Gaming the Lottery

The Global Gamble

Purchasing a lottery ticket is, for millions of people worldwide, a part of daily life.

Gaming the Lottery

Gaming the Lottery: Billions pour into SA Olympic body’s coffers

The South African Sports Confederation and Olympic Committee (Sascoc) has received more money than any other organisation since the SA Lottery was launched in 2002. Out of a total of R5.6-billion allocated under the Sports and Recreation category, about R2-billion of this went to SASCOC and its affiliates.

Gaming the Lottery

Jackpot Tax Avoidance: how One Lottery Company Hides Its Billions

The research mirrors studies from the United States and Europe that suggest lotteries can amount to a regressive tax. In the U.S., where lottery tickets are heavily taxed, state-run lottery revenues often exceed corporate income taxes. In South Africa, the poor are sold on “a dream” that, in the words of the National Gambling Board, which oversees the country’s gambling industry, is “consciously and perhaps irresponsibly manipulated” by the national lottery’s aggressive advertising. Some of the revenue fills government coffers. But the companies involved get an arguably bigger jackpot: As of 2014, the global lottery industry was worth roughly $300 billion. This gamble, though, may in fact be a swindle. While lotteries function essentially as a tax on poor citizens, some of the big companies that dominate the industry engage in aggressive tax avoidance to ensure they pay very little. GTech, a U.S.-based lottery titan that operates jackpots in 100 countries, has been the subject of controversies stretching back decades.

Gaming the Lottery

INFOGRAPHIC: Who plays the lottery?

The lottery in South Africa is hugely supported by poor and low income earners, with 73% of players earning less than R5,000 a month – and of those 33% earn R1,000 a month or less.

Gaming the Lottery

TOOL: About the South African Lottery

When the South African Lottery was launched in South Africa in March 2000 it outlawed most other lotteries games and scratch cards, which badly affected some non-profit organisations that were using these types of games for fund raising.

Gaming the Lottery

The global lottery industry’s little-known nerve centre

If the global lottery industry is a living organism, a strong argument can be made that its nerve center is Basel, Switzerland.

Gaming the Lottery

Gaming the system

Though more than 75% of South Africans surveyed by the NGB played the lottery, unlike other forms of gambling, the purpose was not recreational but an attempt to change life circumstances.

Gaming the Lottery

Gaming the lottery: Behind the story

Few activities are more deeply ingrained into daily life in many countries around the world than purchasing a lottery ticket.

Gaming the Lottery

Lottery supporters march against journalists who exposed corruption

Memo calls on Ebrahim Patel not to suspend the National Lottery Commission’s board

Gaming the Lottery

Gaming the poor

A randomised study of lottery participation conducted by the University of South Africa (UNISA) found that in 2010, nearly three quarters of lottery players earned less than R 5,000 a month – and of those 33 percent earn R1000 a month or less.
The study’s findings add to scholarly work from the United States and Europe demonstrating that lotteries can amount to a regressive tax that, while not imposed by law, is sanctioned by participating governments using advertising campaigns that even the National Gambling Board (NGB) describes as, “perhaps irresponsible… manipulative.”
That poor people across the planet are overrepresented among the ranks of lottery players may not be a surprise. Far less known is known about the presence and activities of GTech, a lottery titan involved in 100 countries around the globe and the subject of controversies stretching back decades.
An exclusive analysis of public financial documents conducted in 2016 shows that the company, which completed a merger in 2015 with gaming giant International Game Technology (IGT), has avoided hundreds of millions of dollars in taxes through financial maneuvers. IGT is currently the main technology supplier for lottery systems and support for Ithuba, the company that currently runs the SA lottery.
The process through which the merger happened appears to show aggressive tax avoidance, involving slashing corporate tax rates in half while keeping billions hidden from the taxman.