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Strong link between gambling expenditure and crime, new study finds - Connections.edu September 2024
The more money Australians spend
on poker machines, the higher the crime rate. This is the key finding to
emerge from a landmark study of gambling and crime published in Addiction.
The authors of the study found that each 10 per cent increase in gambling expenditure in NSW results in more than:
“Gambling hurts not only the people who gamble, but the community as a whole suffers from Australia’s love affair with gambling,” says lead author of the study, NDARC’s Professor Donald Weatherburn. “The study results provide new insights into the harms associated with gambling: when people are spending more on gambling, those in the community who don’t gamble are experiencing crimes that they otherwise might not experience.” There is no previous evidence that looked at the relationship between total expenditure on gambling and total crime. But this study is the first to create this macro view. “What most previous studies have done is interview individual gamblers and ask them whether they've committed crime to raise money to gamble,” says Professor Weatherburn. “Our study is the first to quantify the link between gambling expenditure and crime.” “We've known for a long time that problem gamblers cause all sorts of problems to themselves and their families. What we didn't know is the big picture - like how much extra anti-social behaviour does an increase in gambling expenditure cause across a whole community and this study provides that answer.” The findings of this study show that the consequences of gambling are not limited to gamblers. “Even if you are not a gambler, you're still picking up the tab for other people who do gamble in terms of increased break and enter, motor vehicle theft, stealing and assault,” says Professor Weatherburn. “It's in the community’s interest to have tighter controls on gambling by reducing the opportunities for gambling, instituting controls that stop people from becoming problem gamblers and not advertising gambling. Without such measures, gambling expenditure increases and as a result so does the amount of crime.” |
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