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HAPPY GAMBLERS

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... named modes of gambling (scratchcards, horse betting, table games, etc, etc) ... private betting -0.096 0.010. raffles -0.041 -0.574. e-gaming 0.189 1.228 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: HAPPY GAMBLERS


1
HAPPY GAMBLERS?
  • David Forrest
  • and
  • Ian McHale
  • The Salford Seminar February, 2009

2
  • We all know that consumers in all parts of the
    world are restricted in the choices they make
    about how, when and where to gamble
  • What can explain this highly protective stance
    towards consumers?
  • Government will cite problem gambling concerns in
    justifying their policies

3
  • However, problem gamblers account for a small
    part of the population
  • Problem drinking rates are higher than problem
    gambling rates but there are relatively few
    restrictions on the choices of responsible users
  • The harsher treatment of gambling suggests that
    government believes that those who would gamble
    comprise a vulnerable population that needs
    protection from itself
  • Presumably it believes that gambling causes
    problems to individuals that are not picked up by
    formal screens for problem gambling behaviour

4
  • In any case, it is clear that gambling policy
    should be driven by more than concerns over
    clinically diagnosed problem gambling
  • Attention needs to be paid to the majority of the
    population which gambles without the signs of
    dysfunctional behaviour tested for in problem
    gambling screens
  • We take a direct approach to evaluating the
    wellbeing and mental state of the population who
    gamble
  • In doing so we follow the tradition of the fast
    growing new discipline of happiness studies

5
  • Happiness studies has grown because social
    surveys around the world now routinely ask people
    how happy they are
  • It started in the 70s with the US General Social
    Survey which asked the question
  • Taken all together how would you say things are
    these days? Would you say you are very happy,
    pretty happy or not too happy?
  • very happy3, pretty happy2, not too happy1

6
  • The scale has tended to change over time, so that
    there is now usually a ten point rather than a
    three point scale
  • But the essence of the question has remained the
    same
  • It asks how people rate their life these days-
    ie it attempts not to measure mood today but some
    long-run concept of well being
  • Sets of answers exist for many countries, rich
    and poor, for long periods of time with thousands
    of respondents

7
ARE PEOPLES ANSWERS CREDIBLE?
  • It seems so
  • Statistical models reveal intuitively plausible
    patterns in answers that are stable over time and
    space
  • For example, marriage always raises predicted
    happiness score by about 0.6-0.8 points on a ten
    point scale, very good rather than very bad
    health always raises happiness score by about two
    full points
  • This suggests that peoples answers are
    considered and sensible and we can with
    confidence ask questions like what difference
    does gambling behaviour make?
  • Moreover, psychologists validation studies find
    high correlation between individuals happiness
    scores and other indicators of mental wellbeing
    (eg how often the subject smiles) and other
    peoples assessment of the subjects state of mind

8
The General Approach
  • Researchers build a statistical model to account
    for differences between happiness scores across
    individuals
  • Key items to be taken into account in any study
    include age, living in a partnership, children,
    health and income
  • The researcher then adds the focus of interest
    (here engagement with gambling)
  • This is the first study to use a data set where
    there are happiness scores and information on
    gambling behaviour

9
OUR DATA
  • From Taking Part, a survey on the use of
    leisure time carried out for DCMS
  • Over 28,000 adults in England interviewed during
    2005 and 2006
  • Very ambitious survey- median interview was 32
    minutes long

10
  • THE HAPPINESS QUESTION
  • Taking all things together, how happy would you
    say you are? On a scale of 1-10, 10extremely
    happy, 1 extremely unhappy
  • THE GAMBLING QUESTION
  • Participation in the preceding seven days in
    thirteen named modes of gambling (scratchcards,
    horse betting, table games, etc, etc)

11
  • We built statistical models to account for (i)
    male and (ii) female happiness scores
  • We used only white British respondents
  • Gambling has a different cultural
    significance in different communities and cleaner
    results are likely if the sample is more
    homogenous
  • This gave us sample sizes of 10,128 men and 12,
    772 women
  • Few of these will be problem gamblers- the BGPS
    implies about 100 of the males and 13 of the
    females
  • These small numbers are not likely to affect
    results very much- our results could therefore
    reasonably be interpreted as showing the
    relationship between happiness and gambling for
    non-problem gamblers

12
DISTRIBUTION OF HAPPINESS SCORES
13
HAPPINESS RESULTS
  • male female
  • age -0.028 -.020
  • age squared 0.0003 0.0003
  • married 0.698 0.580
  • cohabiting 0.559 0.404
  • (compared with single)

14
  • male female
  • young child -0.067 -0.130
  • pre-teen -0.089 -0.039
  • teenager -0.169 -0.158
  • (compared with no children)
  • unemployed -0.557 -0.426
  • retired 0.229 0.291

15
  • male female
  • very good health 0.989 0.928
  • good health 0.476 0.504
  • bad health -0.454 -0.588
  • very bad health -1.061 -0.932
  • (compared with fair health)
  • Model also included information on income, level
    of education, access to a car

16
Participation by mode (with standard controls in
place)
  • Male Female
  • National Lottery 0.116 0.096
  • other lotteries
    0.142 0.018
  • scratchcards 0.188 0.043
  • Football pools 0.113
    -0.199
  • horse betting 0.106 -0.024
  • dog betting -0.747 0.151
  • sports betting 0.078 0.922
  • table games 0.080 -0.550
  • bingo 0.285 0.164
  • slots -0.082 0.172
  • private betting -0.096
    0.010
  • raffles -0.041
    -0.574
  • e-gaming
    0.189 1.228

17
  • There is a limit to what can be learned here as
    number of participants for some modes is too low
    for statistically significant findings to emerge
  • But most signs are positive
  • National Lottery players and bingo players (of
    either gender) are strongly significantly happier
    than non-players with similar circumstances
  • Female sports bettors appear to be particularly
    happy people
  • The only negative and significant sign relates to
    men who bet on dogs they experience low
    happiness relative to their circumstances
  • In this one case, results may be driven by the
    presence of (unknown) problem gamblers in the
    sample
  • Thats because an exceptional proportion of
    males who bet on dogs are problem gamblers (16
    according to the BGPS)

18
to help reach a broader conclusion.
  • we decided to measure the degree of an
    individuals engagement with gambling by the
    number of modes of gambling in which he or she
    had participated in the preceding week
  • range was from 0 to 10 for men, 0 to 5 for women

19
Male Female number of modes 0.077
0.072 People who engage in gambling to a
greater degree are happier than similar people
who engage to a lesser degree
20
Of course..
  • This finding, while it shows strong positive
    association between happiness and engagement in
    gambling, does not demonstrate CAUSATION
  • Causation could go either way
  • Gambling might make people happier
  • Or it might just be that happier people might be
    more inclined to gamble
  • For example, extroversion, risk loving nature,
    sociability are all personality traits linked
    with happiness and each of them may also
    predispose an individual to enjoy gambling

21
a technical note
  • Sometimes data allow a test for causation using
    instrumental variables
  • Instrumental variables must be correlated with
    the variable of interest (here number of modes)
    but exogenous to the individual
  • We used as instruments information about gambling
    events in the week before an interview- size of
    Lotto rollover, Grand National (both important in
    determining female engagement) and World Cup (a
    negative influence on male number of modes)
  • Preliminary results are that there is no CAUSAL
    effect running from gambling to happiness

22
RATHER
  • Happier people are more likely to be gamblers
  • Recall that happiness scores are recognised as
    good indicators of mental health and wellbeing
  • Gamblers as a group do not appear to be
    especially vulnerable people
  • They are choosing to gamble and there is no
    evidence here that their choices should not be
    respected
  • Indeed it might be considered that, since
    gamblers are happy, it would be reckless to
    meddle in their choices
  • Does not mean of course that we should forget
    problem gambling
  • But it does imply that policies to mitigate harm
    should be targeted at the very vulnerable- they
    should not be too restrictive of the activities
    of the majority, responsible gamblers whom we now
    know also to be happy gamblers

23
POSTSCRIPT
  • The instrumental variables model provides results
    from a sub-model of what determines the focus
    variable (here, number of modes)
  • This model has strong predictive power and shows
    how family, health and employment status, age,
    education, income etc influence engagement with
    gambling
  • Relative to single people, married and cohabiting
    men and women take part in more modes of gambling
  • Divorce and widowhood increase engagement with
    gambling for men but not for women
  • Less educated people choose more modes of
    gambling
  • There is a very strong positive relation with
    income this should be of concern to the industry
    given current pressures on income
  • To avoid ending on that negative note, let me say
    again that the main message of this research is
    that gamblers are not sad people. Generally
    they are happy people. And that in itself has
    implications for the stance government should
    take towards gambling.
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