By AFPRelaxnews | Oct 6, 2023
Chinese travellers are expected to make more than 100 million daily trips during the annual national holiday—making it the "hottest" Golden Week ever, a state-backed tourism think tank predicted
[CAPTION]Chinese tourists visiting Macau during the country’s week-long holiday at the start of October Image: Peter Parks / AFP©[/CAPTION]
Macau's baccarat and poker tables were teeming once again as millions of Chinese tourists marked "Golden Week" in October, with post-pandemic travel surging despite the country's economic slowdown.
Chinese travellers are expected to make more than 100 million daily trips during the annual national holiday—making it the "hottest" Golden Week ever, a state-backed tourism think tank predicted.
_RSS_And hundreds of thousands have set their sights on Macau—a semi-autonomous city of 680,000 that is the only place in China where casinos operate legally.
"I would say Macau is back," said bartender Aubrhey, 32, who works at a five-star hotel in the former Portuguese colony.
"Not to (its) best, but at least we're way past the pandemic times."
Golden Week for him has been a heady mix of 10-hour shifts and good money, a seasonal bonanza for Macau's hospitality industry.
Chinese tourists "are prepared, they have money," he told AFP. "I think they are spending as much as before the pandemic."
Much of the cash is left on the casino floor, as Macau's gaming industry increasingly relies on mass-market players after Beijing drove away high rollers with a years-long regulatory crackdown.
Last year, Macau saw just 25,000 daily visitors during Golden Week, with the government following Beijing's zero-Covid strategy and shuttering businesses as infections peaked.
Cratering gaming revenues meant that Las Vegas ranked as the world's largest casino hub in 2022.
But once Beijing reversed course on the pandemic and lifted travel curbs, Macau—which in 2019 generated nearly six times the gaming revenue of its American rival— handily reclaimed the title.
"I was never in doubt that Macau would gain that crown back," said J.P. Morgan analyst DS Kim.
"What was surprising was the pace of that recovery."
The city's six casino operators, which received 10-year extensions to their licences last year, reported second-quarter profits that were nearly 70 percent of pre-pandemic levels.
Visitor arrivals this year were "slightly ahead of expectations" as the holiday neared its end Friday, tracking at around 84 percent of 2019 levels, Kim told AFP.
Also read: International tourist arrival should reach near pre-pandemic levels in 2023: UN report