Book contents
- Special Needs Financial Planning
- Special Needs Financial Planning
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- Preface
- Table of Cases
- Table of Legislation
- Part I Adult Guardianship
- Part II Lasting/Enduring Power of Attorney
- Part III Special Needs Trust
- 9 What Will Happen When I’m Gone?
- 10 The Wispact Trusts: Making a Difference in a Means-Tested Support System
- 11 SNTC’s Operational Experience as Singapore’s First Non-Profit Trust Company
- 12 A New Perspective on Adult Guardianship and Trusts in Korea
- 13 Reforming Enduring Powers and Launching a Special Needs Trust in Hong Kong
- Index
13 - Reforming Enduring Powers and Launching a Special Needs Trust in Hong Kong
from Part III - Special Needs Trust
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 June 2019
- Special Needs Financial Planning
- Special Needs Financial Planning
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- Preface
- Table of Cases
- Table of Legislation
- Part I Adult Guardianship
- Part II Lasting/Enduring Power of Attorney
- Part III Special Needs Trust
- 9 What Will Happen When I’m Gone?
- 10 The Wispact Trusts: Making a Difference in a Means-Tested Support System
- 11 SNTC’s Operational Experience as Singapore’s First Non-Profit Trust Company
- 12 A New Perspective on Adult Guardianship and Trusts in Korea
- 13 Reforming Enduring Powers and Launching a Special Needs Trust in Hong Kong
- Index
Summary
Individuals with cognitive impairment, whether inborn or acquired as a result of illness or accident, depend on others to manage the financial assets available for their benefit. This chapter examines the latest developments in enduring powers of attorney and special needs trusts (SNT) in Hong Kong as vehicles for financial planning for such individuals. It first examines whether the proposed reform of the enduring power of attorney will bring Hong Kong law in line with other developed jurisdictions, before outlining the advocacy efforts that led to the Hong Kong Government’s decision to launch a territory-wide special needs trust for the benefit of individuals with cognitive impairment. Finally, it examines the challenges in designing the operational framework of such a trust.
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- Special Needs Financial PlanningA Comparative Perspective, pp. 348 - 364Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2019