NEW PROBLEM GAMBLING STUDY PLANNED IN NEW ZEALAND
24 July 2009
Ethnicity, marketing and gambling behaviour
to be examined in new NZ$ 700 000 government initiative
New Zealand is gearing up for a comprehensive and
government funded study of gambling that will look at
whether casinos and the TAB - and other parts of the
sector - target specific cultures, along with issues
such as gambling behaviour, problem gambling and the
manner in which gambling is marketed.
The
Ministry of Health has budgeted nearly NZ$700 000 for
the research into how to prevent and address gambling
harm, according to proposals published on the
Government's electronic tenders website this week.
Four projects are investigating impact
characteristics of venues, games and marketing on
gambling behaviour and the reduction of harmful
gambling, including whether players on electronic games
can be reined in with warning pop-up panels.
The
NZ$220 000 allocated to the marketing study will look at
the impact of marketing, advertising and sponsorship on
gambling perceptions and behaviour. Internal impacts
include the use of culturally-specific imagery in
venues, and in the wider community, they include
sponsorship of community events.
In earlier
research in 2006, the ministry noted that while casinos
were not seen as creating harm on the whole, for certain
groups, such as Asian gamblers, they did cause
significant harm. Overseas experience had shown that
Asian gamblers of different cultural backgrounds could
be affected by the way gambling was marketed and
presented.
Separately, the ministry has budgeted
another NZ$96 000 to find out how game characteristics
such as pay-offs, play speed, near-miss features and
jackpots influence gambling.
The ministry is
calling for researchers to register interest in the
studies, which include questions developed with the
Department of Internal Affairs and representatives of
the gambling industry.
Questions it has proposed
include the effect of advertising, sponsorship and
promotion of gambling on public views and attitudes, and
whether the marketing of large lottery jackpots
encouraged people to spend more on lotteries than they
usually did.
The ministry wants to know whether
use of terms such as "jackpot", "bonus", and "must be
won" changed gamblers' perceptions of the likelihood of
winning, and how many people spent more than they could
afford on trying to win big jackpots.
Up to
NZ$240 000 will be spent studying the potential for
pop-ups to constrain use of electronic gambling
machines.
Successful tenders for the work are
expected to be identified in October 2009, with the
deadline for delivery of the research to be in June
2013.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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