About
A lottery is a system of drawing numbers to determine who wins a prize. It’s an activity with a long history, and has been employed to distribute everything from land to slaves to baseball draft picks to college football teams. The modern lottery began in New Hampshire in 1964, and is a major source of funding for public projects. It is a popular activity, but also has a dark underbelly. The lottery is an exercise in futility that makes people feel like they must play to be able to improve their lives, even when the odds are astronomical against winning.
It is a lucrative business, and the state’s advertising strategy necessarily focuses on persuading people to spend money they could otherwise put toward their living expenses or retirement savings. A lottery habit of just $20 a month can wipe out a modest income, and make it impossible to pay off debt or save for a rainy day.
The lottery’s players are disproportionately low-income, less educated, and nonwhite. And research shows that people tend to minimize their personal responsibility for negative outcomes by attributing them to luck, rather than their own decision making.