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2009-01-05 08:41:27
By Vaudine England
BBC News, Macau
Macau's landscape shows the far reach of human ambition - land reclamations
have joined up the two islands of Coloane and Taipa to make a gambling and
shopping sprawl called the Cotai Strip.
Flashy casinos and garish hotels tower over what was once a sleepy trading town
at the mouth of south China's Pearl River Delta.
But now some of those towers stand half-finished, the sound of building work
has gone. Only dust and concrete remain.
The thousands of construction workers who poured over the border into the
territory from China every day now have much less to come for.
The US-based Las Vegas Sands group has halted construction of five new hotels,
huge shopping centres and several new casinos.
About 10,000 foreign workers and 2,000 workers from Macau have lost their jobs
so far.
Overweening ambition
A member of Macau's Legislative Assembly, Jose Coutinho, believes the workers
are paying the price for the developers' overweening ambition.
"I feel pity for those foreign workers that came in with a dream," he said.
"Most of them have never, ever dreamed that their stay in Macau would be so
short.
"But the main culprit, it's the company that has done a big step beyond its own
capacity, I mean its financial capacities to cover the long step that it's
done."
Gambling revenues in Macau outstripped those of the Las Vegas Strip last year,
but global financial worries, and China's domestic concerns, are taking their
toll.
Managers of the Venetian hotel and casino complex in Macau blame the global
credit crunch for their difficulties.
China's role
Some have also blamed China, for turning the tap off on the seemingly unlimited
supply of gamblers from the mainland.
Even before the world financial meltdown, China had begun restricting access to
visas for mainlanders eager to gamble (gambling is illegal in mainland China).
Mr Coutinho is convinced that China does want to support Macau - but has
worries of its own about gambling.
"It has brought a lot of problems like money-laundering, like loan sharks, like
prostitution, like collecting debts in mainland China," he said.
As a result of the extension of gambling-related problems into mainland China,
the central government has come under increasing pressure, he said.
Other commentators have noted that now is not the time for China to see its
hard-earned cash frittered away at casino projects largely owned by foreigners.
"In our view, since Macau's economy is highly dependent on the gaming sector
and most casino patrons are from mainland China, Macau's economic development
and social stability are actually at the mercy of Chinese policies," wrote
Gabriel Chan, research analyst for Macau's gaming sector at Credit Suisse.
Quality of life
The boom in Macau, a former Portuguese colony which was returned to Chinese
rule in 1999, may have bumped up revenues, but it also exposed some of the tiny
territory's weaknesses.
Corruption boomed along with the massive new infrastructure projects, as did
traffic jams and social problems.
Some of that was clear when the former secretary for transport and public
works, Ao Man-long, was brought to trial and jailed for a long line of
kickbacks.
Some in Macau are pleased to see the expansion of gambling slowed down, if only
to force a re-think of values in a society where young people leave school
early to become croupiers.
"Do you think that happiness is looking at the majority of young people in
Macau [dealing] cards? I don't want to see the future of Macau being an
international city where the majority of the workforce is giving cards at the
gaming tables. So I don't think that's a good place to live at all," said Mr
Coutinho.
Macau's chattering classes are now looking beyond the gloom to June, when the
territory will get a new chief executive.
"I don't see any changes before the next chief executive - he must come out
with some good news for the people of Macau," said Mr Coutinho.
"The mainland government has lost trust in this government and that's why
they're not doing enough until the next chief executive and new government is
born."
His views are reflected in Macau's press, which now seems obsessed with
guessing who the new leader might be.
Bet on the future?
At the very least, investors are hoping that a change at the top might herald a
loosening of the visa rules by China to spur more arrivals.
Betting on when construction might resume at Macau's casinos is more risky.
But some research suggests that the current slowdown is good reason to bet more
heavily on Macau's future.
"We turned positive on the Macau gaming sector since October [2008],
anticipating that some operators may delay their new projects, resulting in a
more balanced supply-demand dynamic," said Mr Chan of Credit Suisse.
As the saying goes, sometimes less is more.