Macau is the casino capital of the world. For China, this is enough.

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By Alexandra Stevenson and Zixu Wang

Reporting from Macau

Macau, the gaming capital of the world, is intertwined with its Chinese neighbor – one person, education and construction at a time.

Macau, a former Portuguese colony, was reconquered 25 years ago through China and declared a special administrative zone, part of the mainland but with some independence. Beijing agreed not to touch the 12-square-mile territory.

Like nearby Hong Kong, Macau would be part of China but free to govern itself and run its economy without interference from Beijing. It quickly rose to become the world’s most lucrative gambling destination, drawing big American casinos like Wynn and Sands and catering to mostly Chinese tourists.

Now China’s political experiment in Macau is undergoing another transition. China’s leader, Xi Jinping, who visited Macau this week to mark the anniversary of the territory’s “return to the motherland,” wants Macau to operate less independently of mainland China. In Mr. Xi’s vision, Macau will wean itself off an economic reliance on gambling and play a role in boosting China’s own lagging consumer economy.

At the center of this new development is Hengqin, a Chinese island separated from Macau by a river.

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