CO129-558-3 Levy on Salaries- petition from Chinese Civil Servants 3-1-1936 - 19-12-1936 — Page 83

CO129 Colonial Office Hong Kong Records 理藩院香港檔案 All

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against an estimated expenditure of thirty-two and one quarter,

i.e. a deficit of three and one-half millions; and this moreover on a reckoning of sterling commitments at $1 = 1 15/3d. It is

estimated that the Colony's surplus funds on the 1st January will

total approximately eleven and one-quarter million and, while I

am not blind to the fact that the main utility of a surplus is to

carry an Administration through lean years, I do not deem it

prudent (and my advisers are at one with me in this view) to let

the level down to below eight millions on the next year's working.

I have therefore had under critical review various items of

personal emoluments with a view to cutting down rent, language and

other allowances which appear to have been somewhat promiscuously

and lavishly granted in the past. As regards the future I am

recommending in a separate despatch an adaptation of the African

basis of remuneration to Hong Kong appointments but the present

necessity is to secure an immediate economy in the cost of

personnel. With this end in view the Colonial Treasurer

prepared a programme of curtailments in allowances which on the

31st July I discussed with all Heads of Departments.

8.

At this meeting it was impressed very strongly upon

me that the Service would prefer the continued imposition of a

salary levy to any interference with allowances. Many arguments

were adduced but the two principal ones were:-

(a) that there should be equality of sacrifice on the basis

of pre-slump emoluments; this would be effected by a salary

levy but not by docking allowances which some were drawing

and others not; and

(b) that the public should know that Government servants were

"doing their bit" in the depression, and a salary levy would

command popular appreciation whereas a reduction of allowances

would pass either unnoticed or insufficiently comprehended.

The force of both these arguments must be admitted and, in view of

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