Macao’s push to break free from its casino-dependent economy paints a rosy picture for the young generation’s aspirations for careers in areas such as scientific research, technology, arts and tourism.
As the city marks its 25th Anniversary tomorrow as a special administrative region (SAR) of the People’s Republic of China (PRC), its economic transformation is opening doors that were once inconceivable for residents.
Tang Chi-pui, a 38-year-old assistant professor at Macau University of Science and Technology’s State Key Laboratory of Lunar and Planetary Science, exemplifies a new generation that is charting unconventional careers in the SAR.
“When I completed my doctorate at Nanjing University, Jiangsu Province, 2014, pursuing lunar research in Macao seemed far-fetched,” said the Macao native, who studies Change-site-(Y), a lunar mineral crucial to understanding the Moon’s evolution and the first lunar mineral discovered and identified by Chinese scientists.
Tang’s parents once envisioned a stable civil service path for their son – a traditional path in a city where jobs typically revolve around casino floors, government offices and insurance sales.
The transformation is tangible. In early November, Tang gave a speech at a local high school, where students and teachers eagerly inquired about paths to aerospace research careers. “I have never been asked questions like that before,” he said. “The unprecedented curiosity indicates how Macao’s expanding technological sphere is opening new horizons.”
He attributes this expansion to the nation’s development of aerospace sectors and the government’s financial incentives for technology.
Macao’s efforts to shake off a long-standing reliance on casinos have been in full swing since 2006, when then SAR chief executive Edmund Ho Hau Wah vowed to diversify economic development, echoing the nation’s 11th Five-Year Plan (2006-10). The vision morphed into the “1+4” strategy, unveiled in 2023, to entrench Macao’s status as a tourism and leisure hub while wagering on healthcare services, modern finance, advanced technology, and the meetings, incentives, conventions and exhibitions industry (MICE).
Since returning to the motherland, Macao has seen its gross domestic product (GDP) skyrocket nearly eightfold, from US$6.1 billion in 1999 to US$47 billion last year. As for gaming revenues, which once contributed more than 60 percent of GDP, officials aim to cut the share to less than 40 percent by 2028.
Sam Hou Fai, the city’s incoming chief executive, who will take office tomorrow, pledged to advance the SAR’s diversification by developing aerospace research, artificial intelligence-powered traditional Chinese medicine, and financial services for Portuguese-speaking countries.
Hong Kong lawmaker Adrian Pedro Ho King-hong, who is also familiar with Macao policies, said, “Over the next decade, many young people will gravitate toward emerging sectors, particularly in traditional Chinese medicine, technology and specialized finance.”
Some Macao students have already chosen technically focused university programs to pursue fresh opportunities, switching from general business studies, Ho said. Macao could accelerate its economic restructuring by leveraging Hong Kong’s talent and fundraising pools, he added.
According to official data, gaming, hotels and restaurants remained Macao’s largest employers in the third quarter of this year, accounting for 33 percent of the local workforce – far ahead of other sectors. Unemployment hovered at 1.7 percent.
However, the Guangdong-Macao In-Depth Cooperation Zone, established in 2021 on Hengqin Island of Zhuhai, Guangdong Province, provides opportunities for Macao manufacturers to gain access to experts such as architects, lawyers and doctors, who can practice their professions on the mainland. The zone, which is home to about 56,000 commercial entities and more than 10,000 technology companies, covers 106 square kilometers.
In the tourism sector, Macao’s visitor arrivals surged 30 percent year-on-year to 25.92 million in the first three quarters, with mainland tourists accounting for 70 percent of the visitors. International visitors made up just 6.5 percent of the total.
Paul Wong Fai, president of the Macau Leisure Tourism Services Innovation Association, said the city is ramping up efforts to draw tourists from Asia as well as Europe and the United States.
Wong noted that Macao’s next administration plans to create an integrated tourism zone for international tourists. “The government is already revitalizing various districts across Macao, blending community development with tourism initiatives,” he said.
“The government’s move is breathing new life into neighborhoods like Rua da Felicidade, the area around Fortaleza do Monte, the historic Lai Chi Vun Shipyards, and Barra Square near A-Ma Temple,” Wong said. “These efforts aim to highlight Macao’s unique fusion of Eastern and Western cultures.”
The Cultural Affairs Bureau is collaborating with local small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) to organize various events during festivals, including those involving gastronomy, performances and art, to revitalize the historic districts. Furthermore, the bureau aims to create a business environment that is conducive to attracting merchants to the area.
Reinvesting Macao as a “city of performing arts” has also been discussed in recent years amid its economic reshuffle. In 2023, more than 2,000 major performances and 10,000 cultural events drew a total of nearly 20 million participants. Large-scale concerts alone attracted one million people, generating US$137.4 million in ticket sales.
The concert craze has had a ripple effect on various sectors of the city’s economy, giving catering, hotel and retail businesses a lift, along with a surge in tourists. Henry Lei Chun-kwok, an associate professor of business economics at the University of Macau, said the economic impact is clear, since typical mainland tourists spend an average of around US$385 per visit, while concertgoers spend nearly twice that amount on accommodations, dining and shopping.
The SAR government signed 10-year concession contracts with six key gaming operators in 2022, including Galaxy Entertainment Group, requiring them to invest US$13.6 billion in nongaming projects and overseas markets over the next decade. Entertainment and performances are among the nongaming investment categories outlined in the agreements.
– Courtesy of China Daily
This aerial drone photo taken last week shows Macau Tower and Sai Van Bridge. – Xinhua