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was some improvement, but the problem of overlap in the distribution of
              public and private tenants remained substantial.

              Distribution of working-aged households (household heads aged 20 – 65) by
              housing type and by income quartiles



















              Source: Census and Statistics Department.



              3. Divorce and Family Breakdown


                     The crude divorce rate in Hong Kong was 3.1 per 1,000 people in 2013,
              nearly three times higher than that in 1991. This places Hong Kong in the
              top ten in the world in divorce. We believe that implicit in the PRH allocation
              criteria is an in-built incentive that provides encouragement for unhappy
              couples or low-income households to initiate divorce and remarry across
              the border. A low-income divorced parent could apply for readmission
              to the PRH programme, often with preferential consideration (compared
              with being a singleton), if he or she had dependent children or remarried,
              since the current PRH allocation criteria favour married couples but do not
              discriminate between first marriages and remarriages.

                     This perverse incentive further tilts the balance in favour of divorce
              among low-income families and generates a penalty on children who
              inevitably suffer from family breakdown. The growing number of divorced
              women living in PRH units implies a rising number of children growing up
              in broken families in PRH estates. This is not conducive to upward social
              mobility but sets the stage for the production of a new underclass that
              perpetuates intergenerational inequality and low social mobility.

              4. Intergenerational Mobility and

              Poverty


                     Divorced men and women are heavily concentrated in PRH. It
              follows that the PRH estates have become a conglomeration of single
              parent households that will have an adversarial effect on a sizeable
              number of children. Their development is stunted, causing both income
              inequality and poverty.


                     Hong Kong’s public housing estates are transforming into areas of
              concentrated poverty with more children living with a single parent. These
              children reside in poor neighbourhoods which might lack good role models

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