Sunday, November 16, 2008

Macau - Glitter no more

Statistics can lie. This cannot be too far away from the truth. In April this year, the Macau Statistics and Census Service reveals that the sleepy, underachieving Portuguese enclave until its return to Chinese rule in 1999 - has become the richest place in Asia. A closer examination of the figures supplied tells a totally different story.

Here is the good news - Macau's booming casino industry boosted per capita gross domestic product to US$36,357 last year, a rise of 26%. That surpasses perennial regional gross domestic product (GDP) superstars such as Japan, Singapore, Hong Kong and Brunei and means the territory now ranks 20th on the list of the world's top-performing economies, ahead of Italy and just behind Germany.

That is where the good news ends. This is neither an economic miracle nor a model that anyone in Asia - or elsewhere - should aspire to follow. All of Macau's new found wealth has been generated by casino revenue, which grew 47% last year, so GDP figures present a false economic picture of the city with a population of 538,000. Consider this: the rise in median monthly salaries has not come close to keeping up with Macau's soaring GDP, increasing only 7.5% from a year earlier and now standing at 7,930 patacas (US$990), well below the earning power of its prominent Asian neighbors.

A look at personal consumption expenditure also clearly puts Macau, which has a land mass of only 16 square kilometers, in a far humbler place than its garish GDP banner suggests. Personal consumption accounted for only 21% of Macau's GDP last year. In Hong Kong, 60 kilometers northeast, personal consumption accounted for 60% of GDP and personal consumption expenditure per capita was $17,800, compared with Macau's $7,500.

Where do you find the rest of Macau's whopping GDP? Most of it has gone into building a gambling mecca that has become the Las Vegas of Asia. Indeed, last year Macau overtook the Las Vegas Strip as the richest gambling market on the planet. Macau has long been known as a haven for gamblers, but that reputation was greatly enhanced in 2002 when the gaming market was liberalized to include foreign players. Before that, Hong Kong-born billionaire Stanley Ho Hung-sun, now 86, had monopolized the industry for four decades. Las Vegas gambling moguls seized the opportunity and poured money into the city, which now boasts 30 casinos. The Venetian Macau, which was built by the Las Vegas Sands Corp and opened last August, is the largest casino in the world.

While Macau's gambling dens have lured millions of visitors to the city - most of them from mainland China, where gambling is illegal - those tourist dollars are going mostly into the pockets of casino moguls, with ordinary citizens left to pick up the scraps that fall from the banquet table. Making matters worse for ordinary folk, inflation - as measured by the composite consumer price index - raced along last month at 9.47%, a 12-year high. Rents rose 15.6%, and the cost of a doctor's consultation shot up 24.2%. Add to that sharp hikes in food prices that have also hit Hong Kong and the mainland and the reported 7.5% jump in median monthly income starts to look like a negative.

Unemployment is a mere 2.9%, but that, again, is due to the casino boom. Alarmingly, Macau's younger generation is increasingly choosing to drop out of school in their teens to take casino jobs that pay as much as $2,200 a month. Gambling revenue has allowed the government to boost spending on education, but at the same time casinos are snatching would-be graduates away with the lure of easy money for work that, most likely, will be a dead-end.

No comments: