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How a summit for top bank CEOs convinced Hong Kong to end 2 years of mandatory hotel quarantine
Fortune · Zhang Wei—China News Service via Getty Images

Hong Kong is back in business.

Hong Kong authorities on Friday announced that they will drop hotel quarantine for arrivals to the city on Monday, Sept. 26. The change ends two and a half years of near complete isolation from the rest of the world and paves the way for Hong Kong to host a November banking summit whose invitees had balked at any quarantine requirements.

"We need to maximize our connectivity to the rest of the world... [So] I want to reduce inconvenience as much as possible for people [coming to Hong Kong,]" John Lee, Hong Kong's chief executive said at a press conference on Friday. "I'm optimistic that the new measures will be well-received by people coming to Hong Kong.

Hong Kong’s re-opening has lagged months—if not years—behind virtually every other economy on earth outside of mainland China and Taiwan. Hong Kong’s re-opening is also not complete. After entering the city, local residents and foreign visitors will need to take four government-administered COVID-19 PCR tests in the first week after arriving and need to self-isolate if they test positive. Each person arriving in Hong Kong will also be given a QR code via a COVID health tracker app. For the first three days, the code will be amber in color and will bar travelers from eating at restaurants. After three days, the QR code will change to blue and travelers can freely move in the city.

Hong Kong has maintained some of the world’s strictest COVID border requirements. Earlier this year, the city mandated 21-day hotel stays and sent any positive cases along with their close contacts to centralized quarantine centers for 14-day quarantine stays. The city has gradually relaxed mandated quarantine periods from 21 to 14 to seven and then three days in recent months, but a dizzying bureaucratic maze of PCR tests, hotel bookings, circuit-breaker flight bans, and potential confinement in the case of a positive test has closed the city off to only residents and a small cohort of determined visitors.

In the first eight months of this year, Hong Kong's airport handled 1.7 million passengers, down 97% from the 50.6 million it saw in the same period of 2019. Hong Kong's isolation has devastated the city's economy. Hong Kong's government recently said that it expects the economy to contract for the third year in a row due to its COVID measures, and the city is on track to report a record $100 billion budget deficit this year.

The scrapped quarantine represents a victory for Hong Kong's business community that has long advocated for the city to join most of the rest of the world in re-opening, but business groups argue the new rules still don't go far enough. In their view, Hong Kong must drop all restrictions to regain its former glory as Asia's World City.