Macau Daily Times

MACAU’S ECONOMY SHRANK 49% IN THE FIRST QUARTER, AS COVID-19 HIT REVENUE FROM GAMBLING, HOTELS AND TOURISM

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MACAU’S economy posted a deep contractio­n in the first quarter as lockdown measures introduced to contain the virus outbreak hit revenue from gambling, hotels and tourism.

Gross domestic product in Macau plummeted 48.7% in the first three months of 2020, according to the city’s statistics department. That is the fifth straight quarterly decline in the city’s economic output.

In a statement over the weekend, the Statistics and Census Service (DSEC) attributed the major contractio­n to a “substantia­l decline in total demand” for Macau’s exports of services.

Exports of services dropped by 60% year-on-year, according to DSEC, with exports of gaming services and other tourism services falling even faster, by 61.5% and 63.9% respective­ly.

The local economy depends heavily on the city’s casinos, whose revenue was badly damaged by a 15-day lockdown in February and visitation restrictio­ns on the mainland, which have made travel to Macau impractica­l for most people.

Visitor arrivals fell by nearly 70% in year-on-year terms in the first quarter, with January accounting for the majority of Macau’s 3.22 million tourists, before the effect of the Covid-19 pandemic was felt outside of mainland China.

Travel restrictio­ns in or out of Macau will be lifted by early June, while the individual traveler visa scheme will restart soon after, according to analyst Vitaly Umansky, as cited by Bloomberg.

Plans for a ‘travel bubble’ involving at least Guangdong Province, Hong Kong and Macau are believed to be under discussion by the relevant authoritie­s, though no informatio­n has yet been disclosed on when exactly travel restrictio­ns would ease.

“Once global lockdowns are lifted, the worst may be over for the tourism-related sectors in Hong Kong as well as Macau,” Overseas-chinese Banking Corp economists including Tommy Xie wrote in a note. “That said, neither of the two cities will be able to see a strong recovery in its tourism activities amid concerns about second wave of infections.”

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