SHARE Twitter Facebook

Macau: 25 years of change

Published December 19, 2024

The 25th anniversary of Macau’s return from Portuguese to Chinese administration provides a pivotal moment to reflect on the city’s dramatic transformation. Occupying just 33.3 sq km of land, Macau boasts a gaming industry two times larger than that of Las Vegas. The Post explains the city’s fascinating journey through the following charts and explores where its ambitious diversification plans are taking the casino hub.

Ambitious expansion

Many of Macau's most notable casinos and resorts have been built on reclaimed land. The city's total land area grew a staggering 39.9 per cent over the past quarter century. The ambitious reclamation projects, mainly in Coloane, have spurred explosive economic development despite concerns about the ecological impact.

August 2006
December 2010
November 2017
October 2024
1 km

Population growth

Macau’s population has grown by 59 per cent over the past 25 years, largely because of an influx of workers from mainland China. In 2023, one in four of Macau’s 683,700 population were foreign workers. And they represent more than 40 per cent of the total workforce.

Changes in population

Foreign workers
Others

Tourism boom

As the only Chinese city where casino gambling is legal, Macau has become a popular destination for mainland tourists. Beijing’s support of Macau’s tourism-led services industry also accelerated growth. Since 2004, mainland tourists have outnumbered non-mainland visitors, peaking at 27.9 million in 2019. They now make up about 70 per cent of total visitors.

Tourist changes since 1999

Mainland tourists
Non-mainland tourists

Economic miracle

Macau’s gross domestic product (GDP) per capita is higher than that of mainland cities. Its residents have enjoyed annual handouts of 5,000 to 10,000 patacas since 2008, thanks to the flourishing gaming industry. In 2013, gross revenue from gambling peaked at 360 billion patacas, nearly eight times that of the Las Vegas Strip that year and contributing 88 per cent of Macau's GDP.

But an anti-corruption campaign initiated by Beijing in 2015 deterred high-stakes gamblers, affecting gaming revenues ever since. The city’s reliance on the gambling sector also takes a heavy toll on society, prompting Beijing to ask Macau to “promote an optimal degree of industrial diversification” in its 11th five-year plan.

Gaming as percentage of Macau industries

Gaming
Others

Macau's "1+4" industry development strategy

In 2023, Macau introduced a “1+4” diversification strategy to grow the city beyond gaming. The strategy aims to boost Macau’s function as “one centre” for integrated tourism and leisure, while four nascent industries should be further developed to help the economy become more resilient.

Traditional Chinese medicine

High technology

Modern financial services

World centre

of tourism

and leisure

Conventions, exhibitions, trade, culture and sports

Traditional Chinese medicine

High technology

Modern financial services

World centre

of tourism

and leisure

Conventions, exhibitions, trade, culture and sports

Gambling: breaking monopoly and evolving

For decades, Macau's gambling industry operated under a monopoly, with 300 gaming tables recorded in 1999. The year 2002 was a turning point as the government introduced competition, breaking the monopoly of the casino empire built by “gambling king” Stanley Ho Hung-sun.

Since then, the number of gaming tables has skyrocketed, peaking at 6,739 in 2019 before the pandemic. In 2022, six casino operators secured new 10-year concessions, three of which are still owned by the Ho family.

The six casino operators in Macau

1,680

Ho family

Gaming tables

1,250

1,000

750

750

570

Venetian

Macao

SJM

Resorts

Melco

Resorts &

Entertainment

Wynn

Resorts

Galaxy

Casino

Company

MGM

Grand

Paradise

Executives

Robert Glen Goldstein

Chairman of the board and non-executive director of Sands China Ltd.

Daisy Ho Chiu-fung

Chairman

Francis Lui Yiu-tung

Chairman

Lawrence Ho Yau-lung

Chairman

Pansy Ho Chiu-king

Managing director

Craig Billings

CEO

Gaming tables

Ho family

1,680

1,250

1,000

750

750

570

1

2

3

4

5

6

Executives

Venetian Macao

Robert Glen Goldstein

Chairman of the board and non-executive director of Sands China Ltd.

1

SJM Resorts

Daisy Ho Chiu-fung

Chairman

2

Galaxy Casino Company

Francis Lui Yiu-tung

Chairman

3

Melco Resorts & Entertainment

Lawrence Ho Yau-lung

Chairman

4

MGM Grand Paradise

Pansy Ho Chiu-king

Managing director

5

Wynn Resorts

Craig Billings

CEO

6

Gaming tables

Ho family

1,680

1,250

1,000

750

750

570

1

2

3

4

5

6

Executives

Venetian Macao

Robert Glen Goldstein

Chairman of the board and non-executive director of Sands China Ltd.

1

SJM Resorts

Daisy Ho Chiu-fung

Chairman

2

Galaxy Casino Company

Francis Lui Yiu-tung

Chairman

3

Melco Resorts & Entertainment

Lawrence Ho Yau-lung

Chairman

4

MGM Grand Paradise

Pansy Ho Chiu-king

Managing director

5

Wynn Resorts

Craig Billings

CEO

6

Number of gaming tables in Macau from 1999 to 2023

8,000

6,739

6,287

6,000

6,000

5,302

4,375

4,000

2,000

1,388

300

0

1999

2002

2005

2007

2008

2009

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

2016

2017

2018

2019

2020

2021

2022

2023

0

2,000

4,000

6,000

8,000

300

1999

339

2002

1,388

2005

4,375

2007

4,017

2008

4,770

2009

5,302

2011

5,485

2012

5,750

2013

5,711

2014

5,957

2015

6,287

2016

6,419

2017

6,588

2018

6,739

2019

6,080

2020

6,198

2021

5,605

2022

6,000

2023

8,000

6,739

6,287

6,000

6,000

5,302

4,375

4,000

2,000

1,388

300

0

1999

2002

2005

2007

2008

2009

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

2016

2017

2018

2019

2020

2021

2022

2023

Associate Creative Director Marcelo Duhalde
Cover illustration by Davies Christian Surya
Reporting by Natalie Wong
Web development by Yi Zhe Ang
Edited by John Henderson

Source: Macau's Statistics and Census Service, Labour Affairs Bureau and Government Information Bureau

Photos: SCMP, Sands, Macau's Government Information Bureau, AFP

SHARE THIS STORY