Lottery expenditure in a non-lottery state
- 1 January 1991
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in Journal of Gambling Studies
- Vol. 7 (2) , 89-98
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf01014524
Abstract
One of the major arguments for legalization of lotteries in new jurisdictions in the United States has been the fact that neighboring states, with their own lotteries, have captured lottery purchases from the other jurisdiction's citizens. This paper explores the issue by examining lottery purchase patterns in the state of Indiana prior to the start-up of the Indiana lottery, at a time when three adjacent states offered a variety of lottery product. Tobit analysis is also done on survey data to determine important contributing factors to the decision to play the lottery, as well as individual lottery expenditures. The paper concludes that, even though lottery revenues for a state are regressive, legalization might be justified on the basis of reducing the regressive outflow of revenue to bordering lottery states.Keywords
This publication has 11 references indexed in Scilit:
- THE BUDGETARY INCIDENCE OF A LOTTERY TO SUPPORT EDUCATIONNational Tax Journal, 1988
- Gambling among lottery winners: Before and after the big scoreJournal of Gambling Studies, 1988
- IMPLICIT TAXATION IN LOTTERY FINANCENational Tax Journal, 1987
- State Lottery Sales: Separating the Influence of Markets and Game StructureGrowth and Change, 1987
- Lottery winners: The myth and realityJournal of Gambling Studies, 1987
- The Redistributive Effects of Lotteries: Evidence from CanadaPublic Finance Quarterly, 1987
- ON THE REGRESSIVITY OF STATE-OPERATED "NUMBERS" GAMESNational Tax Journal, 1979
- The Incidence of State Lottery TaxesPublic Finance Quarterly, 1978
- AN ECONOMIC APPRAISAL OF STATE LOTTERIESNational Tax Journal, 1975
- ON THE TAX INCIDENCE OF THE PENNSYLVANIA LOTTERYNational Tax Journal, 1974