The Maine Wire
  • News
  • Commentary
  • The Blog
  • About
    • Contact
  • Investigations
    • Data
Facebook Twitter Instagram
Trending News
  • Maine Agency Quickly Scrubs Discriminatory Hiring Quotas After Trump Admin Threat
  • Attorneys General of 15 States Back Rep. Libby in Amicus Brief, While AG Frey Urges SCOTUS to Deny Her Appeal
  • Trump Admin Freezes Maine Wildlife Agency’s Funds Over ‘Sex-Based’ Hiring Policy
  • Committee Rejects Three Proposals to Regulate Marijuana Industry, But One Targeting Organized Crime Remains on the Table
  • Student Tip Leads to Lockdown, Arrest of Armed Man Near Biddeford High School
  • Sen. Collins Announces $8.5 Million Federal Grant for Non-Profit Helping Victims of the Lewiston Shooting
  • China, Maine Trio Busted for String of Copper Cable Thefts Across Lincoln County
  • Another Maine School District Removes Pro-Trans Policy after Overwhelming Board Vote
Facebook Twitter Instagram
The Maine Wire
Sunday, May 11
  • News
  • Commentary
  • The Blog
  • About
    • Contact
  • Investigations
    • Data
The Maine Wire
Home » News » Commentary » Should Maine and other states end state-run lotteries?
Commentary

Should Maine and other states end state-run lotteries?

Liam SigaudBy Liam SigaudMay 28, 2019Updated:May 28, 2019No Comments4 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Email LinkedIn Reddit
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email

To an obdurate defender of economic theory’s central simplifying assumption — that people act to maximize their long-run satisfaction — lotteries provide a formidable counterexample. Indeed, it’s difficult to imagine a clearer embodiment of humans’ irrationality.

The math is simple: A few years ago, the Maine State Lottery made $272.3 million in ticket sales and awarded $178.2 million in winnings. In other words, the expected return on a $1 ticket was 65 cents. If everyone was driven by calculating self-interest, not a single lottery ticket would ever be purchased.

Yet since its inception in 1974, the Maine State Lottery has generated $5.8 billion in sales. Clearly, the lottery is a great money-maker for state coffers. But at what cost? It claims to provide “the citizens of Maine with fun and exciting entertainment” while “generating important revenue…in a fiscally and socially responsible manner.” In reality, the lottery constitutes an ineffective and unfair shell game, redistributing money around the economy in a destructive and highly regressive way.

Without exception, researchers have found that lotteries disproportionately soak the poor and “generate substantial regressive tax revenue as low-income players spend a higher proportion of their income on lotteries.” While estimates aren’t available for Maine, one nationwide study found that households with incomes of less than $13,000 spent an average of $645 a year on lottery tickets, or about 9 percent of their income.

There’s also evidence that lotteries entice people who never would have begun to gamble without the government’s encouragement. Studies in the 1990s indicated that in states with a lottery, the rate of participation in other forms of gambling was higher. And for some, the lottery evolves into something more than a game. A 2007 study suggested that 15.2 percent of lottery gamblers were addicted, a condition closely associated with family dysfunction, bankruptcy, and criminality.

The lottery’s negative effects reach far beyond its direct victims. Unsurprisingly, a study found a strong positive correlation between lottery sales and poverty rates. By deepening the challenges of people who already struggle financially, the lottery increases welfare dependency and spending on the social safety net — costs borne by all taxpayers.

“Pathological and problem gamblers in the United States cost society approximately $5 billion per year and an additional $40 billion in lifetime costs for productivity reductions, social services, and creditor losses,” according to a report in 1999. As lottery participation has grown in the last two decades, so have the costs.

But the damage doesn’t end there. The lottery siphons money out of the economy and diverts it to unproductive uses. For example, the Maine State Lottery spends more than $3 million per year on marketing and advertising, much of which goes to out-of-state contractors. And that’s not counting the costs of maintaining the gaming infrastructure, paying state personnel, compensating retailers for selling tickets, etc. That money would be better left in Mainers’ pockets and spent on useful products and services — which would generate sales tax revenue, to boot.

Is anyone really better off because of Maine’s lottery? Even for those lucky enough to win big, the gains in life satisfaction often fade rapidly.

The lottery is a thinly-disguised tax on the most vulnerable Mainers, and a crutch for policymakers unwilling to make hard choices about taxing and spending.

Politicians justify high cigarette and alcohol taxes by arguing that raising the price of unhealthy products will reduce sales. How can these same politicians support a state-run operation designed to exploit its citizens and encourage a destructive and irrational habit?

There’s no question that individuals have the right to gamble, but we should question the merits of the Maine State Lottery.

big government Commentary Featured gambling gaming Lottery Maine State Lottery scratch tickets
Previous ArticleMisguided policy drives high energy costs for Maine manufacturers
Next Article Bill to adopt national popular vote compact fails in Maine House
Liam Sigaud

Liam Sigaud is a former policy analyst at Maine Policy Institute. A native of Rockland, Maine, he holds a B.A. in Biology from the University of Maine at Augusta and has studied policy analysis and economics at the Muskie School of Public Service at the University of Southern Maine. He can be reached by email at liam.sigaud@maine.edu.

Related Posts

Chaos & Crowns: Are Pageants Still Relevant?

May 9, 2025

Now Too Infirm to Think Straight, Biden Still Believes He’s Cicero – and the Portland Press Herald Thinks Chuck Grassley is the Problem

May 8, 2025

As a Senator, Shenna Bellows Voted to Make Ballot Questions Straightforward – But as Secretary of State, She Ignores the Law She Once Supported

May 7, 2025

Leave A Reply

Recent News

Attorneys General of 15 States Back Rep. Libby in Amicus Brief, While AG Frey Urges SCOTUS to Deny Her Appeal

May 10, 2025

Trump Admin Freezes Maine Wildlife Agency’s Funds Over ‘Sex-Based’ Hiring Policy

May 9, 2025

Committee Rejects Three Proposals to Regulate Marijuana Industry, But One Targeting Organized Crime Remains on the Table

May 9, 2025

Student Tip Leads to Lockdown, Arrest of Armed Man Near Biddeford High School

May 9, 2025

Sen. Collins Announces $8.5 Million Federal Grant for Non-Profit Helping Victims of the Lewiston Shooting

May 9, 2025
Newsletter

News

  • News
  • Campaigns & Elections
  • Opinion & Commentary
  • Media Watch
  • Education
  • Media

Maine Wire

  • About the Maine Wire
  • Advertising
  • Contact Us
  • Submit Commentary
  • Complaints
  • Maine Policy Institute

Resources

  • Maine Legislature
  • Legislation Finder
  • Get the Newsletter
  • Maine Wire TV

Facebook Twitter Instagram Steam RSS
  • Post Office Box 7829, Portland, Maine 04112

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.