Cheaper to live than be dead in Hong Kong
THERE’S one thing even Hong Kong’s more than 40 billionaires may struggle to buy — a final resting place on their home turf.
Land shortages in the late 1970s forced Hong Kong to ban construction of new permanent burial sites, and public cemeteries were ordered to ensure the remains of the deceased be exhumed and cremated after six years to make way for newcomers.
The policy has done little to alleviate the grave shortage in a city where more than 40,000 people die each year.
Some can get lucky if relatives choose to have the remains of a loved one removed from a public burial site to be cremated, opening the prized permanent space to a lottery system, but plots may only come available every few years.
The only other way is if the deceased is a member of a church that has a private graveyard with a plot available, a very rare instance that can cost up to HK$3 million (US$386,900).
“In Hong Kong, people cannot buy a final resting place even if they have all the money in the world,” said Hoi Pong Kwok, funeral director at Heung Fok Undertaker. “The government doesn’t just have to settle housing needs for the living. It also needs to address those of the dead.”
In land-hungry Hong Kong, where more than 7 million people are packed into just 30 percent of the territory, failure to vacate a plot after six years means bodies will be exhumed by the government, cremated and put in a communal grave.
While the funeral policy has resulted in a surge in the number of people being cremated — 90 percent of the city’s dead were cremated in 2013, up from 38 percent in 1975 — cremation is by no means the answer for those seeking a resting place.
Securing a niche in a public columbarium — a drab concrete structure where urns are placed — can take up to five years and there are officially more than 21,800 deceased on the waiting list for a space, which costs more than HK$3,000.
Funeral service providers say there are a further 100,000 jars of remains stored in funeral homes or at funeral companies across the city, some of which are also waiting for plots.
Those who can’t stand the wait must pay as much as HK$1 million for a niche about the size of a sheet of A4 paper in a privately owned crematorium.
At Lung Shan Temple in Fanling district, a private plot measuring 160 square centimeters with “the most auspicious position” costs HK$1.8 million.
With a luxury home in Hong Kong costing roughly HK$151,389 per square meter, that means it’s more expensive to house the dead than the living.
“Permanent burial sites are not available any more. We don’t even have enough space for the living,” said Barry Law, sales manager at Fortune Wealth Memorial Park Ltd.
As the shortage shows no signs of easing, some funeral service providers see big opportunities in the city’s ageing wealthy.
Midas International Holdings Ltd and Sage International Group Ltd are promoting graveyards in provinces on the Chinese mainland and Macau.
“Usually they will go to the mainland because there are some very expensive and nice places for them,” said Betsy Ma, sales and marketing director at Sage.
Ma said prices for permanent burial sites in Guangdong — just across the border — had jumped to about 200,000 yuan (US$32,000). For a permanent burial plot in Macau — just an hour by ferry from Hong Kong — a plot can fetch at least HK$1 million.
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