TNAG-2119-FCO40-3025-Future-of-Hong-Kong-general-1990 — Page 85

FCO40 Hong Kong Department Records 聯邦事務部香港部檔案 All

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to be of enormous value both in the short- and long-run. Another

factor in the government's favor is the Hong Kong Chinese'

obsession with stability and its abhorrence of confusion. They

know very well the indispensability of the colonial authority in

maintaining social order. As noted before, some of them would

even like to see the government take draconian measures to

reassert its authority, probably considering it as a means to

guarantee stability in Hong Kong. The general endorsement of the

existing institutional structure, which owes its origin to

colonial tutelage, is of great help to the government in

maintaining its rule.

Thirdly, as the government is publicly credited with the

modernizing success of Hong Kong, it must have accumulated a

substantial amount of diffuse political support. This stock of

political goodwill from the people should have depleted quite a

bit, but the balance should enable the government to sustain

itself for some while. The general satisfaction with colonial

rule in the past and the reluctance of the people to face the

future might even produce some measure of 'nostagic' political

support for the government. When people think that the future

government is not likely to be better than the departing one,

they would be more magnanimous in dealing with the latter.

Fourthly, the emigration of people from the higher occupational

strata creates vacancies for those staying behind to fill.

Opportunities for upward occupational mobility for the young and

better educated have multiplied. At least in the short term, as

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