The Art of the $3,400 Toilet Roll Holder
In the grand theater of tribal survival, the "leader" has always found creative ways to redistribute the tribe’s surplus. In the old days, it was gold-leafed altars; today, it’s a HK$3,390 toilet paper holder in a government-subsidized youth hostel. We are told these items were purchased with "functional elegance" in mind, yet they were never installed because—ironically—it was too difficult to actually change the toilet paper.
This is a classic study in the "Bureaucratic Parasite" model. When an organization handles "other people’s money" (the taxpayer’s surplus), the biological urge to hunt for value is replaced by the urge to signal status and exhaust budgets. Why buy a HK$2,000 bathroom heater when you can pay HK$9,400? The justification offered—blaming the 2019 social unrest for the price hike of a plastic rack—is a stroke of cynical genius. It is the modern version of "the devil made me do it," or perhaps more accurately, "the riot made the screwdriver heavier."
From a historical perspective, public works have always been the watering hole where the well-connected drink their fill. Whether building pyramids or "youth hostels," the cost is always secondary to the ritual of spending. The fact that only 1,326 units have materialized in 13 years against a backdrop of eye-watering furniture costs tells you everything you need to know about the goal. The objective wasn't to house the youth; it was to feed the machine. The youth get the "delayed completion," while the contractors get the HK$170,000 "miscellaneous prep fees." In the end, the human animal remains consistent: we build monuments to our own inefficiency and ask the next generation to pay the bill.