Will The Macau Casino Boom Last?

Written on April 27, 2007 by admin

Perched behind the front desk at the Pousada de Mong-Ha, a colonial-style hotel in , Iris Lo looks every inch a professional hotelier in her dark bow tie, and gray tunic over a blue-striped blouse.

In a few months, that’s what she could be. For now, Ms. Lo is a fourth-year student at ’s elite Institute for Tourism Studies (ITS), where the hotel is located. Her outfit is the school’s uniform. She’s getting ready to graduate in a labor market so tight that most of her classmates have already lined up well-paid jobs in ’s burgeoning hospitality sector.

Even by China’s exhilarating standards, the gambling-driven economic boom in , a tiny enclave ruled by Portugal for four centuries until its hand over in 1999, is something to behold. Last year gaming revenues at its 22 casinos rose to $7.2 billion, according to government figures, up threefold in six years, outdistancing Las Vegas for the first time and lifting GDP growth to a red-hot 17 percent.

Gambling giants from Las Vegas are among those building new casinos and resorts in , which received 22 million visitors last year. Among the newcomers is the 3,000-room Venetian , a giant casino due to open this summer at a cost of $2.3 billion. International hotel chains are also opening their doors along a new casino strip built on reclaimed land, a 10-minute drive from ’s international airport.

For young Macanese seeking a start in the hospitality industry, it should be the best of times. But Ms. Lo, a tourism-management major, isn’t so sure. “I’m afraid this is only a bubble. You can easily find a job now, but what about in five years?” she asks.

50,000 croupiers wanted

By then, the burst of investment that greeted the licensing of new casinos in 2002 may face new challenges. As well as competition from Singapore and other Asian countries loosening rules on gambling, is vulnerable to any political shift in Beijing, whose ban on betting elsewhere in China makes this enclave a gold mine. Over 60 percent of the visitors here are Chinese, and if they took their bets elsewhere, ’s monoculture economy would be in trouble.

With a population of only 510,000, is dependent on laborers from mainland China to build the glittering pleasure palaces. Most jobs in hotels and casinos are reserved for locals like Ms. Lo, but gambling tycoons are lobbying ’s government to ease labor laws so they can recruit overseas, particularly for croupiers — those who run the gambling tables. By 2009, the casinos estimate they will need 50,000 croupiers. That makes hospitality students nervous, given China’s huge labor supply.

Gambling has long defined , the seedy cousin to neighboring Hong Kong. Not only wagers on horses and slots, but also on murky dealings with North Korea, for whom served as a no-questions-asked trade hub. That role was embarrassingly made public in 2005 when the US accused Banco Delta Asia of laundering profits from North Korean sales of drugs and counterfeit bank notes.

macau-boom.gif
While the British fashioned Hong Kong into a world-class financial center, ’s colonial rulers took a more hands-off approach. Portugal was the first European country to claim territory in Asia — , East Timor, Goa — and the last to leave. In between, it built churches, forts, and mansions, and left a culinary legacy that lingers in Macanese food, a tangy fusion of East and West. Visitors left cold by roulette wheels can take refuge in relaxed, family-run restaurants where hearty meals are served.

A 35-percent gambling tax
Since 2002, when ended a 40-year monopoly on gambling held by , a Hong Kong businessman, that slow pace has given way to a frenzied casino boom that has reshaped the territory. Some residents find it bewildering to be swamped by so many visitors and ask if the riches from the gaming industry — which pays 35 percent tax on revenues — will lead to better public services or improved standards of livings.

Still, Sophia Chan reckons that is on track. A second-year student in hotel management at ITS, she plans to carve out a career in an international hotel. On a recent morning, Ms Chan, a cheerful bespectacled woman, keeps a close eye on the lunchtime rush at the cafeteria, which she is helping to manage. “I like hospitality. I think my smile can make other people smile,” she says.

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One Comment so far.

  1. tom said : :

    Unskilled workers cannot find job anywhere in the world and that is the truth.
    I believe SAR government does want these middle-aged citizens to be employed, however government is not an all-mighty machine and the economic development will make a portion of the population richer and the rest poorer. what I suggest these middle aged citizens to do is go get trained, learn some skill. They should be happy about the fact that there are still lots of job vacancies.

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