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  • When local, or even provincial or state governments find themselves in need of greater revenue

  • streams to support education, healthcare or other services, but don't want to raise taxes,

  • casinos and lotteries are often promoted as ways to produce a sizable influx of cash,

  • boost tourism and provide a new source of entertainment for the locals.

  • It's important that we stop and ask the question, Are Casinos Good for Communities?

  • As of 2006, Canada's gaming industry was one of the largest contributors to the Canadian

  • economy at more than $15 Billion per year.

  • Directly supporting 135,000 full time jobs and generating almost $9 Billion per year

  • to fund government and community projects.

  • Clearly, gambling is big business, and when governments are able to cash in on that revenue

  • in a positive way, there can be benefits.

  • But are there also economic side-effects?

  • Yes. There are several, including negative impacts on home valuations and local businesses.

  • The impact of casinos on neighboring property values is "unambiguously negative," according

  • to the economists at the National Association of Realtors.

  • Casinos don't encourage non-gaming businesses to open nearby, because the people who most

  • often visit casinos do not wander out to visit other shops and businesses.

  • A casino is not like a movie theater or a sports stadium, offering a time-limited amusement.

  • It is designed to be an all-absorbing environment that does not release its customers until

  • they have exhausted their money.

  • Not only do casinos fail to greatly increase the profile of neighbouring businesses, much

  • of their profit is not from generating new wealth.

  • The highly touted economic benefits may not be as grand as they first appear:

  • . . . critics point out that gambling only redistributes existing money, but does not

  • generate much new wealth.

  • In fact, it can have a detrimental effect on the surrounding economy as leisure spending

  • is diverted away from local businesses.

  • Every dollar spent in a casino is a dollar that might have been spent in local restaurants,

  • cinemas or shops.

  • The outlier to this occurs when a Casino is able to attract wealthy high-rollers from

  • afar who, when they lose, pump money into the economy.

  • But even if the economic benefit was worth it, what is the cost to society?

  • . . . there's no dispute that gambling causes crime.

  • The only questions, he says, "are how big is the impact and can you get a good measurement."

  • Even the American Gaming Association agrees that gambling addiction is a social problem.

  • The same article goes on to highlight a 2004 report that almost one-third of pathological

  • gamblers "admitted having committed robbery in the previous year.

  • Approximately 13 percent had assaulted someone for money."

  • Many argue that it is only the few individuals who suffer from the societal effects of gambling

  • addiction.

  • The numbers tell us otherwise.

  • According to the University of Calgary:

  • Gambling becomes a problem when it interferes with personal life, work life, personal and

  • household finances, or physical and/or mental health.

  • Up to 3% of Canadians suffer from a gambling problem.

  • This rate is similar to the prevalence of alcoholism in Canada.

  • Few would argue that alcoholism is only a "minor problem."

  • If 3% suffer from a gambling problem, that accounts for more than 700,000 Canadians.

  • Gambling problems affect more than just those with the problem.

  • How many families are affected?

  • How many work places are affected?

  • While there may be some economic benefits to Casinos, lotteries and other forms of gambling,

  • they have essentially become another tax on the poor as shown by Americanvalues.org.

  • In this way, state-sponsored casino gambling creates a stratified pattern that parallels

  • the separate and unequal life patterns in education, marriage, work, and play that increasingly

  • divide America into haves and have-nots.

  • Those in the upper ranks of the income distribution rarely, if ever, make it a weekly habit to

  • gamble at the local casino.

  • Those in the lower ranks of the income distribution often do.

  • Those in the upper ranks rarely, if ever, contribute a large share of their income to

  • the state's take of casino revenues.

  • Those in the lower ranks do.

  • Casinos are a lot of things.

  • However, they are not good for communities.

  • For Tomorrow's World Viewpoint, I'm Michael Heykoop.

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  • Visit TomorrowsWorld.org for more articles telecasts and booklets.

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カジノは地域社会にとって良いものなのか? (Are Casinos Good for Communities?)

  • 7 1
    Mayu Okuuchi に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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