Friday, August 08, 2014

A Good Way to Wreck a Local Economy: Build Casinos

A Good Way to Wreck a Local Economy: Build Casinos - The Atlantic
..... Casinos promise a new and easy flow of revenues to hard pressed local governments.
The promise however comes increasingly hedged with fine print.
The casino market is nearing saturation, if it is not already saturated.
Two casinos have closed in Mississippi this year.
Four have closed or will soon close in Atlantic City, including the glitziest hotel on the boardwalk, Revel.
Casinos that do stay in business yield less to their towns and states.
Revenues from Maryland’s first casino, in Perryville, at the northern tip of Chesapeake Bay, have already dropped 30 percent from their peak in 2008, and are expected to decline even more rapidly in future as competitors proliferate.
Yet the truly bad news about casinos is not found in the tax receipts. 
It’s found in the casinos' economic and social impact on the towns that welcome them.
Until the late 1970s, no state except Nevada permitted casino gambling.
Then Atlantic City persuaded its state legislature to allow casinos, in hope of reviving the prosperity of the battered resort town.
Hotels sprung up along the seafront.
Thousands of people were hired.
And the rest of Atlantic City … saw no benefits at all.
All these years later, it still has desperate trouble sustaining even a single grocery store.
No one should look to casinos to revive cities, “because that’s not what casinos do.”
So explained the project manager for a new Wynn casino rising near Philadelphia.
He’s right, but it has taken a surprisingly long time for city governments to acknowledge a fact that was well understood by the 19th-century Americans who suppressed gambling in the decades after the Civil War.
The impact of casinos on neighboring property values is “unambiguously negative,” according to the economists at the National Association of Realtors
Casinos don’t encourage non-gaming businesses to open nearby, because the people who most often visit casinos do not wander out to visit other shops and businesses. 
A casino is not like a movie theater or a sports stadium, offering a time-limited amusement. It is designed to be an all-absorbing environment that does not release its customers until they have exhausted their money.
The Institute for American Values has gathered the best evidence on the social consequences of casinos.
That evidence should worry any responsible city government.

2 comments:

Andrew said...

Personal liberty must always be considered. If I want to gamble at a casino and you want to provide the casino, the state should not prohibit us from getting together.

Andy

Jim Riley said...

Andrew, I agree. But we must understand the clear negatives before we allow government to spend money to expand casinos.