1.
TRADE UNIONISM IN HONG KONG.
It is impossible to attempt to convey any approximately
accurate idea of the status and condition of Trade Unions in
Hong Kong today without reference to the political history of
China especially during the last twenty five years, in which
are One to be found the main influences which have encouraged,
determined and to some extent distorted their growth.
2.
I am taking the liberty, therefore, of quoting extensively
from the report of my predecessor in office, Mr. H. R. Butters,
on Labour and Labour Conditions in Hong Kong, which was published
as a Sessional Paper in 1939 and which contains the best summary
of the historical background that I know.
3.
"China has been described as not a state but a society, and
the Chinese as a familial and not a political animal, "society
being merely the family writ large". The family as the basis of
society has been not inappropriately referred to as a communistic
unit with "Do what you can and take what you will" as its guide.
This accounts for the ability of the individual both in China and
Hong Kong to survive periods of distress in the absence of poor
relief, unemployment benefit or old age pension. Devotion to the
family at the sacrifice of truth, justice, and loyalty to the
state bred the vices of nepotism and corruption.
moral philosophers but no metaphysics. With the preservation and
perpetuation of the family exalted as the supreme end of man,
anything that appeared to be conducive there to was inevitably
regarded as virtue. The enrichment of one's self and one's
relations was not only the perquisite but the duty of the ruler.
It belonged to his status. In modern times union officials have
frequently shown themselves susceptible to the influence of
tradition.
China has many