Title: Ongoing Challenges in CostBenefit Analysis of Casino Gambling
1Ongoing Challenges in Cost-Benefit Analysis of
Casino Gambling
- Colloquium on the European and National
Perspectives of the Regulation of Gambling - Tilburg University, The Netherlands
- 23 November 2006
- Douglas M. Walker, Ph.D.
2Gambling research in the U.S.
- Since casino gambling began expanding outside
Nevada and New Jersey in the early 1990s,
gambling research has increased. - Politicians are interested in benefits relative
to costs of legalization. - Casino legalization is a state-level policy.
- State governments have been facing record-level
budget deficits. - Gambling research has been influential, as it is
commonly referred to by politicians and the media.
3The economics of gambling literature
- Some well-known studies include
- U.S. House of Representatives (hearing, 1994),
- National Gambling Impact Study Commission (NGISC
1999) - Australian Productivity Commission (APC 1999)
- National Opinion Research Center (NORC 1999)
- National Research Councils Pathological
Gambling A Critical Review (1999)
4Gambling literature, cont.
- Earlier studies these are mostly not
peer-reviewed, and use arbitrary assumptions. - Politzer et al. (1985)
- Maryland Task Force (1990)
- Casinos in Florida (1995)
- Goodman (1994a, 1995b)
- Grinols and Omorov (1996), Grinols (1994a, 1995a)
- Kindt (1994, 1995)
- Thompson, Gazel, and Rickman (1996, 1997, 1999)
5Gambling literature, cont.
- More recent studies, but still flawed
- Thompson and Quinn (2000)
- Managerial and Decision Economics (2001), edited
by Grinols and Mustard - Grinols and Mustard
- Gazel, Rickman, and Thompson
- Kindt
- Comments on Kindts paper published, MDE 2004
- Grinols (2004)
- perhaps most influential
6Gambling literature, cont.
- Thompson and Schwer (2003/2005)
- Study of Las Vegas that got publicity
- Methodology by Thompson et al. (1996)
- Hall Aitken (2006)
- Study of U.K.
- PolicyAnalytics (2006)
- Study of Indiana, with a focus on crime
- Relies on Grinols (2004)
- Grinols and Mustard (2006)
- Review of Economics and Statistics study on crime
7Gambling literature, cont.
- Research in this area has been criticized by
- National Research Council (1999)
- Walker and Barnett (1999
- Shaffer et al. (2001)
- Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis (2003)
- Eadington (2004)
- Walker (2007)
- and elsewhere
8Economic perspective
- Economic perspective on costs-benefits
- Represented by Collins and Lapsley (2003),
Eadington (2003), and Walker and Barnett (1999). - This perspective has a foundation in the
economics literature. - Detailed description in Walker (2007)
9Economic perspective on benefits
- The benefits of legalized casino gambling
include - Tax revenues (transfers, but easy to avoid)
- Employment and wage effects
- Capital and labor inflow to a region
- Potential economic growth
- Walker and Jackson (1998, 2007)
- Consumer benefits (CS, variety benefits,
competitive pressure on entertainment) - This is the most commonly ignored benefit.
- Consumer sovereignty
- Some may argue that increased freedom of choice
is, itself a benefit.
10Benefits, cont.
- There have been relatively few academic studies
of the benefits of gambling. - However, these are arguably easier to measure
than the costs. - Politicians may care mostly about tax revenues,
and so do not demand detailed studies of
benefits. - The most important benefits (CS, other consumer
benefits) are most difficult to measure.
11Economic perspective on costs
- There is debate over all aspects of the costs of
gambling - definition
- measurement
- Social cost is a decrease in aggregate societal
wealth (Walker and Barnett, 1999). - Wealth need not be in monetary terms it is
utility. - Transfers of wealth are not social costs.
- Private (internalized) costs are omitted.
- Most researchers agree that the costs are caused
by pathological gamblers. - There are different severities of the affliction,
ignored here - Compulsive, pathological, problem gamblers, etc.
12Costs, cont.
- Even if the definition is conceptually valid,
measurement is difficult, if not impossible. - There is no agreement among researchers from
different disciplines. - Other social scientists do not like the exclusion
of transfers and other private costs.
13Why the focus on costs?
- Costs are typically the focus by media,
politicians, and researchers. - This may be a result of the existing illegal
status of casinos - Are the benefits of legalization/expansion worth
the costs? - Estimates of expected tax revenues, employment
increases, and changes in average wages can be
easily produced. - The social/economic costs are more elusive, both
in defining them and in measuring them. - Costs are closely related to prevalence of
pathological gambling.
14Calculating social costs
- Most of cost studies use this formula
- estimated annual cost per pathological gambler
X prevalence estimate () X population
estimate - estimated annual social cost of gambling
15Variation in cost estimates
- Authors rarely define social cost before
estimating it. - Studies use ad hoc methodologies, resulting in
cost estimates ranging from US9,000-50,000
(7.000-39.000) per pathological gambler per
year. - Such a large range indicates that the
methodologies are not the same.
16Examples of problematic studies, discussed
hereafter
- Grinols (2004)
- Politzer et al. (1985)
- Thompson et al. (1996, 1997, 1999)
- Thompson and Quinn (2000)
- Thompson and Schwer (2003)
- Grinols and Mustard (2006)
17Grinols (2004)
- Gambling in America demonstrates many of the
problems in the literature. - His discussion appears to be comprehensive and
unbiased, but it is neither. - He ignores work with which he disagrees.
- See Eadington (2004) for a discussion.
- He overstates the costs and discounts the
potential benefits from gambling.
18Grinols (2004), cont.
- Grinols estimates for the U.S.
- Annual cost to society of one pathological
gambler 10,330. - Annual cost per problem gambler 2,945.
- On a per adult basis, the average cost is
estimated to be 219. (p. 175) - After some analysis, it is clear that these
estimates are meaningless.
19Grinols (2004), cont.
- Cost estimates were derived by averaging over
the available original studies for each
category of social cost, adjusting to 2003
dollars, and summing over cost types (p. 176). - The studies used by Grinols to derive his cost
estimates include - 9 studies, none peer-reviewed.
20Grinols (2004), cont.
- Grinols estimate is based (in part) on
- Politzer et al. (1981)
- Thompson et al. (1996)
- Thompson and Quinn (1999/2000)
- Thompson and Schwer (2003)
- These studies have been criticized by a number of
researchers.
21Grinols (2004), cont.
- Grinols ignores the controversy over how to
define and estimate social costs. - His presentation gives the impression that
because the cited research is original it is
legitimate. - He does not explain differences in the studies or
their potential flaws. - Lets look at some aspects of the studies used by
Grinols
22Politzer et al. (1985)
- This concept is vague.
- What is an essential purpose?
- Is it defined the same for Bill Gates and Joe
Sikzpak? - Could be interpreted as the total bets placed
(handle), much larger than actual losses. - Any money borrowed to gambler is considered
abused dollars. - Use of this concept allows one to arrive at a
very high social cost estimate.
- Define abused dollars
-
- the amount of money obtained legally and/or
illegally by the pathological gambler which
otherwise would have been used by the
pathological gambler, his family, or his victims
for other essential purposes. These abused
dollars include earned income put at risk in
gambling, borrowed, and/or illegally obtained
dollars spent on basic needs and/or provided to
the family which otherwise would have been
covered by that fraction of earned income which
was used for gambling, and borrowed and/or
illegally obtained dollars for the partial
payment of gambling related debts.
23Thompson et al. (1997)
- Estimated social cost per compulsive gambler is
9,469 (p. 87), but - They do not define social cost, and include
whatever negative effects they can measure with
their survey on Gamblers Anonymous (GA) members. - Using GA members in Las Vegas to is not a random
sample of problem gamblers. - Most of the costs are transfers.
24Thompson et al. (1997), cont.
- Costs included
- Employment (lost work hours, unemployment
compensation, lost productivity), 2941 - (Lost hours, productivity are internalized
unemployment compensation is a transfer or
fiscal externality.) - Bad debts, 1487
- (Transfer of wealth)
- Civil court costs (bankruptcy, other), 848
- Criminal justice (theft, arrests, trials,
probation, incarceration), 3498 - (Thefts are transfers)
- Therapy, 361
- Welfare, 334 (Transfer of wealth)
- TOTAL 9469
- (Revised to 2974 after eliminating transfers and
internalized costs. Walker and Barnett 1999)
25Thompson and Quinn (2000)
- Costs include money leaving South Carolina for
purchase of video poker machines (46.5 million
each year). - Then any purchase represents a social cost?
- Money leaving the state is not a cost since the
buyer values what is bought more than the money
spent. - A transaction at the grocery store is similar.
26Thompson and Schwer (2003)
- They estimate the annual social cost of per
pathological gambler in Las Vegas at 19,085. - Accounting for estimated prevalence and
population, the total annual cost estimate is
between 301 and 470 million. - Their cost figure is the result of numerous
arbitrary assumptions. - Well examine a component of this estimate later
27Studies cited by Grinols (2004)
- Among the studies cited by Grinols, there is
- Disagreement about the types of costs to include
- Sometimes costs are excluded because of
measurement difficulties. - Disagreements on the estimated values of the
individual cost categories - The estimated values are often the result of
arbitrary assumptions (see Walker 2003)
28Adjudication costs (criminal and civil justice)
- The monetary estimates for these costs among the
Grinols-cited studies are - 3,619 (Maryland, Politzer et al. 1981)
- 733 (Wisconsin, Thompson et al. 1996)
- 568 (Conn., Thompson et al. 1998)
- 31 (S. Dakota, 1999)
- 420 (Louisiana, Ryan et al. 1999)
- 266 (S. Carolina, Thompson and Quinn 2000)
- 51 (Nevada, Thompson and Schwer 2003)
- Such a huge variation across states indicates
these studies are not measuring the same thing
the same way.
29Thompson and Schwer (2003) cost estimate for
lost work time
- 50 of 89 (or 56) of Gamblers Anonymous survey
respondents indicated they had missed work
because of gambling. - An average of 17.22 hours missed during each
month due to gambling. - The average loss is 9.67 hours/month allocated
over the 89 respondents. - This amounts to 116.1 hours per year, calculated
- (50 x 17.22)/89 x 12
- 116.1 hours is multiplied by 15/hr, the hourly
rate based on Thompson et al.s (1996) use of an
average annual pay rate of 23,610. - This annual rate of 23,610 is based on the U.S.
average salary (Thompson et al. 1996, p. 17). - This results in an estimated cost of 1,742 for
lost work time.
30Grinols and Mustard (2006)
- This recent paper in Review of Economics and
Statistics has numerous problems - In calculating crime rates, they include crimes
committed by visitors, but omit visitors from the
measure of population at risk. - Their estimate of costs of crime seems arbitrary.
- Other issues are discussed in Walker (2007)
31General Problems in Estimating Social Costs of
Gambling
- Regardless of the definition of social costs
chosen, there are measurement problems - Counterfactual scenario
- Comorbidity
- Survey data and fungible budgets
- Government expenditures
- If a particular study does not address these, it
should probably be ignored.
32Counterfactual scenario
- For policy purposes, the economic and social
effects of legalized casinos must be compared to
the case in which casinos are not legal. - This may be difficult to know in terms of
employment, economic growth, etc. - Unless the counterfactual is what is already
happening - In some stagnant economies, one could argue that
no other industry would have come (e.g.,
Mississippi Gulf Coast).
33Counterfactual scenario, cont.
- In terms of problem/pathological gambling
- If casinos were not legal in the state, would
people just go to other venues? - If casinos were not available, would the
pathological gamblers with coexisting disorders
have more serious alcohol or drug problems? - If yes, then it is possible that the gambling
legalization would lead to lower social costs
even if more people would become pathological
gamblers.
34Comorbidity
- This may be the biggest problem in cost-benefit
analysis. - Studies have found that many pathological
gamblers have other disorders. - Petry, Stinson, and Grant (2005, p. 569) find
- 74.2 have alcohol use disorders
- 38.1 have drug use disorders
- 41.3 have anxiety disorders
- 28.5 have obsessive-compulsive personality
disorder - How do you allocate the social costs to the
different problems when many pathological
gamblers have other disorders? - Most of the published studies ignore this,
resulting in overestimates of the social costs
attributable to gambling.
35Surveys and fungible budgets
- Diagnostic instruments and cost estimate surveys
ask various questions about potential problem
gamblers behavior. - Blaszczynski et al. (2006) explain that without
explicit instructions, respondents use different
strategies in estimating their gambling losses. - The result may be serious biases in gambling
losses reported in the literature (p. 128). - Walker (2007) discusses the inability to
attribute specific expenditures to specific
revenue sources. - Budgets are fungible.
36DSM-IV and SOGS criteria
- DSM-IV items
- 8. has committed illegal acts such as forgery,
fraud, theft, or embezzlement to finance
gambling. - If a person cannot estimate gambling losses, can
they correctly attribute their crimes to its
cause? - 10. relies on others to provide money to
relieve a desperate financial situation caused by
gambling. - What if the person bought an expensive car, or is
otherwise financially irresponsible? - How do clinicians deal with this possibility?
37DSM-IV and SOGS criteria, cont.
- SOGS items
- 14. Have you ever borrowed from someone and not
paid them back as a result of your gambling? - What if you dine out at fine restaurants too
often? Will you attribute your financial problems
to the proper cause? - 16a-k. If you borrowed money to gamble or pay
gambling debts, who or where did you borrow
from? (many possible responses) - How can a person attribute specific spending to
specific sources of income, unless there is only
one source of income?
38Caveat
- Clinicians may argue that it does not matter
whether it is possible to identify sources of
spending. The screening instruments may serve
their purpose anyway. - Perhaps what matters is if the person thinks
he/she has a problem.
39Relevance of diagnostic tools to cost estimates
- The reason these types of questions are relevant
to policy is that the questions about total
losses and sources of money used to gamble are
used in cost estimation studies. - Abused dollars
- Bad debts
- Bailout costs
- Bankruptcy costs
40Fiscal externalities
- Browning (1999) discusses how to handle costs of
government policies. - His application is to health care costs
associated with smoking. - Walker (2007) discusses this in the context of
treatment of pathological gambling.
41Fiscal externalities (cont.)
- The issue is how to classify costs of government
for pathological gambling behavior. - Is the monetary cost incurred by government a
cost of pathological gambling, or a cost of our
philosophy on government and policy? - Suppose one country has very generous treatment
reimbursement (150), while another countrys
government pays only 50 of the costs. - The social cost of the first country would be
triple that of the second.
42Fiscal externalities, cont.
- If government expenditures are social costs,
then we can eliminate costs by eliminating
spending. - Obviously this isnt the correct way to think
about social costs.
43Critiques of C-B Analyses
- Reuter (1999) and Kleiman (1999) are
enlightening. - They argue that research effort would be better
spent on the effects of policy changes. - Applied to gambling, since gambling is already
widely available, what can we do to minimize the
costs/harms? - This is similar to what public health
perspectives advocate harm minimization.
44Should we measure costs and benefits of casinos?
- There are motivations for this type of research
- Politicians need data to inform and defend their
decisions. - Policy entrepreneurs want to influence policy
(Krugman 1996) - Researchers benefit if there is a problem to
investigate. - But do cost-benefit studies provide good
information? And are they important? - Policymakers might make better decisions without
such studies.
45Should we measure costs and benefits of casinos?
(cont.)
- Peter Collins book, Gambling and the public
interest (2003) has an excellent discussion on
this issue. - Policy discussions in the U.S. neglect the
fundamental issues - Property rights
- Freedom of choice/consumer sovereignty
- The role of government in a free society
- We instead focus on expected tax benefits
compared to a murky understanding of social
costs.
46Conclusions
- Unfortunately, researchers have not developed
valid or practical methods for estimating costs
(and benefits) of casino gambling. - Given that some researchers seem intent on
influencing policy, as explained by Eadington
(2004), perhaps we should focus more on the more
basic issues of property rights, freedom of
choice, and the proper role of government. - At this stage in the development of research in
this area, policymakers are advised not to put
too much stock in existing studies. - If one does rely on such studies, seek an
external critique of the study to be aware of
potential problems that may not be explicitly
identified in the study.
47 Contact information
- Doug Walker
- Associate Professor of Economics
- Georgia College, CBX 14
- Milledgeville, GA 31061
- USA
- dougwalker1_at_gmail.com
- http//walker-research.gcsu.edu
- (This link has presentation slides and references
from the presentation.)
- The Economics of Casino Gambling
- by Doug Walker
- Springer (Jan. 2007)
- ISBN 3-540-35102-7