Tsang Shu-ki (Chinese: 曾澍基; 15 April 1950 – 16 August 2014) was a Hong Kong economist and social activist.
He was the founding member of the Meeting Point, a political organisation in the 1980s and was the influential thinker among the student and social activists during the time.
[3] He later obtained a Master of Business Administration degree from the Chinese University of Hong Kong and worked as a credit analyst, a gold and foreign exchange dealer, and a treasury assistant.
When the Meeting Point led by Anthony Cheung supported Chris Patten's controversial electoral reform in 1993 which was strongly opposed by Beijing, he and Lau Nai-keung quit the party.
He had been member of the Currency Board Sub-Committee under the Exchange Fund Advisory Committee of the Hong Kong Monetary Authority for 14 years.