No Matter Who Takes Home a Record Lottery Prize, the Government Always Wins

Via Reason

Richard B. Levine/Newscom

At some point in the near future, the record-high Mega Millions jackpot is going to make someone very, very rich. But as is usually the case when it comes to the lottery, the biggest winner will be the government.

First, a disclaimer: Later today, I fully intend to stop by a convenience store and spend $2 on a Mega Millions ticket. The allure of $1.6 billion is too much, even if my odds of winning the top prize are just 1 in 302,575,350. I might even buy a Powerball ticket too, because $620 million doesn’t sound like a bad payout either.

But before you run out and emulate me, there are a few things us suckers need to keep in mind about the lotto.

First, the majority of lottery revenue goes back to the government. In 2015, The Atlantic estimated that 40 percent of all lottery ticket sales are allocated to state governments. As Steven Greenhut, western region director for the R Street Institute, explained in a 2016 piece for Reason, this “voluntary tax” to support education is supposed to be a positive. But politicians often use lottery revenues to supplant school budgets. As Greenhut put it: “Money is fungible, so the education element mainly is a public-relations ploy to help people feel good about the dollars they spend on tickets.”

Direct ticket sales aren’t the only way the government profits from the lottery system. Say I were the sole winner of the $1.6 billion jackpot (lucky me). I could opt to receive either a lump sum payment of about $905 million or 30 annual payments averaging about $53,333,333 each, according to the Mega Millions website.

Either way, I’d get hit with a 24 percent federal withholding tax. That would subtract nearly $13 million from each of my annual payments or $217 million from the lump sum. And the top income tax rate is 37 percent, so I’d have to pay the difference between the two rates as well. That would leave me with “just” over $570 million, assuming I took the lump sum.

Then there are the state taxes. A total of nine states don’t take a cut of lottery prizes, but the tax rates for the remaining 41 vary. New York’s 8.82 percent tax on lottery winnings—the highest in the country—means my final lump sum payout would be about $490 million. The remaining $1.11 billion, plus the 40 percent of ticket sales supposedly allocated to education and other causes, would end up in the hands of the federal and New York state governments.

Meanwhile, some states that allow lotteries crush their competition with strict gambling regulations. In Texas, for instance, most forms of gambling are illegal. This means the government has a near-monopoly. The double standard for public and private gambling operations is obvious.

Ultimately, the lottery system is a kind of regressive tax on low-income earners. “If the promised return is by far illusory—and it is—it would be hard to argue that those purchases do not constitute a tax on those who believe the state’s hype,” Fiscal Policy Institute research associate Brent Kramer wrote in 2010, according to MarketWatch.

As Reason‘s Katherine Mangu-Ward noted in a 2012 appearance on NBC, “The people who can afford it the least are the people who are dumping the most money into the lottery.” Poor people, of course, have every right to dream big. But while the lottery promises a chance—albeit a small one—to gain untold riches, it’s always going to be the government that benefits the most.

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14 Comments
BL
BL
October 23, 2018 8:25 pm

If I win, I’m buying a small country………everything will be bright white and happy. (wink, wink)

Stucky is not allowed until I am elevated from #98 of 100 to top ten at least in the TBP important people who’s who list. 🙂

Donkey Balls
Donkey Balls
October 23, 2018 8:39 pm

Question:

Is there proof or at least a study showing people experiencing psychological or motivational harm playing games of chance like the lottery?

EL Coyote
EL Coyote
October 23, 2018 9:44 pm

Nobody here will win. Move on.

mangledman
mangledman
  EL Coyote
October 23, 2018 10:19 pm

I heard the state gets 49% the winner gets 51% I believe know some people that won in FL, and I didn’t see much enthusiasm for someone that just got a lifeline.

Al
Al
October 23, 2018 10:09 pm

I would have all of my half winnings spent within 3 months….

A roll of Toilet paper has more worth than a dollar bill…

Fiat currencies have always failed and our time with them is about to end…

Abruptly…

Nov 2018 is when the Reset beggins…

Cash will be king for the first while after that physical goods that people need to live…

The end of fiat currencies is upon us

Anonymous
Anonymous
October 24, 2018 8:47 am

Funny how the lottery money at the state level supposedly goes toward education.
And yet, public education system always needs more funding, and the teachers union always seems to bitch about how poorly they are paid, and how stressed & overworked they are. With 3 months off in the Summer. Hmmm.

Funny how the bulk of property taxes goes toward local public school funding, too.
And there’s always a new millage or bond proposal at the local level for the schools.

Temptations sang: “And the politicians say: More taxes will solve everything…and the band played on.”

Last night’s “Frontline” episode detailed just how bankrupt the Kentucky State pension plan is,
for cops, firemen, teachers, and all the other public servant employees, courtesy of Wall Street hedge fund fees,
plus losses from the tech bust of 2000, the housing crash of 2008.

30-40% haircut, after both crisis for all ‘investors’, besides the large pool of cash in State pension plans. Ouch.
Man, the carnage, when the next financial crisis hits.

KY Governor: Illinois is next, then New York, then …
The money is simply not there, and legacy defined benefit pension plans are broke.
The promises made will not be kept. They can bitch all they want, but they’re screwed. We all are.

As a worker in the private sector with no pension, just a simple 401k with no guarantee there, either,
I just don’t care about your retirement loss of bennies, teach.
I have no more shits left to give, and no more taxes left to pay, either.

Don’t even get started on how the sick-care industry has raped the masses, as costs go ballistic, with the
quality of care degrading to a crap shoot, if you’re in need of medical expertise.
Funny, too, how the hospitals have grown to ‘too big to fail’, just like the mega banks, where the corporate bottom line is the only priority, as their footprint grows ever larger.
Vampire squids are thriving.
Corruption and Greed are rampant.

Small wonder lotto players seek an escape from financial pain, praying for an epic windfall.

Yes, it’s a Ball of Confusion, and not funny how history repeats. Cycles. Increasing frequency and intensity.

end of rant.

Stucky
Stucky
October 24, 2018 12:27 pm

For the second time in the past 10 years I bought a $2 lottery ticket.

Winning number: 05 28 62 65 70 05
MY numbers: — 20 23 24 34 53 10

In other words, not even one fucken number matched. Goddamned rigged game!!!

Funny thing about playing the lotto … I bought the ticket yesterday morning …. and I thought about what I would do if I won pretty much all day long. Right up into the evening, and even when I went to bed. I fell asleep thinking that I just COULD win it this morning. Really. Not kidding. The lure of riches, fast and easy money … goddamn, that can be horribly addicting and destructive. I was actually depressed when I read my numbers.

I’m buying a Powerball this afternoon. Why not? I want to daydream about Rich Stucky just one more day. After that, I’m never ever buying another lotto ticket again. I swear.

Fiatman60
Fiatman60
October 24, 2018 12:31 pm

After tax dollars that get taxed AGAIN!!!
What a surprise!!

Gerold
Gerold
October 24, 2018 1:15 pm

Lottery = fools’ tax.
Ya got as much chance of winning if you buy a ticket as not.