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        Immigrants as Voters in Electoral Autocracies: The Case of Mainland Chinese Immigrants in Hong Kong

        Stan Hok-Wui Wong,Ngok Ma,Wai-man Lam 동아시아연구원 2018 Journal of East Asian Studies Vol.18 No.1

        Migration to electoral autocracies has become increasingly common. Extant studies, however, accord little attention to the immigrants' influences on the domestic politics of these regimes. We argue that immigrants have attributes (status quo bias and lack of prior exposure to local politics) that make them an attractive co-optation target of the authoritarian regime. We provide a case study of mainland Chinese immigrants in Hong Kong to illustrate our argument. Since the sovereignty transfer, the Hong Kong government has devised various schemes to attract these immigrants, while pro-establishment political parties and groups have actively sought to co-opt them. Using two distinct public opinion surveys, we also find that immigrants are more likely to approve of the political and economic status quo, and less likely to vote for pro-democracy opposition parties than the natives. In addition, we find no evidence that exposure to political information can change the immigrants' vote choice.

      • KCI등재

        Political Connections and Firm Performance: The Case of Hong Kong

        Stan Hok-Wui Wong 동아시아연구원 2010 Journal of East Asian Studies Vol.10 No.2

        Business interests are overrepresented in Hong Kong’s nominally democratic political institutions. Many in Hong Kong perceive this as evidence of the existence of “collusion between government and business,” a phenomenon that has stirred public concerns in the city since its sovereignty transfer. Although anecdotal accounts abound, no systematic analysis has been conducted to evaluate the validity of this perception. In this article I use a rich firm-level dataset to offer the first systematic assessment of the effects of political connections on firm performance in Hong Kong. I define politically connected firms as firms that have stakeholders concurrently holding a seat on the Election Committee, a constitutional body that elects the city’s chief executive. I found evidence, though not overwhelming, consistent with the “collusion” hypothesis: political connections do improve firm performance measured by return on equity and market-to-book ratio. The improvement is unlikely due to unobserved confounding factors such as firms’ inherent ability. As for the origin of the political connections, the data show that a firm’s economic power has little predictive value of its connections to the Election Committee. Rather, number of employees matters; firms that hire fewer workers were more likely to gain a seat on the 1997 Election Committee. This result may suggest that Beijing plays a more dominant role in the formation of political connections—that serve Beijing’s co-optation needs rather than the interests of powerful firms that may have a desire to “capture” the state.

      • KCI등재

        Petition and Repression in China’s Authoritarian Regime: Evidence from a Natural Experiment

        Stan Hok-Wui Wong,Minggang Peng 동아시아연구원 2015 Journal of East Asian Studies Vol.15 No.1

        China has established a petition system to elicit information about grievances. However, the petition system may have perverse effects because it also reveals to the center the failure of local-level officials to resolve those grievances. Anecdotal accounts suggest that local officials have incentive to silence petitioners, often with the use of repression. In this article we study whether non–regime threatening petitions would provoke local governments’ coercive response. To tackle the endogenous relationship between petition and repression, we take advantage of a natural experiment afforded by a change in hydroelectricity policy in China. In particular, we use provincial hydropower outputs as an instrument to identify citizen petitions. We find that citizen petitions significantly increase a province’s spending on its repressive apparatus. The results suggest a paradoxical outcome of China’s petition system: while it may help reduce the national authority’s use of repression, it has caused an explosion of repression within the authoritarian system as a whole.

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