the average over the last twenty years has been HK$12: £1). It is designed to meet our

obligations to this last group of HMOCS officers, and to take account of the interests of the UK taxpayer. It is already significantly less generous than previous schemes:

it places an artificially low cap of £120,000 on the compensation scheme. This would bite on a far higher

percentage of officers than in past schemes. But I think

let.42hmocs.ADMIN

JEB

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