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article imageStudy Uncovers Why Low-Income People Buy Lottery Tickets

Posted Jul 24, 2008 by  Bob Ewing in Lifestyle | 16 comments | 408 views
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A new Carnegie Mellon University study sheds light on the reasons why low-income lottery players eagerly invest in a product that provides poor returns.
Why do people living on a low income buy lottery tickets? State lotteries, on average, return just 53 cents for every dollar spent on a ticket yet people continue to pour money into them. This appears to be especially true for low-income people, who spend a larger percentage of their incomes on lottery tickets than do the wealthier segments of society.

A new Carnegie Mellon University study sheds light on the reasons why low-income lottery players eagerly invest in a product that provides poor returns.

The study is published in the July issue of the Journal of Behavioral Decision Making. In this study participants who were made to feel subjectively poor bought nearly twice as many lottery tickets as a comparison group that was made to feel subjectively more affluent. The Carnegie Mellon findings point to poverty's central role in people's decisions to buy lottery tickets.

"Some poor people see playing the lottery as their best opportunity for improving their financial situations, albeit wrongly so," said the study's lead author Emily Haisley, a doctoral student in the Department of Organizational Behavior and Theory at Carnegie Mellon's Tepper School of Business.

"The hope of getting out of poverty encourages people to continue to buy tickets, even though their chances of stumbling upon a life-changing windfall are nearly impossibly slim and buying lottery tickets in fact exacerbates the very poverty that purchasers are hoping to escape."

The participants' perceptions of their relative wealth, or lack thereof, were influenced by having them complete a survey on their opinions of the city of Pittsburgh that included an item on annual income.

The group made to feel poor was asked to provide its income on a scale that began at "less than $100,000" and went upward from there in $100,000 increments, ensuring that most respondents would be in the lowest income category. The group made to feel subjectively wealthier was asked to report income on a scale that began with "less than $10,000" and increased in $10,000 increments, leading most respondents to be in a middle or upper tier.

Participants were recruited at Pittsburgh's Greyhound Bus terminal and were paid $5 for completing the survey and given the opportunity to buy as many as five scratch-off lottery tickets.

The experimental group purchased an average of 1.27 lottery tickets, compared with 0.67 tickets bought by the members of the control group.

A second experiment reported in the paper found that indirectly reminding participants that, while different income groups face unequal outcomes in education, jobs and housing, everyone has equal chances of winning the lottery induced an increase in the number of lottery tickets purchased. The group given this reminder purchased 1.31 tickets, compared with 0.54 for the group not given such a reminder.

The researchers note that lotteries set off a vicious cycle that not only exploits low-income individuals' desires to escape poverty but also directly prevents them from improving upon their financial situations.

State lottery administrators could explore strategies that balance the economic burdens faced by low-income households with the need to maintain important funding streams for state governments.

"State lotteries are popular revenue sources that are unlikely to go away anytime soon," said George Loewenstein, a study co-author and Herbert A. Simon professor of economics and psychology at Carnegie Mellon.

"However, it is possible to implement measures that can actually benefit low-income lottery players and lead to fairer outcomes."

Loewenstein noted that one such potential method for addressing income inequality, which has shown promise in other countries, is tying lottery tickets to savings accounts.

Romel Mostafa, a graduate student in Carnegie Mellon's Department of Social and Decision Sciences, also was a study co-author. The research was funded in part by a grant from the Russell Sage Foundation.

The hope of escaping poverty as the motivation for purchasing lottery tickets was no surprise; yet how real is this hope?
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  • avatar Posted Jul 24, 2008 by  Gar Swaffar
    #1
    Tying tickets to savings accounts?
    Shazammmm.
  • avatar Posted Jul 24, 2008 by  Debra Myers (skyangel)
    #2
    "Some poor people see playing the lottery as their best opportunity for improving their financial situations, albeit wrongly so," said the study's lead author Emily Haisley, a doctoral student in the Department of Organizational Behavior and Theory at Carnegie Mellon's Tepper School of Business.

    "The hope of getting out of poverty encourages people to continue to buy tickets, even though their chances of stumbling upon a life-changing windfall are nearly impossibly slim and buying lottery tickets in fact exacerbates the very poverty that purchasers are hoping to escape."


    Exactly. This is why I don't buy into the gimmick!
  • avatar Posted Jul 24, 2008 by  Bob Ewing
    #3
    @ Debra Myers (skyangel)
    Exactly. This is why I don't buy into the gimmick!

    I do not buy lottery tickets.
  • avatar Posted Jul 24, 2008 by  Cynthia T. [Picasso]
    #4
    People that buy lottery tickets because they need the money if they win are only fooling themselves.
    I have never bought one or do I ever intend to buy one.
  • avatar Posted Jul 24, 2008 by  Debra Myers (skyangel)
    #5
    @ Bob Ewing
    I do not buy lottery tickets.


    @ Cynthia T. [Picasso]
    People that buy lottery tickets because they need the money if they win are only fooling themselves.
    I have never bought one or do I ever intend to buy one.


    I've only ever bought about 5-6 of them and the most I ever won was $7.00. I don't see the point of wasting money that needs to go elsewhere.
  • avatar Posted Jul 24, 2008 by  Chris V. (cgull)
    #6
    It is just gambling, people lose more than win.
  • avatar Posted Jul 24, 2008 by  pbrite
    #7
    Seriously, a university paid money to figure this out?
    Up next: why people breathe better when they inhale.
  • avatar Posted Jul 24, 2008 by  Bob Ewing
    #8
    @ pbrite
    Seriously, a university paid money to figure this out?
    Up next: why people breathe better when they inhale.

    without the study you only have hunches, although in this case I personally thought the reason was obvious.
  • avatar Posted Jul 24, 2008 by  Can Tran (TFactor)
    #9
    I don't ever buy lottery tickets. But, there is one thing I can add that the study hasn't. By chance if any one of them actually do win the lottery, they'll end up in the poor house again in the near future or even worse.

    They'll have all that money coming to them. And they would not have the right idea on how to use it. They didn't work hard for the money. They got that money on luck of the draw. While I understand and empathize with poverty playing a central role, investing in lottery tickets is not the best path. By chance if one of them does win, it makes things even worse.

    My aunt Tatia dated a person over 10 years ago. I met the guy at my uncle's wedding reception. But they broke up after a few years. His parents had won the lottery. Guess what, his parents invested the money in a drug habit.
  • avatar Posted Jul 24, 2008 by  Debra Myers (skyangel)
    #10
    You are right, Can Tran...we had a guy who was barely getting by win the lottery...and before the year was up, he was dead broke again! Sheer stupidity!
  • avatar Posted Jul 24, 2008 by  pbrite
    #11
    I've bought lottery tickets. I think I've bought maybe 10 in the last two years. It isn't because I'm poor; they are just fun to scratch.

    But see, I don't call it gambling. I call it "investing in California's Education future with a slim chance of exemplary returns for my part in funding current endeavors".
  • Amir Posted Jul 24, 2008 by  Amir
    #12
    Well, I don't think this study shows clearly "why low-income people buy lottery tickets". It only proves that they do so using game theory techniques.

    I think in this experiment we need to take into account the psychology of hope as well. Buying lottery tickets may not help poor to get out of poverty, but might make them feel better. Look at these two statements:
    The hope of getting out of poverty encourages people to continue to buy tickets, even though their chances of stumbling upon a life-changing windfall are nearly impossibly slim...

    while different income groups face unequal outcomes in education, jobs and housing, everyone has equal chances of winning the lottery.


    In this sense, buying lottery tickets is even more effective than praying to God. When you pray the chance of winning anything is zero and when you buy lottery tickets the chance is slim. But they both make you feel better.
  • avatar Posted Jul 24, 2008 by  Nikki W (karateblossom)
    #13
    Great find, Bob. This is very interesting. I dont play, nor do I gamble at all!

    I know my dad who is by no means poor used to play weekly. He and several would pool $20 ~ 50 ea n split any winnings. The loss for him was insignificant but occasionally, the win recouped his losses. He broke even and made a little cash.

    Lotteries are no different than gambling in vegas or playing slots. Hey, i know its a stretch, but why do poor people eat out? They have a right to spend that $ me thinks as they wish. It gives them some hope and dreams....:o)
  • skeptikool Posted Jul 24, 2008 by  skeptikool
    #14
    Anyone claiming it might be related to IQ levels would probably be felt a bigot.

    With the unconscionable odds, the widespread cases of fraud (given much media exposure, last year) and the outrageous salaries and severance packages paid to many of those controlling and monitoring the lotteries, it's a wonder any tickets are bought at all.
  • sumdume Posted Jul 25, 2008 by  sumdume
    #15
    The lottery is a hidden tax! Public entities cannot openly tax the "poor" without a huge public backlash. So,,,,, they dreamed up the lottery scheme to tax the masses.

    Here are a couple of definitions for your amusement.
    Lottery, a tax on the mathmatically impaired.
    Lottery, a tax on the stupid.
  • Hammster Posted Jul 25, 2008 by  Hammster
    #16
    The lottery is NOT a fair day’s pay for a fair day’s work (gambling is an agreement between thieves).

    Our church does missions and mentoring through a bus ministry. More than once we've walked through the parking lot of a lower income apartment complex and seen children roaming around with no one watching them. The ones I’ve seen were dirty and poorly clothed, but it was just as staggering to walk to walk by the car parked in front of their unit and notice spent lottery tickets laying in the floor board and seats.

    "It's just $3.oo dollars..." So is a loft of bread.

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