Closing time: How Hong Kong’s hawkers face a struggle to survive (2024)

Street hawkers

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How Hong Kong’s hawkers face a struggle to survive

Hong Kong’s hawkers will die out in less than 50 years, if current stringent policies don’t change. Talking to different hawkers from those manning dai pai dongs to itinerant hawkers selling fruit on carts and stall owners touting clothes on Mong Kok’s famous hawker streets, the South China Morning Post reports on what is pushing the trade into extinction.

What d’ya want sir? Cup of yin yeung coooooooooomin’ up!

Tucked between high-rise offices of multinational banks and companies in Central, the hawkers of Stanley Street serve up steaming cups of Hong Kong-style milk tea to early-rising workers. Business will pick up at lunchtime, when their kitchens will dish out plates of hot rice topped with wok-tossed meat. For dinner, beer glasses will clink as Cantonese dishes are set on roadside tables.

There are just a handful of such stalls now, food stall hawker Wily Chan Chiu-wah says. Decades ago the streets were filled with stalls and customers.

“It’s almost all gone now ... and we’re the lucky ones already,” said Chan, tossing rice and egg in a huge wok. Chan scooped the fried rice onto a waiting plate and wiped his brow with a towel.

Hong Kong hawking – an age-old practice of selling cheap food and wares from stalls and street carts – is going the way of horse-drawn carts and century-old buildings. Worried about hygiene, safety and street congestion, city officials took steps in the 1970s to limit the practice. Those rules – a ban on new licences and severe limits on their transfer – has shrunk the number of legal hawkers from 50,000 in 1974 to about 6,000 today, city records show. Last year, the city started a programme to buy back licences, further shrinking the numbers.

With many licence holders in their 60s, and no new licences or policy changes to foster this form of commerce, hawking – and all its tourist charms and economic benefits for the lower classes – could die out in 50 years if current policies don’t change, says Yip Po-lam, convener of a grassroots concern group for hawkers.

Perhaps realising this, the city has begun exploring changes to their policies, said an official of the Food and Health Bureau, who asked to remain anonymous. A department spokesman said the government recognised the cultural significance of hawking and is not trying to kill it off.

“The Administration’s current hawker policy is [designed] to strike a proper balance between allowing legal hawking activities on the one hand and maintaining environmental hygiene and protecting the public from undesirable effect[s] on the other,” a spokesman from the Food and Environmental Hygiene Department wrote in an email. License restrictions are necessary, “as hawker licences should not be regarded as commodities available for free transfer or trading in the market”.

With many licence holders in their 60s, and no new licences or policy changes to foster this form of commerce, hawking could die out in 50 years

Yip said the government needs to move quickly.

“We see many overseas places – Japan, Korea, Singapore – that have kept them for a reason,” said Yip, who has spoken at Legislative Council meetings for hawkers. “Supermarkets, which are owned by large corporations, will soon become the only choice” for shoppers, she said. “If you see it from poverty alleviation, culture and tourism or local economy point of view, then you should grow it.”

It was always tough: a history of survival

Hawking has been an economic lifeline for generations of workers. It has allowed poor, sometimes uneducated people to earn a living on their own, without the expense of finding and maintaining a permanent storefront. Stalls provide convenient foodstuffs and household items, often at prices affordable to the working class, while feeding the new generation of office workers looking for cheap eats.

“The government needs to see that this is a cultural fixture of Hong Kong life for the past half-century,” said long-time hawker Chan Kai-tai, who sells fresh fruit from a cart. “This is it. This is where the locals, the poorer folks, the working folks buy their daily necessities.”

After the second world war, hawking became an affordable way of making a tidy living in poor, crumbling Hong Kong. Hawkers didn’t need to rent a shop nor obtain a licence to operate. The Hong Kong Hawkers Association estimated there were more than 70,000 such sellers in Hong Kong and Kowloon in 1946, with many “having engaged in the business before the war and have had long residence in the colony”.

The British government soon realised that the trade needed to be regulated, and enforced a licensing system. In 1971, the city had 39,033 licensed hawkers, with another 6,000 illegal sellers, according to the Urban Council. In addition, there were 40 hawker bazaars in 1972.

By 1974, town planning documents showed that there were 49,310 daytime stalls in business areas around Hong Kong and Kowloon. There were 150 stalls for every 10,000 people, with most stalls in high-density, low-income districts, according to the report.

City officials believed there were many more hawkers who operated despite not having licences.

By the 1970s, the city was concerned that areas dense with hawking could pose sanitation and safety hazards.

Documents from the now defunct Urban Council show that hawker policies were made stricter because by the 1970s, hawking was viewed as no longer a welfare activity, but a commercial one, which could draw larger numbers if the city didn’t tighten its policies.

“For residents living nearby, on-street hawking activities might cause obstruction, environmental nuisance or even hazards relating to hygiene and fire risks,” according to a government paper issued in April. “Shopkeepers in commercial premises nearby might consider on-street hawking activities an unfair competition with the businesses because hawkers did not have to pay rent," read another government issued paper on hawker policies.

The government issued its last hawking licence in 1973. Annual licence fees ranged between HK$1,000 to HK$3,000 – depending on the size, location and type of stall or cart the hawker used.

In addition, the city established a hawker control unit to pursue illegal sellers. The size, height and structure of the stall has been severely regulated by law. Sellers say that inspections are fickle and inconsistent.

Those policies have remained in place, largely unchanged. They were relaxed a bit in 2009, when the government issued 61 new itinerant hawker ice-cream vendor licences.

“The government needs to see that this is a cultural fixture of Hong Kong life for the past half-century.”

Today, hawkers can be roughly divided into four types: the fixed pitch hawkers selling dry goods; cooked-food stalls; newspaper stalls and itinerant hawkers who push carts.

After obtaining his licence in 1972, itinerant fruit hawker Chan, now 65, said he has had to quit hawking for a while because of government inspectors.

“All that government talk about encouraging people to work and to work longer, yet here they are stamping out our job,” he said. “Many old colleagues gave up because the work was truly back-breaking, or because of government persecution.”

Harsh policies didn’t help

Itinerant hawker licences became non-transferrable; once a hawker retires, that licence is not reissued. Fixed-pitch licences can be transferred once to a close relative, like a spouse or child.

Mong Kok hawker Chan Kong-chiu, who works on Fa Yuen Street, began his hawker life in 1977 as a jau gwai – an “on-the-run” illegal hawker.

The 62-year-old clothes seller stayed with hawking, hoping like many that he’d get the chance to “go legitimate”.

It never happened for Chan. Now he works as an assistant to an elderly fixed-pitch hawker.

Truth is, many assistants are the real hawkers. By law, the licensee must be present at the stall for it to be open for business. But licence holders are often too old to work the streets all day, and some aren’t involved in the business at all. Some assistants have worked this way for decades, but can’t obtain their own operation licences.

“It’s the business arrangement,” said clothes hawker Chan sitting on a short ladder outside his stall, keeping an eye on a customer rummaging through his clothes pile. “Most of the licensees are too old to work. So we do the job as an assistant and get a salary.”

“Most of the licensees are too old to work. So we do the job as an assistant and get a salary.”

Yip, who has been fighting for hawkers’ rights since 2011, said the lack of new hawker licences has fostered a licensing black market.

In some cases, one person has rented out a few stalls from licensees – often elderly people – and then subleased them at high prices, earning a profit, said Yip.

“No hawkers working nowadays will be willing to talk about it, probably because many of them are actually the ones renting these stalls,” she said. “Those who want to become hawkers have no way of doing that legally.”

Lack of city planning

The latest blow to the hawking trade came in 2013, when the government offered lump sums of HK$120,000 to hawkers willing to surrender their licences. More than 310 licences were forfeited in just a year.

The aim was to decongest the denser tourist-heavy streets after a deadly fire on Fa Yuen Street. But it killed off hawker streets catering to locals instead.

Yip criticised Hong Kong’s city planning and spatial use. Instead of building a city stuffed with luxury flats and office space, the government should save old neighbourhoods, perhaps designating some in new towns for markets.

The food department official said the government is considering issuing new hawking licences, given the wide community support hawkers have gained in recent years. The government draws the line at itinerant hawkers, the official said.

“Land [in Hong Kong]? It’s impossible to find affordable commercial space.”

The official said that the government was open to suggestions of suitable locations for hawker markets, but said it was extremely hard to find such spots, given Hong Kong’s tight land issues and expensive real estate.

Yip scoffed at the idea.

“Land? It’s impossible to find affordable commercial space,” she said.

The future of hawkers

Once an itinerant seller, Chan Kwan-yick dragged his cart all over Hong Kong for more than 40 years. He traded clothes, switching later to cart noodles – Chinese noodles in soup with toppings that included braised turnip and pig’s blood to various fish balls.

After multiple arrests that ended with fines, he got a licence which barred him from lawfully selling cooked food on the street. He switched specialities.

Now 74 years old, Chan works from 10am to 11pm daily, health permitting, serving more than 30 snacks including homemade boot jai go – bean and rice-flour puddings moulded in ceramic bowls – and sticky rice dumplings covered in coconut and sugar.

He sells up to 450 bean jellies a day in the winter, and up to 300 a day in the summer.

The veteran remained optimistic about Hong Kong hawking.

“Yes we’ll shrink in numbers, but would we disappear altogether? I don’t think so,” he said. “Even though there are no more licences, the illegal ‘runaway hawkers’ will be back.

“Without hawkers, society is quiet and empty.”

Credits

Reporting

Jennifer Ngo

Video

Robin Fall

Online production

Cedric Sam

Editing

Suzanne Sataline

Adam Renton

Join the conversation on SCMP.com

Closing time: How Hong Kong’s hawkers face a struggle to survive (2024)

FAQs

What difficulties does hawker have? ›

Their employment is insecure and irregular. Very low gain. This profession is not legal so they are in danger of harassment by varied social control agencies. These are the problems faced by hawkers and street vendors.

What is the history of hawkers? ›

Dating as far back as the 1800s, hawker culture in Singapore originated from the early migrant population selling quick, affordable meals on street pavements, in town squares and parks – wherever they could set up their makeshift stalls.

What does a hawker do? ›

In most places where the term is used, a hawker sells inexpensive goods, handicrafts, or food items. Whether stationary or mobile, hawkers often advertise by loud street cries or chants, and conduct banter with customers, to attract attention and enhance sales.

What are the types of hawker? ›

The hawkers can be classified according to their mode of operation. There are mobile hawkers, semi-static hawkers and static hawkers.

What is a hawker answer in one sentence? ›

A trader who carries the goods on the back of animals or wheel cart for the purpose of selling is called an hawker.

How do hawkers manage their work short answer? ›

They organise their own work. They know how much to purchase, as well as where and how to set up their shops. Their shops are usually temporary structures. Sometimes just some boards or papers spread over discarded boxes or may be canvas sheet hung up on a few poles.

What does the name hawker mean? ›

English (western England): occupational name for someone who trained hawks or engaged in the sport of hawking from Middle English hauker 'falconer hawker' (Old English hafocere).

Why is it called hawkers? ›

"hucklebone," the hip-bone; and the hawkers or hucksters were so called either because they stooped under their packs, or squatted at booths in markets, &c.

What was the thing the hawker was selling? ›

Ans: The speaker in the poem is a little school-going child. In the poem, he meets three people- a hawker, a gardener and a watchman. He observed all three of them and saw that the hawker was selling bangles and was saying “Bangles, crystal bangles!” while selling.

How is the life of a hawker? ›

He gets out of his home early in the morning. He buys cheap, small articles of trade at a cheaper rate and tries to sell them at a good profit. A hawker carries his articles on a hand-cart or in a basket on his head, and sometimes even with his hands. He moves along the streets and roads to sell his articles.

Why is hawker culture important? ›

Hawker Culture was consistently highlighted as an intangible cultural heritage that best represents Singapore's multicultural heritage, with hawker centres viewed as important community spaces. With the inscription, it is hoped that there will be greater appreciation and recognition for our hawkers.

In what ways is hawker different? ›

The difference between a hawker and a shopkeeper is that a hawker does not have a fixed shop, that is, he sells his products from street to street by roaming around. Whereas a shopkeeper has a fixed shop and people come to shop to purchase things.

What do you need to be a hawker? ›

If you intend to handle food in a cooked food stall, you must first complete the Basic Food Hygiene Course (BFHC). If you do not pass the BFHC, you will not be able to handle food in your stall even if you have successfully tendered for one. Vacant stalls are put up for tender and awarded to the highest bidders.

Who is known as a hawker? ›

a person who offers goods for sale by shouting his or her wares in the street or going from door to door; peddler.

Who is hawker named after? ›

Origin of Name

Hawker was named after George Charles Hawker. It was named in 1880.

What is the sentence of answer? ›

Verb She answered all my questions. He answered only three of the test questions correctly. When the police asked him his name, he refused to answer.

What is sentence question and answer? ›

A statement is a sentence that tells you something. A question is a sentence that asks you something. A statement does not require an answer. A question requires an answer.

What is sentence give answer? ›

A sentence is a grammatically complete idea. All sentences have a noun or pronoun component called the subject, and a verb part called the predicate.

What kind of problems do hawkers and street vendors face? ›

Street vendors are usually associated with encroachment of public spaces, causes traffic congestion, inadequate hygiene, and poor waste disposal. Safety of food has been increasingly become a concern in regard to street vendors.

How do hawkers earn their living? ›

Answer: Street hawkers are a significant part of the street population in cities. There are about 10 million street vendors in India. They sell a variety of products for daily consumption such as fruits, vegetables and other items like handicrafts, garments, newspapers and magazines.

How can we help our hawkers? ›

To help hawkers tide over this challenging period, the Alliance encourages members of the public to continue supporting hawkers through e-ordering, food delivery or take-out. Together, we can contribute to the sustainability and vibrancy of Singapore's Hawker Culture.

What does a hawker own? ›

Hint:A hawker provides door to door service. He sells his goods by calling out the names of his product. He generally owns a tie which we may call a movable shop and keeps in its different products of our everyday use.

Where was hawkers founded? ›

Way back in 2011, four best friends joined forces (like the Avengers, but better) to bring the streets of Asia to the streets of Orlando, Fla.

Is Shui a female name? ›

The name Shui is primarily a gender-neutral name of Chinese origin that means Water.

Who created hawkers? ›

Hawkers was founded in December 2013 by Iñaki Soriano, Pablo Sánchez and the brothers Alejandro and David Moreno. Hawkers is part of the Saldum Ventures group and its current President is Alejandro Betancourt.

Who is in charge of hawkers? ›

NEA manages the 118 markets and hawker centres [PDF, 55.97 KB] and regulates the tenancies, and public health aspects of these markets and hawker centres.

Who owned hawker? ›

Hawker Siddeley
TypePublic
Defunct29 April 1977 (aircraft production) 1992 (whole company)
FateAircraft business merged with British Aircraft Corporation and Scottish Aviation Group divested
SuccessorBritish Aerospace Bristol Siddeley Airbus
HeadquartersKingston upon Thames, Greater London , United Kingdom
8 more rows

How did hawker pass his time? ›

The hawker passes the time unhurriedly. There is nothing to hurry him on, there is no road he must take, no place he must go to, no time when he must come home.

What does the boy see as special in the hawker's life? ›

At three different points of time during the day he notices different hawkers and gets impressed by their free choices and independent way of life.

Why did the child want to be a hawker? ›

The child wants to be a hawker because like a hawker he wants to spend “his day on the road”. He wants to be a gardener because he, “does what he likes with his spade”. Nobody takes him to task, “even when he gets baked in the sun or gets wet”.

Why is the hawker culture dying? ›

As old hawkers retire, they are not replaced by new blood in sufficient numbers. The working conditions (the hawker centre stall is a tiny cubicle), long and odd hours, and low profit margins deter most young from joining the profession.

How long do hawkers work? ›

For (non-subsidised) stallholders in joint-operatorship, the stallholder and the joint-operator each is required to personally operate the stall for at least half a day (i.e. at least 4 hours per business day).

What defines hawker culture? ›

Hawker Culture in Singapore is an integral part of the way of life for Singaporeans, where people from all walks of life gather at hawker centres to dine and bond over their favourite hawker food, which are prepared by hawkers.

What is hawker experience? ›

Hawkers prepare a variety of food ('hawker food') for people who dine and mingle at hawker centres. These centres serve as 'community dining rooms' where people from diverse backgrounds gather and share the experience of dining over breakfast, lunch and dinner.

What does hawker style mean? ›

Well, generally, a hawker centre is an open-air commercial property – many are over two or more floors – where people cook on a permanent stall. These stalls may have their own seats but, usually, there is a large communal seating area. This allows everyone in your party to try different foods from various stalls.

How did hawker culture start? ›

1800s – The Origins

Many immigrants saw street hawking as a good way to earn a living, as it required little capital. These early pioneers started to ply the streets, serving the dishes that they were most familiar with. The streets were bustling with activity, colours, aromas, and flavours.

How would you describe a street hawker? ›

A street hawker is a common sight in all the Indian towns and villages. A street hawker usually comes with a cart or a basketful of goods, placed on his head. He carries a variety of things and eatables. Usually, in the morning, street hawkers come with vegetables and fruits in their baskets.

How is the fruit seller different from the other hawkers? ›

What difference does the author note between the flute seller and the other hawkers? Answer: The author says that unlike other hawkers, the flute seller plays slowly without excessive display. He does not shout out his wares.

What is the synonym of hawker? ›

Definitions of hawker. someone who travels about selling his wares (as on the streets or at carnivals) synonyms: packman, peddler, pedlar, pitchman.

What are qualities of hawker? ›

The main characteristics of hawkers and pedlars are: They move from street to street, in buses, trains, etc. in search of customers. They sell a wide range of products, including fruits, vegetables, toys, and bangles.

What are the duties and responsibilities of a hawker supervisor? ›

Arranging of work schedule and problem solving for issues arise from the different hawker stalls. Communicating with the stalls owners and making sure the work process is smooth. Have to be working hands on and clearing table top to ensure smooth work flow.

Who can work at hawker? ›

Hawker assistants must be registered with NEA before they can help out at the stall. All hawker assistants of cooked food stalls must possess a valid Basic Food Hygiene Course (BFHC) certificate. The stallholder must personally operate the stall and is not allowed to sublet the stall.

Is hawker a name? ›

Hawker is a surname.

Does hawker still exist? ›

Hawker Beechcraft Corporation (HBC) was an American aerospace manufacturing company that built the Beechcraft and Hawker business jet lines of aircraft between 2006 and 2013.
...
Hawker Beechcraft.
TypePrivate
Founded2006
DefunctFebruary 19, 2013
FateSucceeded by Beechcraft Corporation upon emerging from bankruptcy on February 19, 2013
8 more rows

What is a hawker in China? ›

Hawkers in Hong Kong (Chinese: 小販) are vendors of street food and inexpensive goods. They are found in urban areas and new towns alike, although certain districts such as Mong Kok, Sham Shui Po, and Kwun Tong are known for high concentrations of hawkers.

When did hawkers start? ›

It all started when four best friends with family roots in Malaysia, Hong Kong, Vietnam and exotic…Winter Haven, Florida, decided to bring the bold flavors of Asian street food to the streets of Orlando in 2011.

What did Harry hawker invent? ›

During November Hawker produced the Sopwith Tabloid, a revolutionary short-winged biplane which emerged as the fastest and most manoeuvrable aeroplane in the world and led to biplanes gaining preference over monoplanes as combat aircraft during World War I.

What was a hawker in the 1800s? ›

Although the words costermonger, hawker and pedlar were used interchangeably, the costermonger or hawker was, technically speaking, someone who sold his wares by crying them out in the street. The pedlar travelled the countryside with his wares, visiting houses along the way to sell them.

Why do people not like hawker centres? ›

Hawker centres are seen as very hot and dirty, hawkers are not dressed well “and the presentation of food is not as fancy as many would like it to be”, he added. “The bulk of a newer generation still likes to eat what's trending online, such as pop-ups, food trucks, or artisanal farmer's market type of food ...

In what ways is a hawker different from? ›

The difference between a hawker and a shopkeeper is that a hawker does not have a fixed shop, that is, he sells his products from street to street by roaming around. Whereas a shopkeeper has a fixed shop and people come to shop to purchase things.

Why are hawkers sometimes considered as an inconvenience? ›

Hawkers are sometimes considered as an inconvenience​ because they result in problems such as traffic jams, low-quality products in the market, etc. Explanation: Hawkers are the vendors who do not have a permanent shop and use mobile vehicles to sell goods and cheap products at lower rates.

How do you keep hawker culture alive? ›

Keep it authentic and affordable

To preserve our hawker heritage, he believes the next generation of hawkers must first nail down the original recipes and then strive to "re-express" and improve on not just the dishes, but also the aesthetics of the food and the stalls.

In what ways is a hawker different from a shop owner Why do people go to a weekly market Give two reasons? ›

Hawkers do not have permanent shops whereas shop owners have permanent shops. They generally sell a product like vegetables and fruits. Their income levels are less than that of shop owners.

Are hawkers dying? ›

Yet, for a generation brought up on hawker fare, one cannot help but feel that in recent years, some of these familiar haunts are slowly losing their magic. With the median age of hawkers at 60, according to the National Environment Agency (NEA), many heritage hawkers are at risk of dying out without succession.

When was the last hawker built? ›

Hawker Beechcraft Corporation (HBC) was an American aerospace manufacturing company that built the Beechcraft and Hawker business jet lines of aircraft between 2006 and 2013.

What kind of challenges are faced by street vendors and hawkers? ›

Street vendors are usually associated with encroachment of public spaces, causes traffic congestion, inadequate hygiene, and poor waste disposal. Safety of food has been increasingly become a concern in regard to street vendors.

Why are hawkers not welcome in certain areas of the city? ›

Answer: The street vendors do not have any job security. Police can remove their shops anytime. They are prohibited from selling their items in certain parts of the city.

What are the rights of hawkers? ›

The hawkers and squatters or vendors' right to carry on hawking has been recognised as a fundamental right under Article 19 (1) (g) of the Constitution. At the same time, the right of the commuters to move freely and use the roads without any impediment is also a fundamental right under Article 19 (1) (d)."

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