Opinion | Hong Kong should see the ‘silver economy’ as a golden opportunity
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Opinion | Hong Kong should see the ‘silver economy’ as a golden opportunity
03 mins
Hong Kong stands at a definitive demographic crossroads. With one-third of our population projected to be over 65 by the 2040s, the city can either treat ageing as a fiscal burden or it can transform longevity into a sustainable growth engine.
Drawing inspiration from Andrew Scott and Lynda Gratton’s work on the 100-Year Life project, Hong Kong should boldly embrace longevity as a new development frontier. By leveraging our unique strengths in finance, world-class regulatory frameworks and strategic East-West positioning, we can become the global gateway to the Greater Bay Area’s massive “silver economy”.
As lifespans extend towards a century, we need new financing models for multi-stage careers, lifelong learning and flexible pension systems that support work into people’s 60s and 70s. Hong Kong can carve out a distinctive niche as the global capital for “longevity finance”, transitioning from a focus on simple asset accumulation to wealth preservation, income generation, long-term care, and cross-border health and life insurance solutions.
Hong Kong is also uniquely positioned to become Asia’s premier hub for investment in healthcare, biotechnology and assisted living facilities. The Hong Kong Investment Corporation is perfectly placed to anchor this sector, curating platform projects that de-risk private capital.
The city’s family office initiative can channel multi-generational capital into longevity-focused funds, silver real estate investment trusts, health-outcome bonds and other innovative offerings, blending fintech, family legacy and opportunities to serve. These could pave the way for the world’s first “longevity impact exchange”.
The health and wellness sector presents equally compelling opportunities. The manufacturing capabilities of cities in the Greater Bay Area development zone could support a thriving ecosystem of wearable devices and home health technologies designed specifically for Asian seniors, a fast-growing market which has hitherto been dominated by Japan and Taiwan.
An elderly man hangs upside down on a horizontal bar during his morning exercise in Fanling on August 17, 2025. Photo: Eugene Lee