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Today, 14 Dec 04

How to 'prove' anything
by Larry Haverkamp mail@AskDrMoney.com

IF you were hoping for a casino, then too bad for you. There is 'no case for casinos'. Why? Because 'from an economic standpoint a casino will have an adverse impact on Singapore in the long term.' These are the headlines from a study published in The Business Times on Dec 3 by SMU and NUS economists Hoon Hian Teck and Ho Kong Weng. They conclude: 'Our recommendation is not to build the casino.'

I spoke with Assistant Professor Ho who was kind enough to explain the workings of this study. After telling me how they did it, he gave me a surprise. Very few have questioned their study. I think it's because statistics are intimidating. Who is going to argue with fancy methodologies like present value, simulation and regression analysis? In the face of such powerful tools, only a fool would disagree. I disagree.

These guys have built a clever economic model, but it is based on two shaky assumptions. First, Professors Hoon and Ho assume a casino will lower Singapore's institutional quality because of higher bankruptcy cases, embezzlement and fraud. Second, a casino is assumed to lower work productivity by 0.5 per cent. That's because poor productivity results from 'employees with gambling problems and their adverse effects on teamwork'. Here is a simple and shocking example of how economic models really work. Let's say your model of the Singapore economy looks like this: $80 billion x 2 = $160 billion = Singapore's GDP. Next, let's ASSUME gambling reduces productivity. It changes the equation to $70 billion x 2 = $140 billion. Now, let's review our results. With no casino, GDP was $160 billion. With a casino, GDP declined by $20 billion to $140 billion.

The obvious conclusion: Scrap the casino. You may say that I practically assumed the conclusion.' I agree. But that is how economic models work. Conclusions depend largely on the assumptions. Once you assume that a casino lowers productivity and institutional quality, the outcome is certain. A casino is doomed.

Of course a better approach is to focus on the reasonableness of the assumptions.

CASE FOR CASINOS The facts about casinos may surprise you. They defy conventional wisdom.

Unemployment: Las Vegas, Nevada in the US has more casinos per capita than any US city. Yet Nevada is among the 10 states with the lowest rate of unemployment. (It is 3.6 per cent vs. 5.5 per cent for the national average.)

Crime: Las Vegas, Nevada - with 40 million annual visitors - has a lower crime rate than US tourist destinations with no casinos such as Miami, Honolulu, New Orleans and Phoenix. A University of Maryland study said: 'In no case is there any evidence that casinos have had a major impact on the crime rates.'

Embezzlement and Fraud: Professors Hoon and Ho called this 'a well-known problem associated with having a casino'. The FBI crime reporting unit, however, found that from 1988 to 1996, casino jurisdictions reported a DECREASE in fraud and forgery whereas the nation as a whole reported significant INCREASES. A study at Virginia Commonwealth University in the US also found that casinos did NOT lead to an increase in 'embezzlement, forgery and fraud'.

Bankruptcy: The National Opinion Research Centre (NORC) at the University of Chicago found that instances of bankruptcies were no greater in communities with casinos than in those without casinos.

Compulsive gambling: The Harvard Medical School's Division of Addictions estimated that only 1.29 per cent of the population could be classified as having serious pathological gambling problems. Another study by NORC said: 'The availability of casinos within driving distance does not appear to affect prevalence rates (of compulsive gambling).'

Social Cost: NORC estimates that in the US, the social cost of alcohol abuse is 33 times the social cost of casinos.

Tourism: NORC found that cities with casinos had 43 per cent higher earnings in their hotel sectors than cities with no casinos.

Economic impact: A US congressional study concluded: 'The gambling industry has emerged as an economic mainstay in many communities and plays an increasingly prominent role in economies.'

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