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by slg
1405 days ago
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A 30% return on the amount spent on tickets would not improve quality of life drastically for most people. Winning a big jackpot would. That creates a situation in which expected value might not be the best metric. Measuring it in expected quality of life, for example, would favor playing for many people including likely most reading this. |
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From The Washington Post [1] (the links to the source studies are unfortunately broken): "When a team of economists tracked the fortunes of financially distressed people in Florida who had won the lottery, they found that within three to five years, the winners of big prizes (between $50,000 and $150,000) were equally likely to have filed for bankruptcy as the small winners, and the groups had similarly low savings and levels of debt. According to the National Endowment for Financial Education, about 70 percent of people who win a lottery or receive a large windfall go bankrupt within a few years."
However, I concede that if you win the lottery and spend it wisely (e.g. maybe invest virtually all of it and live off the interest spent reasonably), it's plausible it can greatly improve quality of life. So, assuming one acts carefully when receiving the large windfall, I agree with you now that buying lottery tickets is plausibly a good idea.
[1] https://www.washingtonpost.com/outlook/five-myths/five-myths...