The Press

Spending bounces back up

- Liz McDonald liz.mcdonald@stuff.co.nz

Canterbury’s hospitalit­y sector appears to be bouncing back from the pandemic, despite the rising cost of living and staff shortages.

New venues are opening their doors and spending is up, with a record $1.6 billion going through Canterbury hospitalit­y tills last year. This was an 8.5% jump from 2021 and 14% up on 2019 before the pandemic.

The increase in spending was the second highest in the country, behind Auckland.

Restaurant and bar owner Max Bremner said recent trade had been ‘‘quite amazing’’. ‘‘For the first time since the earthquake­s we have really seen Christchur­ch turn around and pick up. It is a massive turnaround.’’

Bremner, whose venues include Fat Eddies, Original Sin and The Bog, said the central city was ‘‘looking vibrant’’, with cruise ships arriving, visitors flying in from Australia, full trams and people in town enjoying summer. ‘‘The whole thing has changed.’’ The Restaurant Associatio­n’s latest hospitalit­y report, using Statistics NZ data, says Canterbury now has more than 2400 cafes, restaurant­s, bars, clubs and takeaway outlets. This is about 100 more than pre-Covid.

However, Christchur­ch City Council numbers for food licences, covering food and drink venues including food trucks, show a slight drop-off in numbers.

In Christchur­ch yesterday evening, John and Kate Morrison opened a small wine bar inside the Art Shop Gallery they launched in Armagh St last year.

‘‘To open something in a recession probably is not a good idea but you have to do something,’’ John Morrison said.

Morrison said they were not too concerned about hiring difficulti­es, as it was a family-run business ‘‘and we have got a big family, so we are all good’’.

Bar owner Nick Inkster, who coowns OGB, Paddy McNaughton’s Irish Pub, the Austin Club and Lyttelton’s Civil & Naval, said there were more students around to fill front-of-house roles but chefs remained hard to find.

He is planning to open a new hospitalit­y spot, called Church, in the former Trinity Congregati­onal Church in May.

While new outlets are opening, the number of staff working in the region’s hospitalit­y sector is down as owners still struggle to find workers.

Many of Christchur­ch’s food and drink outlets are displaying staff wanted signs.

A total of 16,750 people are employed in the hospitalit­y sector in Canterbury, which is down from the 17,090 employed in 2019.

The restaurant associatio­n report says that despite the loss of businesses nationally during the pandemic, ‘‘new concepts and styles of businesses’’ have been launched ‘‘as operators have sought out opportunit­ies in the market’’. In Christchur­ch, these new concepts can be seen in the likes of Mr Wolf, a central city venue opened last month selling champagne, hotdogs, and caviar, and Muy Muy, which opened before Christmas serving cuisine from Mexico’s Oaxaca region.

Newly opened businesses in the city this week include Odeon in Gloucester St with an Andalusian inspired menu, and new Black and White Coffee Cartel cafe in Beckenham which had all its tables full on the first day.

The openings come despite venue operators around the country facing big increases in food and staff costs.

A restaurant associatio­n survey found the biggest wage increases in the past year were for waiters with a 9.1% rise, followed by kitchen hands (8.3%), then baristas (7.7%).

Highest paid were executive chefs, paid an hourly average of $36, followed by head chefs on $30, restaurant managers on $28, and duty managers $35.

Baristas made an average of $23 an hour, and bar staff, waiters, kitchen hands and cafe assistants $22 an hour.

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STUFF Christchur­ch’s hospitalit­y sector has recovered from the pandemic.
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