The Timaru Herald

Average punt matches cost of dinner

- Tom Pullar-Strecker

Lotto customers are spending an average of $14 on each purchase, the Lotteries Commission has revealed.

The sum is just $1 less than the budget set by supermarke­t chain Countdown for menu suggestion­s for a family dinner for four.

Giving evidence to Parliament’s social services select committee, Lotteries Commission chief executive Chris Lyman said its model was based on ‘‘a large number of people spending a small amount of money with a small chance to win big’’.

But he acknowledg­ed its average expenditur­e per transactio­n had been gradually tracking up.

Suggested prices for popular ‘‘triple dip’’ Powerball options on MyLotto range from $16 to $28.

Total Lotto sales – across all its games – jumped 28 per cent over two years, to total almost $1.25 billion in the year to June 2018.

Problem Gambling Foundation marketing director Andree Froude said $14 would be a significan­t portion of some people’s weekly budget.

Lotto’s maximum allowed spending limit of $150 a week, including $50 on instant games, was ‘‘quite high’’, she said. ‘‘If that money is coming out of poor communitie­s there is a really good chance it is going to be spent by people who can’t afford it.’’

Lyman said the Government had let the commission retain $8 million from its revenues for an overhaul of its core gaming system and its ‘‘aging’’ internet gaming platform.

Lyman and commission chairman Matthew Boyd stated in the commission’s annual report that they wanted to make buying Lotto products ‘‘easier and more convenient’’, and to reduce the commission’s dependency on ‘‘jackpot-fuelled growth’’.

‘‘There will be a focus on increasing diversific­ation through ensuring our game portfolio and brand experience­s continue to be compatible with the lifestyle and needs of today’s New Zealanders,’’ they said.

But addressing MPs, Lyman emphasised the tools that its new technology platform would offer to combat problem gambling.

The new platform, which should be completed by May next year, would use data and artificial intelligen­ce to allow players to be ‘‘better informed’’, he said.

Commission spokeswoma­n Kirsten Robinson said it would not be possible to quantify how much of the cost of the new system would be accounted for by specific functions, such as harm minimisati­on.

Lyman said online sales now accounted for 20 per cent of the commission’s overall revenues.

 ??  ?? The Lotteries Commission says its model is based on a lot of people spending a small amount.
The Lotteries Commission says its model is based on a lot of people spending a small amount.

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