U.S. STATES FEEL THE PAIN OF RECESSION
14 August 2009
Lawmakers in at least 14 states have
considered expanding gambling
In an interesting article over the weekend the Wall
Street Journal explored the impact of recession on the
US gambling industry, and what states are doing to
combat the accompanying drop in tax returns. Strangely,
the article did not bring legalised internet gambling
and its potential contribution to state revenues into
its study.
Author Conor Dougherty wrote that tax
revenues from land casinos, slot machines and lotteries
is falling for the first time in many of the 48 states
that have grown to depend on gambling as a crucial
source of income. Quoting statistics from the American
Gaming Association, he reveals that revenue contributed
by commercial casinos to state and local governments was
down 2.2 percent in 2008 to $5.7 billion. In many
states, the declines have continued.
"Eight of
the 12 states that allow commercial casinos saw their
take of gambling revenue fall in the fiscal year ended
June of this (2009) year, compared with the same period
a year ago," the WSJ article reports, quoting data from
states and the Nelson A. Rockefeller Institute of
Government at the State University of New York.
"In five of those states, including Illinois and Nevada,
gambling income fell by a greater percentage than the
state's overall revenue did. Nevada's gambling-tax
revenue fell 15 percent in the fiscal year ended June
'09 compared with the same period a year earlier. That
contributed to a drop of 10 percent in the state's
overall revenue," the article continues.
Lotteries have also been adversely impacted; in a
sampling of 20 state lotteries, including California and
Illinois, 14 had recorded recent year-over-year drops in
revenue.
The declines have been a rude awakening
for US states accustomed to rising tax contributions as
gambling has expanded. In the past, states saw total
gambling revenue including casino games, lotteries and
horse-racing wagers rise 65 percent from fiscal year
1998 to $23.9 billion in 2008. Overall state revenue
over the same period grew to $774 billion, up 65
percent.
A weak economoy, and the recession's
impact on the gambler in terms of lower spending and a
reluctance to travel to gamble, combined with a more
competitive gambling industry are principal reasons for
the decline. And declining gambling revenues have
exacerbated falling sales- and income-tax receipts,
forcing states to slash spending as they try to balance
budgets.
"Gambling revenues are declining across
the board, and states can no longer count on gambling
when it comes to closing budget gaps," said Lucy Dadayan,
a senior policy analyst at the Rockefeller institute.
The Wall Street Journal piece takes a look at the
extent to which individual states depend on gambling
revenues. In Nevada, about 30 percent of the state's
general fund comes from gambling, whilst in Delaware, it
is about 8 percent. Utah and Hawaii are the only two
states without some form of legal gambling.
In
general, gambling income - including state
lottery-ticket profits and taxes on commercial gambling
revenue - has made up a growing share of state budgets.
Though each state has its own way of collecting and
distributing the money, gambling revenue has helped
states fund expanding budgets, education, and to lower
other taxes that have a broader consumer impact, such as
property taxes.
U.S. commercial casinos saw
gambling revenue slump 5 percent to about $33 billion in
2008 compared with 2007, according to the AGA. The
figure doesn't include American Indian casinos, and it
has deteriorated since.
Competition between
neighbouring states has seen the gamblers' dollar spread
more thinly across competing options, the article notes.
New Jersey, the home of Atlantic City and the
second-largest gambling state, after Nevada, has been
hit hard by competition from neighbouring Pennsylvania,
which over the past year has added several thousand slot
machines. New Jersey's share of casino revenue fell 14
percent in the fiscal year ended in June versus a year
earlier.
"Commercial casinos also are competing
with the expanding number of American Indian casinos,
which now exist in 28 states," Dougherty reports.
"Tribal casinos don't pay taxes, though several states
have forged agreements that pay them a share of the
casino's revenue.
"Revenue at the 405 tribal
casinos tracked by the National Indian Gaming Commission
grew 2.3 percent to $26.7 billion in the fiscal year
ended September 2008, compared with $26.1 billion from
391 casinos in the year-earlier period. That compared
with revenue growth of 5 percent and 10 percent in the
previous two years."
Rick Mazer, a regional
president for Harrah's Horseshoe Casinos, discussed
reductions in wagering levels on slots and told the WSJ
writer: "People are afraid. They're concerned about
their retirement and their portfolio. Even though
sometimes their income hasn't changed, their wealth in
their mind has changed."
Cities that have
successfully grappled with the problem include Chester,
Pennsylvania, where gambling revenue has allowed the
city to balance its budget and set up a rainy-day fund.
"This fiscal year about 30 percent of the city's $41.2
million budget will come from the slot machines at the
Harrah's Chester casino and racetrack, roughly equal to
the city's police budget," Dougherty found.
"Without Harrah's the city would be in a dire financial
situation," said Thomas Moore, chief of staff to Chester
Mayor Wendell N. Butler Jr.
The National
Conference of State Legislatures reports that lawmakers
in at least 14 states have considered expanding gambling
as an alternative to raising property or income taxes.
Slot machine and other gambling offerings installed at
racetracks - generically dubbed "racinos" - has been one
solution to be explored. Five of a sample of nine states
with racinos saw revenue increase in the fiscal year
ended June, according to the Rockefeller Institute.
In Pennsylvania, where gambling-tax revenue has
risen as the state added slot machines over the past
year, state representative Bill DeWeese recently
introduced a proposal to add table games such as
blackjack and craps to the state's slots-only locations.
With a $3 billion budget deficit and many legislators
resisting calls to raise taxes, DeWeese says gambling is
one of the few areas that can be tapped. "It would be a
substantial amount of help to our state in this very
challenging moment," he says. "There's no difference, in
my view, in putting $20 in a slot machine and putting
$20 on a blackjack table."
But with gambling
revenue falling, Nevada is taking a different tack. To
close their budget gap this year, Nevada legislators
voted to increase sales and payroll taxes.
And
there's always the possibility that a legalised and
regulated US Internet gambling regime as envisaged by
Congressman Barney Frank's HR 2267 proposal currently in
Congressional committee could make a worthwhile
contribution to state coffers.
In an independent
study in September last year the respected international
financial advisory services group PricewaterhouseCoopers
estimated that up to $51.9 billion could be realised in
tax revenues over a ten year period if Internet gambling
was legalised in the United States.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
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