Hong Kongâs fertility rate has sunk to roughly 0.8 children per woman, far below the replacement rate of 2.1 needed to maintain a stable population. Registered births in the city fell to just over 31,000 in 2025, a record low following years of declines.Â
Long working hours and high childcare costs make starting a family a difficult choice for many households. Hong Kongâs statutory maternity leave stands at 14 weeks of paid leave; it offers just five days of paternity leave. Hong Kong has tried to implement policies to subsidize some of the costs of childcare, including a one-off âbaby bonusâ of 20,000 Hong Kong dollars ($2,550) to no avail.Â
Hong Kongâs problem isnât unique, as several Asian economies like South Korea, Japan, and Mainland China are also grappling with falling birth rates. Even less wealthy markets across Asia, like Thailand, are aging faster than their level of development would suggest, leading to fears that such countries might âgrow old before they get rich.âÂ
Earlier this year, Rosewood Hotel Group, the luxury hotel chain owned by Hong Kongâs billionaire Cheng family, introduced a parental leave policy offering 16 weeks of fully paid leave to all employees, regardless of gender or seniority; employees still qualify if they adopt. The policy applies to associates across corporate offices and managed properties globally.
âBy rolling this policy out, itâs going to have an impact on our culture and our talent, and itâs going to drive business resilience in the long-term,â says Keno Lung, Rosewood Hotel Groupâs global senior vice president for talent and culture. âItâs not so much because itâs the right thing to do, even though it absolutely is.â
The move puts Rosewood ahead of statutory minimums across most of Asia, a region that has long lagged North America and Europe on parental benefits. It also arrives at an awkward moment for corporate leave policies. Deloitte is cutting paid family leave in halfâfrom 16 weeks to eightâfor internal support roles and also eliminating support for some fertility treatments. Zoom, meanwhile, has trimmed leave for birth mothers to 18 weeks, down from 22, and cut non-birthing parentsâ leave to 10 weeks from 16.
Rosewood, founded in Dallas in 1979, is now part of the Cheng familyâs business empire. Sonia Cheng, daughter of family patriarch Henry Cheng, serves as Rosewoodâs CEO, as well as the vice chairman and executive director of jewelry chain Chow Tai Fook Jewellery.Â
Today, the group operates across 26 markets. Its most recent opening was in Courchevel in the French Alps in December 2025; new projects are under construction in Saudi Arabia, Seoul, and Shanghai. Rosewood Hong Kong, meanwhile, was ranked the No. 1 hotel by The Worldâs 50 Best Hotels in 2025.
Like most luxury hotel companies, Rosewood is competing for skilled hospitality workers, who are in short supply across Asia after a post-pandemic travel boom. One issue is that potential workers see the hospitality industry as less prestigious than other sectors.Â
âPeople arenât looking at brand prestige, or the opportunities they get at a company,â Lung says. âTheyâre actually thinking: âHey, do I align with the values of this companyâ and âWhatâs the purpose of this organization?’â (He himself admits to leaving organizations that gave unsatisfying answers to these questions.)Â
Because Rosewoodâs parental leave policy applies in every market, Lung admits âthere was a lot of complexityâ as the company rolled out the policy. âYouâre looking at different jurisdictions with different statutory requirements, around payment frameworks, around eligibility, around legalities of recognizing parenthood,â he said. âEven if itâs not written in the law, a lot of existing cultural nuances are tied to gender roles around parental responsibilities.â
Generous leave policies frequently go underused, particularly by men, if workplace culture quietly penalizes those who take advantage of them.Â
âIf you design something purely around maternity leave, which is what a lot of statutory frameworks focus on, then you place a disproportionate amount of pressure on women,â Lung says. âBy making this gender neutral, weâre signaling that mothers, fathers and non-birth partners are treated equally, and remove the stigma from taking leave.â
Still, Rosewood isnât quite going the extra step of forcing parents to take time off. âWe donât mandate that you must take leave, but we mandate that youâre given the option,â he says. The company will track return-to-work rates, engagement survey results, and long-term career progression among parents to measure whether the policy translates into practice.
Rosewood has also established employee resource groups, including one dedicated to parents and caregivers, to support reintegration once employees return. âWe work with leadership so that they really remove the notion that caregiving as a parent is a distraction or disruptor to a career,â Lung says.
Correction, May 25, 2026: An earlier version of this article misstated Sonia Chengâs position at Chow Tai Fook Jewellery.
This story was originally featured on Fortune.com
