YOUNG CANADIAN ADULTS PREFER TECHNOLOGY DRIVEN
GAMBLING
2 May 2008
Under 35 year olds doing more online gambling
A report in the Montreal Gazette, based in the closest
Canadian city to the Kahnawake First Nation enclave
which licences and hosts many online gambling companies,
reports that young adult Canadians under age 35 are
probably gambling more on technology driven games,
whilst older generations are in general gambling less.
The newspaper was quoting an expert paper by pollster
Allan Gregg, who told the 2008 Canadian Gaming Summit
that one- third of Canadians say they are gambling less
than they did three years ago, while those under 35
years of age are more likely to be gambling more.
"Unfortunately for lottery jurisdictions in Canada, this
younger group favours the technology driven gambling
options of the future," the chairman of Harris/Decima
told about 200 conference participants.
Gregg revealed that in a national poll of 3 047
Canadians, online sports betting and Web-based poker
games are considered acceptable forms of gambling by 56
percent of those 18 to 34 years of age. Only 20 percent
of those over 55 years of age and only 35 percent of
those over 35 favoured online sports betting, Gregg
said.
Younger people were also more supportive of interactive
online lottery games, buying lottery tickets via a
mobile device or playing casino games for money via
in-home televisions, according to the 2008 National
Gambling Report, which Gregg presented to the
conference.
Canadians spend an estimated Cdn$ 300 million to Cdn$
400 million a year on online gambling by accessing
computer servers based in foreign jurisdictions or on
the Mohawk reserve of Kahnawake, Paul Burns,
vice-president of the Canadian Gaming Association, told
the newspaper in a post-conference interview.
The Mohawk council contends that it has a sovereign
right to allow and regulate the computer servers on the
reserve that play host to an array of gambling sites.
The council-run Mohawk Internet Technologies is
considered one of the global hubs of Internet gambling,
the report adds, opining that neither the provincial nor
federal governments have forced the issue, apparently
fearing confrontation with the Mohawks.
A recent study by the Canadian Gaming Association (see
previous InfoPowa report) pegged total revenue from
industry activities - including casinos, lotteries, VLTs
and pari-mutual gambling - at just over $15.3 billion in
2006. Governments and charities received almost $8.7
billion of those revenues.
Online Casino News courtesy of
InfoPowa
More news here.
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