China Daily (Hong Kong)

Unsold tickets and fewer tourists cast shadow on world-famous street party

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RIO DE JANEIRO — Instead of costly and elaborate costumes with glittering sequins, expect more cheap get-ups featuring fake mustaches, hats and tiaras at this year’s Carnival.

Revelers are bargain-hunting ahead of Rio de Janeiro’s world-famous party, which is about to kick off amid a prolonged economic crisis that is hurting pocketbook­s and the myriad businesses that depend on the bash for a large part of their annual incomes.

Many parade tickets have not been sold, sponsors have declined to pony up for street parties and hotels are expected to be emptier than last year’s also disappoint­ing blast, when worries about the Zika virus kept some foreign tourists away and the recession depressed local spending.

“Last year was not great, but we still had the 2016 Olympics as a peg to Carnival. Now we can feel there is a reduction,” said Cristina Fritsch, head of Rio’s travel agents associatio­n. “Security is also making people worry at a time when public ser- vants, including the police, are threatenin­g to go on strike.”

Rio’s tourism agency is hoping to attract 1 million tourists who spend about 3 billion Brazilian reals ($950 million) in the city during the Feb 24-28 festivitie­s. If that pans out, it would be roughly the same amount of revenue as last year.

Hotels estimate they will see only a 72 percent occupancy rate, about 14 percent less than last year.

With festivitie­s starting on Friday, there are still 800 stand tickets for the parade, which typically sell out right after New Year’s Day. Many of the box seats for the float parade, which feature local and global celebritie­s, have been distribute­d among the samba schools that put on the spectacle. Organizers say they want to make sure television cameras don’t capture any empty spaces.

The backdrop is the worst recession that Latin America’s largest nation has suffered in decades. Brazil’s central bank estimates the

I am not spending more than 150 reals. It’s not easy, but not celebratin­g would be even worse.” Marina Hill, homemaker occupancy rate expected in Rio’s hotels for Carnival, which is about 14 percent down on last year’s levels

country’s economy shrank more than 4 percent in 2016 and unemployme­nt is around 12 percent.

Rio’s state government has felt that impact like few others, with public servants having their pay delayed for

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