The Last Elite: When a Diploma Was a Golden Ticket
The generation born between 1964 and 1968—the tail-end of Hong Kong's postwar baby boom—is a fascinating study in the psychology of "survivorship bias." They are the last of the true gatekeeper-generation. When they sat for their exams in the early 80s, the university system was a narrow, high-walled fortress. With an admission rate hovering around 6% to 11%, the diploma wasn't just a piece of paper; it was an exit visa from the working class.
They lived through the brutal binary of the era: you either passed the exam and secured a path to the middle class, or you were cast into the machinery of low-wage labor. There was no middle ground, no "everyone gets a participation trophy" rhetoric. For those who broke through, the rewards were commensurate with the terror of the trial. Their income growth in their late twenties—adjusted for inflation, over HK$25,000—was explosive. They were the beneficiaries of an economy that rewarded the few who managed to navigate the scarcity of its institutions.
But their greatest advantage wasn't just their salary; it was the ability to acquire land when it was still a commodity rather than a lottery ticket. When your mortgage payment consumes less than a quarter of your salary, the world looks like a place of opportunity. Today, we look at their success and call it "luck." They look at their younger selves and remember the paralyzing fear of a single, definitive test that could vaporize their future in a heartbeat.
We often mistake their financial comfort for easy success. We fail to see the psychological toll of living in a world where you had to be "the best" just to be "average." They are the survivors of a system that demanded absolute perfection, and in doing so, they created a standard of living that their own children can now only dream of. They didn't just climb the ladder; they pulled it up behind them, not out of malice, but because they were taught that there was only room for one at the top.