Gambling in America
Costs and Benefits
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:12th Jan '04
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This hardback is available in another edition too:
- Paperback£30.99(9780521124171)
The book documents that social costs of casino gambling outweigh their social benefits.
Gambling in America explains why the public decision making process governing the issue of casino gambling tends to lead to wrong outcomes and why the studies typically provided to justify the phenomenon are conceptually flawed. Professor Grinols documents that the social costs of casino gambling considerably outweigh their social benefits.Gambling in America carefully breaks ground by developing analytical tools to assess the benefits and costs of the economic and social changes introduced by casino gambling in monetary terms, linking them to individual households' utility and well-being. Since casinos are associated with unintended and often negative economic consequences, these factors are incorporated into the discussion. The book also shows how amenity benefits - for casinos, the benefit to consumers of closer proximity - enter the evaluation. Other topics include agent incentives and public decision making, conceptual clarifications about economic development, cost-benefit analysis, and net export multiplier models. Professor Grinols finds that, in considering all relevant factors, the social costs of casino gambling outweigh their social benefits.
'Earl L. Grinols is … clearly a man of great influence on significant American decision-makers. Gambling in America is a personal quest - a worthy, earnest and quietly passionate look at how we should examine the industry and make decisions about expanding casino empires.' Sam Marsden, jackpot.co.uk
ISBN: 9780521830133
Dimensions: 235mm x 160mm x 21mm
Weight: 547g
248 pages