A socioecological perspective on the future quality of life of Hong Kong’s young people: the role of competencies, livelihood improvement and support, upward mobility and environment, and five-year outlook
A socioecological perspective on the future quality of life of Hong Kong’s young people: the role of competencies, livelihood improvement and support, upward mobility and environment, and five-year outlook
The rapid loss of young people from Hong Kong’s (HK’s) labor force between 2020 and 2022 was not reflected in the steady unemployment rate, suggesting the departure of young people. It was likely due to the pessimism about their future quality of life (QoL) in HK, following discontent about, for example, the Anti-Extradition Bill and stringent COVID-19 restrictions. To help prevent further loss of the precious population, we aimed to identify the HK-specific socioecological aspects that could predict young people’s future QoL based on a socioecological perspective. We found that, compared to 2018 (n = 794), young people in 2021 (n = 636) were significantly more pessimistic, and this was predicted by factors in the socioecological framework at lower levels, such as financial competence and self-efficacy to improve one’s QoL, and at higher levels, such as positive evaluations of QoL, opportunities for young people’s upward mobility, the natural environment in the Great Bay Area compared to HK, and the five-year economic outlook and QoL in HK. Implications for HK young people’s perceptions and what they value were discussed.
147-168
Fung, Anthony
972e764f-9878-4f20-97f9-c2856a566043
Lam, Jason
2452121a-ca5d-4b3a-8f50-f7523be61c43
Chiu, Stephen
92239e9d-0c61-4d73-9a2d-68dc2969e51a
Fung, Anthony
972e764f-9878-4f20-97f9-c2856a566043
Lam, Jason
2452121a-ca5d-4b3a-8f50-f7523be61c43
Chiu, Stephen
92239e9d-0c61-4d73-9a2d-68dc2969e51a
Fung, Anthony, Lam, Jason and Chiu, Stephen
(2023)
A socioecological perspective on the future quality of life of Hong Kong’s young people: the role of competencies, livelihood improvement and support, upward mobility and environment, and five-year outlook.
Journal of Applied Youth Studies, 6, .
(doi:10.1007/s43151-023-00100-3).
Abstract
The rapid loss of young people from Hong Kong’s (HK’s) labor force between 2020 and 2022 was not reflected in the steady unemployment rate, suggesting the departure of young people. It was likely due to the pessimism about their future quality of life (QoL) in HK, following discontent about, for example, the Anti-Extradition Bill and stringent COVID-19 restrictions. To help prevent further loss of the precious population, we aimed to identify the HK-specific socioecological aspects that could predict young people’s future QoL based on a socioecological perspective. We found that, compared to 2018 (n = 794), young people in 2021 (n = 636) were significantly more pessimistic, and this was predicted by factors in the socioecological framework at lower levels, such as financial competence and self-efficacy to improve one’s QoL, and at higher levels, such as positive evaluations of QoL, opportunities for young people’s upward mobility, the natural environment in the Great Bay Area compared to HK, and the five-year economic outlook and QoL in HK. Implications for HK young people’s perceptions and what they value were discussed.
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Accepted/In Press date: 7 September 2023
e-pub ahead of print date: 25 September 2023
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 499649
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/499649
ISSN: 2204-9193
PURE UUID: 467a7daa-0c29-4269-9893-11a2931bfbbe
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Date deposited: 28 Mar 2025 17:43
Last modified: 29 Mar 2025 03:29
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Author:
Anthony Fung
Author:
Jason Lam
Author:
Stephen Chiu
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