Townhall...
The
Real Effects of Gambling
By Steve Chapman
7/21/2011
Gambling
has proliferated in America
in recent years, and it’s not about to stop. The Illinois legislature
has
approved a bill authorizing more casinos as well as slot machines at
race
tracks. Ohio has four new casinos in the pipeline. Maine voters
approved a new
one last year. Massachusetts lawmakers plan to consider a gambling
expansion
this fall.
To
critics, this spells trouble: more
gambling, more problem gamblers and more of the calamitous social ills
that
follow. But the fear stems from the assumption that demand inexorably
rises to
match supply -- that each new gambling site increases the number of
people who
gamble and the amount of money they bet. That, we have learned, is not
quite
how human beings respond.
The
latest news comes from Howard
Shaffer, an associate professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical
School. His
recent article, co-authored by Harvard colleague Ryan Martin in the
Annual
Review of Clinical Psychology, offers reassuring evidence.
“The
current available evidence,” they
found, “suggests that the rate of PG (pathological gambling) has
remained
relatively stable during the past 35 years despite an unprecedented
increase in
opportunities and access to gambling.”
I
called Shaffer, one of the country’s
leading experts on this and other addictions, to ask what citizens
should
expect when gambling expands in their states. He does not sound alarmed.
“When
gambling becomes newly available
in an area, you’ll see some increase in gambling,” he says. “Some
people who
would not have gambled become willing to try.” That’s especially true
in places
that (unlike Illinois) had no legal gambling before. But the effect,
contrary
to myth, soon subsides.
“I
was so wrong about this when I
started this work,” Shaffer admits. He expected it would take
generations for
people to adjust their behavior in response to greater availability. In
fact,
“people gambling on the Internet change from gambling more to less in
weeks. We
never would have predicted that.”
Online
access is a good test of the
alleged hazards of allowing people to wager on games of chance. It is
said to
be particularly dangerous because it is anonymous, immune to
supervision and
accessible anytime, anywhere. “With virtual casinos entering the homes
of
millions every day, the chances for addiction are only going to
increase,”
warns CRC Health Group, which offers treatment for problem gambling.
“We
expected it to be the Wild West of
gambling,” Shaffer recalls. “People could sit in front of a computer
with a
credit card and just go.”
Online
gambling is illegal in the
United States. But in the countries where it’s allowed, most people
take a
pass. “People discover it isn’t that much fun to gamble alone,” he
notes,
except for those with social problems. “The extent of Internet gambling
for
most is astoundingly moderate.”
Another
surprise for Shaffer was that
in most cases, problem gambling is not “a relentless progressive
disorder.” If
you smoke a few cigarettes, you’ll probably soon be smoking every day.
If you
shoot heroin a couple of times, pretty soon you won’t be able to live
without
it. But for the vast majority of those who gamble, control comes easy.
“It’s
a problem people react to,”
Shaffer reports. In fact, he says, “Problem gamblers are more likely to
get
better than worse.”
Some
problem gamblers, of course, do
get worse, with harmful and even disastrous consequences for themselves
and
those around them. But Shaffer suggests that excessive gambling is not
a highly
contagious malady that can infect anyone who enters a casino. It’s
usually a
symptom of some underlying disorder.
“Of
people in the U.S. with gambling
problems, about 75 percent had a mental health problem first and a
gambling
problem second,” he notes. That, it stands to reason, makes efforts to
outlaw
gambling a pointless enterprise. He says that “some problem gamblers
would have
difficulties with gambling or something else even if there were no
legal
gambling available.”
In
any case, the epidemic of
pathological gambling is hugely exaggerated. Studies indicate,
according to
Shaffer, that about 5 percent of Americans will ever have a gambling
problem.
Compare that with about 8.5 percent who suffer from alcohol problems
annually
and 25 percent who smoke cigarettes.
Allowing
more casinos and other
gambling opportunities is not likely to produce the great economic
benefits
often promised. But as a way of accommodating consumer preferences
without
serious social side effects, it’s a pretty safe bet.
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