Submission to the New Zealand Parliamentary Inquiry : New Zealand Convention Centre Bill 2013


Autoria(s): Hancock, Linda
Data(s)

10/01/2013

Resumo

The Bill outlines the overarching purpose of the NZICC Agreement ‘to provide economic benefits to New Zealanders’. It is really a form of PPP (Public Private Partnership) where the beneficiaries are said to be the Crown and SkyCity but the real payment comes from the losses of the (mainly) community members who will gamble on the expanded facilities outlined in the Agreement. The Howeth International Convention and Exhibition Centre study (2009) established a clear business case for an international convention centre; with an optimistic benefit-cost ratio of 1.433 (which translates into a benefit to the economy of $1.433<br />for ever $1 spent). Aside from the short-term stimulus to jobs of the construction phase, a convention centre with capacity for 1000 delegates would create about 800 new jobs and attract up to 35 additional conferences of between 150 and 2500 delegates per year (an additional 22,000 additional international visitors and more than 200,000 extra visitor days, worth approximately $85.4 million in tourism-related expenditure per year15. It is therefore questionable as to why this venture needs to be captured by gambling interests, which will also dictate the location. This points to the efficacy of a non-casino provider being able to tender for establishment of an International Convention Centre that could be run profitably without being part of the for-profit model based on expanded gambling machines/revenue.<br />

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/10536/DRO/DU:30061157

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

New Zealand Parliament

Relação

http://dro.deakin.edu.au/eserv/DU:30061157/hancock-submissiontonz-2013.pdf

Direitos

2013, New Zealand Parliament

Palavras-Chave #submission #casino #gambling
Tipo

Report