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Hong Kong counting the economic cost of chaos even as retail crisis looms

Financial Secretary Paul Chan made the announcement to lawmakers Monday, explaining that the ongoing turmoil has hurt economic growth by some 2 percentage points this year

Hong Kong protesters
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Hong Kong protesters

Eric Lam, Jinshan Hong and Natalie Lung | Bloomberg
Hong Kong is counting the economic cost of almost six months of political unrest, with the city expected to post its first budget deficit since the early 2000s.

Financial Secretary Paul Chan made the announcement to lawmakers Monday, explaining that the ongoing turmoil has hurt economic growth by some 2 percentage points this year.

There’s more bad news coming Monday: Retail sales data for October due later will show a “very enormous” decline, Chan said.

Arrivals from China plunged 45.9 per cent from a year earlier in October, the biggest decline on record, meaning that the annual “Golden Week” holiday

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