CHINESE LOVE A FLUTTER
15 January 2010
Lotteries, land gambling and the Internet
serve a massive and not always legal market
The Daily Telegraph carried an interesting article over
the weekend in which it examined the firmly established
gambling culture of the Chinese nation, a pastime that
has continued to flourish despite being largely outlawed
on the Chinese mainland since the Communist Party took
power in 1949.
Rising incomes have combined with
the advent of new ways to gamble, such as foreign
internet betting websites, to maintain an interest in
gambling that continues to grow, the newspaper observes.
There are just two officially sanctioned
lotteries in China. But an estimated one trillion yuan
(GBP 900 million) is also wagered illegally each year in
China – equal to the entire economic output of Beijing.
"It is a staggering figure for a country where
700 million people – more than half the population –
live in rural areas with an average of just 4,700 yuan
(GBP 415) a year [income]", the article comments, adding
that gambling takes place in card and mah-jong schools
on street corners, in underground casinos in the cities,
through unofficial lotteries in the countryside and on
hundreds of websites catering to internet gamblers.
But the popularity of gambling has inevitably
included a downside: illegal gambling has spawned huge
and increasing numbers of addicts.
“Based on
international statistics for countries with developed
gaming industries, 2 or 3 percent of gamblers have a
problem,” Wang Xuehong, director of Peking University’s
Centre for Lottery Studies, who has made a study of
China’s problem gamblers told the newspaper.
“In
China it’s more than that, because people are still not
rational when it comes to gambling.”
The article
goes on to chronicle tragic stories of the consequences
of problem gambling for punters and their near and dear
ones, and some unconventional treatment methods employed
by former card sharks.
State assistance is hard
to come by, apparently. Wang Xuehong has been trying
unsuccessfully for years to persuade the Beijing
municipal government to let her open a gambling
addiction centre.
She has been allowed to set up
China’s first help line for problem gamblers, and
despite a ban on advertising the telephone number, her
staff are overwhelmed by calls.
Yet they can
only listen. “We can’t do anything to help them because
we don’t have a treatment centre,” said Mrs Wang. “If
people have a really serious problem, we ask the local
government if they can be admitted to a mental
hospital.”
There are booming casinos in Macao,
the former Portuguese colony that neighbours Hong Kong
and is the sole corner of China where gambling is
allowed. Otherwise the official lotteries are the only
legal outlet for a bet.
Set up in 1987, they
raise 100 billion yuan (GBP 90 million) a year in
revenue for Beijing. But Mrs Wang thinks that figure is
dwarfed by the money wagered illicitly. “I’d estimate
that 10 times more is spent on illegal gambling,” she
said.
She believes the government gains so much
from the lottery that it won’t admit to, or tackle,
China’s gambling crisis. “Many calls are from people
addicted to buying lottery tickets,” said Mrs Wang.
“These are people who are going bankrupt, who have been
divorced by their partners, who want to commit suicide."
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
Top of page |
Home |
News |
Forum |
Webcast |
Vortran |
Accredited Casinos |
Evil Ones |
Pitch a Bitch |
Online Gambling Resources |
Poker
|