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Radio Singapore International, 10 Jul 04

The gambling culture in Singapore
One young Singaporean's study

In this edition of Young Expressions, one young Singaporean’s move to study the gambling culture in Singapore. And later, what operating a casino means for Singapore.

Welcome to the program, I’m Melanie Yip.

A sociology graduate from the National University of Singapore was intrigued by what he observed at a local supermarket. Denny Ho Teck Hua was standing outside the supermarket and he noticed a long queue there. There were no signs indicating that this was the location of a betting outlet. Yet he found people queuing to try their luck, during lunch time, dinner or even during working hours.

So Denny (DH) decided to study the gambling culture in Singapore for his honors degree research.

DH: The first comment I got from my thesis supervisor was “are you serious about doing this subject?? And I was quite shocked because I couldn’t find any existing research and he cautioned that it may be difficult to gain access to information, both from the legal and illegal gambling operations. I found out through the hard way.

Denny also interviewed some illegal gambling operators.

DH: Gaining the respondents was one of the most difficult aspects of my research as the underground operators were afraid of getting caught. It was understandable. They would ask me if I was part of the government, or a police officer, how did I know of their existence, who told them, who rattled on them? I needed to answer all these questions, I needed to pacify and assure them that this was for my academic research. They will also ask “what do I get out of helping you?? Actually, in real fact, they do not get any real benefits by talking to me, so it was hard at first convincing them.

During the course of Denny's research, he discovered that youths as young as 15 were immersed in the gambling culture.

DH: One of my respondents was a 15 year old kid, going on 16. And he was gambling on both ends, legal and illegal. Basically, what he did was he asked his older friends to place bets for him, and to claim the prize money for him. But there is a tendency to switch to illegal betting. After some time of betting via legal means, he was more involved in the betting culture. He gained access to the underground avenues, and started betting with illegal operators.

And the process continued when the same boy made a worrying transition into the gambling career

DH: Subsequently, he goes into what I term the transition into career gambling, he starts collecting bets from his friends, and betting with illegal operators, taking a cut of the money. So he is slowly becoming a professional runner for the bookies in Singapore. He denies that he is a runner and insists he is helping his friends, but when you see his rationale, if he’s collecting bets and taking money out of it, he is on his way to becoming a runner, if he is not now.

As the case showed, gambling can be addictive, and young people could find themselves pursuing a gambling career if left unchecked.

So what can be done to prevent this? Denny suggests

DH: The only advice / restriction from the legal operators is responsible gambling. They tell people to gamble within their means. But when compared to smoking, one stick is one stick too much. And compare that to drunk driving, one drink is one drink too many, be safe. What about gambling? You’re telling people to gauge within your own means, so does it raise any dangers. When you gamble, statistically, you lose in the long run. If you spend S$50 on gambling, could the money be used for better purposes or on your family. By saying that you are gambling S$50 on legal avenues, S$5 is donated to the underprivileged. So you are essentially giving S$45 away.

Meanwhile, Singapore is studying the feasibility of building a casino in the country. And this proposal has sparked off a debate on whether the economic benefits outweigh the social costs.

Professor Jan McMillen (JM) is the Director of the Center for Gaming Research at the Australian National University. She sees the necessity of putting proper regulations in place before opening a casino.

JM: The answer really lies in the policies and the regulations in place. If we do not have proper policies, of course social problems would occur. But we’ve demonstrated in various parts of the world that if the government thinks ahead, and puts proper policies in place, even before the casino starts to operate, a lot of those social problems can be prevented or minimized. For instance, in America, casinos tend to attract a lot of community crime. In Australia, they don’t. In fact, in Australia, the casinos are probably the safest place in the major cities because the governments have introduced good policies, good regulations to prevent street disorder, crime inside the casino, and outside the casino. The same with problem gambling, if Singapore is prepared to put efforts into some very carefully planned policies to prevent problem gambling, they can be minimized. And in fact, the problems can be a lot less than with the existing illegal gambling operations that are already there.

In fact, some have argued that having a casino can also reduce the possibility of people indulging in online or illegal gambling.

Professor McMillen agrees.

JM: If you have a fairly active illegal gambling market, and you regulate it well, you can prevent and minimize social problems associated with the illegal market. So I think it is likely to occur in Singapore as well. Not completely, mind you, there is always going to be illegal gambling but if you have a well-regulated, well run legal facilities, most citizens would prefer to gamble there, with the legal operators.

On the issue of who frequents the casino, she cites the experiences of casinos in other countries.

JM: In the United States ?Nevada and New Jersey ?casinos attract a lot of international tourists but particularly domestic tourists because casinos aren’t readily available in the rest of the country, so people from one side of America will travel to Nevada to gamble every year. In Australia, we have casinos spread all over the country; it’s the locals who are the main visitors. They are perhaps two or three casinos in Australia that do attract tourists but if at the most, it’ll be 10% of revenue coming from tourists. In Europe, they have a different approach. They restrict entry to casinos only to tourists, and people from other countries. So the locals don’t go there. Even if locals are allowed into the casinos, they need to pay an entrance fee that is a disincentive.

In the final analysis, the burning question is “Will the economic benefits of building a casino in Singapore outweigh the social costs.

Professor McMillen offers her perspective.

JM: This is a question for Singapore about whether they go ahead and build a casino so that they don’t lose revenue, or whether they have a casino that provides the same sorts of attractions as other countries. There are several countries in Asia that are moving towards having casinos, and if that occurs, Singapore could be disadvantaged because Singaporeans would go to casinos in other countries. And all the casinos in Australia, New Zealand and South Africa, it’s the locals who patronize the casinos. A very small percentage of revenue comes from people from other countries. So it’s more of stopping the money from draining out of Singapore and to make the Singapore tourism industry competitive with the industry in other countries. Professor Jan McMillen, Director of the Center for Gambling Research at the Australian National University.

You’ve been listening to Young Expressions. Join me at the same time, next week. I’m Melanie Yip for Radio Singapore International.

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