Las Vegas Review-Journal

Australian­s’ gambling losses spur some to seek action

- By Adam Baidawi New York Times News Service

MELBOURNE, Australia — In pockets of suburbia all across Australia, electronic gambling machines known as pokies await their many customers in pubs, hotels and sports clubs, as common a fixture as ATMS in a shopping mall.

But the unremarkab­le machines contribute to an extraordin­ary level of gambling. Government statistics show that they account for more than half of individual Australian­s’ annual gambling losses, a gargantuan 24 billion Australian dollars ($18.4 billion). On a per-capita basis, Australian­s lose far and away the most in the world: more than AU$1,200 ($920) every year.

Australia’s gambling losses per adult are more than double those in the United States, and around 50 percent higher than second-placed Singapore, according to H2 Gambling Capital, an analytics company.

As those figures swell, a public war is brewing between venue operators and people against gambling, with each trying to win the hearts and minds of state government­s that rely on revenue from the machines.

The electronic gaming machines are similar to slot machines seen in casinos elsewhere. Pokies are not the only major form of gambling in Australia — casinos account for around 20 percent of gambling losses here — but they remain by far the most profitable for operators and most damaging for gamblers, gaming opponents say. And they permeate small towns with a prominence that is unmatched around the world.

“What makes Australia unique is that we’ve allowed these machines to be embedded in our local communitie­s,” said Angela Rintoul, a research fellow at the Australian Gambling Research Center, a government-financed organizati­on. “We haven’t contained them just to casinos, where many jurisdicti­ons in the world have.”

In Australia, the pubs, clubs and hotels that house the machines usually resemble typical English pubs, replete with a bar and dining area but with the addition of a dedicated gaming room.

“Often, Australian­s don’t real-

 ?? ASANKA BRENDON RATNAYAKE / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Players sit at electronic gaming machines March 26 in Australia. Legalized gambling, including from electronic gaming machines known as pokies, is an important source of tax revenues for Australian states and territorie­s.
ASANKA BRENDON RATNAYAKE / THE NEW YORK TIMES Players sit at electronic gaming machines March 26 in Australia. Legalized gambling, including from electronic gaming machines known as pokies, is an important source of tax revenues for Australian states and territorie­s.

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