Freakonomics Radio - Is America Ready for a “No-Lose Lottery”? (Update)
Episode Date: November 23, 2017Most people don't enjoy the simple, boring act of putting money in a savings account. But we do love to play the lottery. So what if you combine the two, creating a new kind of savings account with a ...lottery payout?
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One of our favorite things to do on this show is present a new idea or maybe a new way to think about an old problem.
Way back in 2010, the first year we made Freakonomics Radio, we did such an episode.
Unbeknownst to us, one of the people who heard it was so inspired by the idea that he would spend much of the next seven years turning it into something real.
Knowing that this had been a podcast that turned into an idea that ended up becoming a constitutional amendment and that I had a piece of that thing that had happened, it was just super exciting.
That's Michael Gaudini.
Yeah, and I am a policy advisor with the city of Austin.
In 2010, he was a 21-year-old college senior in Pennsylvania, interning in a state legislative office.
And I was really kind of trying to get involved more in public policy at the time.
And I listened to the Free Economics podcast on PrizeLink Savings, and I thought it was a really cool idea that was pretty common sense.
And what you may be wondering is PrizeLink Savings?
So PrizeLink Savings account is basically just a savings account in which you're incentivized to
put more money into your savings account. The incentive comes in the form of cash payouts,
kind of like a lottery, but unlike a lottery in that even if you don't win,
you still have your principal. We kind of wanted to harness the same type of feeling that you get
when you play the lottery. And I thought that it just made sense and had the potential to have like
a broad spectrum of support across like no matter what part of the aisle you sat on. Gaudini happened
to sit on the Democratic side of the aisle,
first in Pennsylvania, where he pitched the idea,
and then when he moved to Texas to work in the state legislature there.
He was patient and stuck with it through the very slow political process.
Finally, this November, he was on the ballot in Texas.
Proposition number seven was an authorizing amendment
that would allow banks and credit unions in the state of Texas to offer prize-linked savings accounts as a savings option for folks that have accounts there.
And it passed by, I think, a pretty solid margin.
I think it was something around 60 percent in favor.
And so here we are today.
So here we are today. So here we are today. We thought, therefore, it might be nice to replay for you the original episode that inspired 21-year-old Michael Gaudini.
Who knows? Maybe you'll be inspired to do something with it.
There's something Peter Tufano wants to know about you.
If you had to, could you come up with $2,000 in 30 days?
That's the question he asked a whole bunch of people in 13 countries, including the U.S.
Why $2,000? Because an auto transmission is about $1,500.
Most estimates of what everyday emergencies are about are in that order of magnitude.
If you were to have a sick or ailing relative on the other side of the country and you had to buy full price plane tickets, it could easily be that amount. And then why this
language come up with as opposed to save? Because what we wanted to see if people had access to
resources between savings and credit and friends and family. And about half of Americans are not
able to come up with $2,000 in 30 days, which means that they stand only one emergency or crisis away from
really quite dire circumstances. This isn't picked up in the national economic statistics. This is
picked up at a much more local level, at a much more intimate level at what happens inside families.
It's this lack of savings, as it were, that motivates me.
Tofano is all about the motivation.
He's a professor at the Said School of Business at Oxford, and one of his specialties is consumer
finance.
He wants to know how many checks you write and for what, how much you borrow and why.
And he wants to know how much you spend on beer, on toys, or on lottery tickets.
From WNYC Studios, this is Freakonomics Radio, the podcast that explores the hidden side of everything.
Here's your host, Stephen Dubner.
Americans are generally terrible at saving money. Think about what Peter Tufano just said.
Half our country doesn't have enough money in the bank to survive one breakdown. And it's not just poor people. In Tufano's survey, only 25% of the people who earn between $100,000 and $150,000 a year
could come up with that $2,000 in 30 days. We are, however, excellent at spending money.
Houses, cars, clothes, books, electronics, and lottery tickets. Households that play the lottery spend, on average, about $1,000 a year on tickets.
That's more than a typical household spends in grocery stores on dairy products and beer
combined. This year, Americans will buy about $60 billion worth of lottery tickets.
The other day, I went to a store at Penn Station in New York called Carlton Cards.
It's pretty big. In the back, there are rack upon rack of greeting cards and some candy bins,
but there weren't any customers back there. All the customers were jammed up front at the lottery
counters. According to the New York State Lottery, Carlton Cards sells more lottery tickets than any other store in New York.
Kareet Prejabadi is one of the managers.
I asked him how much lottery revenue does his store take in in a year.
It's about $8 to $9 million a year.
Holy crap. $8 to $9 million a year in lottery sales in one store in Penn Station.
Yes.
Okay, you see people buying tickets all day. You see winners a lot. Tell me how excited they are when they win. When they win, they forget about
all those losses and they get excited like they win something. Whatever they lose, but they just
care about their win. They give you a hug, they give you a kiss? Not really, just handshake
probably sometimes. That's probably all, you really probably don't want the hugger. No, not really.
When I was in graduate school, there was a local little store by, you know, my graduate student housing unit.
And I would stop there on the way home and pick up milk and orange juice and notice lots of people buying lottery tickets.
This is Melissa Carney. She teaches economics at the University of Maryland.
And so I just sort of started chatting with the vendor and he said, oh, I have people coming in spending hundreds, thousands of dollars on lottery tickets a month, a year.
And so being a graduate student, I just downloaded some data and started playing around and was struck in particular people do spend a lot of money buying lottery tickets.
And so it was just sort of a passing curiosity. Really, I started wondering about what were they not buying in order to buy lottery tickets. And so it was just sort of a passing curiosity, really, I started wondering about what were they not buying in order to buy lottery tickets.
So let's walk through some of the numbers on lottery gambling. In the U.S.,
how many people play the lottery?
Half of U.S. adults surveyed say they play the lottery at some point in the past year.
And would that make it the most popular form of gambling in the U.S.?
Yeah, so by far. So two out of three American adults report gambling. And would that make it the most popular form of gambling in the U.S.? Yeah, so by far. So
two out of three American adults report gambling, and it's 50 percent say they play lottery. The
next closest is casino, which is, you know, about one in five adults. Why do so many people play the
lottery? Because it's fun. For a dollar or two, you buy the chance to dream. Big.
This remarkable bargain illustrates a phenomenon, a probabilistic oddity that economists call skewness.
That's the idea that there's some big prize way out there that corresponds to a very small odd, but there's some potential of capturing that.
And that's what your
typical, you know, money market account can't give you, right? So you could, you can have $1,500
in your money market account, and every month you might earn, you know, a dollar on it. But there's
no chance in every month will you earn $100,000 or even $10,000. Now, I know as an economist,
you're not trained to answer this question,
but as a human being, tell me, why is skewness so important to us?
That's the chance of changing your life, right? That's the return, you know, that's the big win
outcome that might allow you to buy a beach house or, you know, to send your kids to college.
You know, or if it's less far out in the distribution,
that might be what you need to make a down payment on a house or buy a car
or throw your daughter the wedding you want to throw her.
For a lot of people, skewness has an irresistible appeal.
And so a handful of researchers like Melissa Carney are trying to harness its power,
the unlikely chance of changing your life with a big prize in order to solve America's low savings rate.
The idea is a new financial product that combines the thrill of the lottery with the goal of, say, accumulating more than $2,000 in a savings account so that a broken transmission doesn't become a full-blown
crisis. Here's Carney's pitch. So we know Americans like gambling. They always have.
The majority of them do it, and they're going to keep doing it. And so what we do is take
seriously the idea that people want some small chance of winning a large sum of money. That market,
that asset is missing from the American landscape. Low wealth individuals, the only asset available
to them that gives them some chance of accumulating a large amount of money is the state lottery.
And in fact, a recent national survey of
a thousand adults, one in five American adults said their greatest chance of accumulating,
you know, hundreds of thousands of dollars was through the lottery. That number jumps to 40%
for folks making less than $25,000 a year. So, you know, a lot of Americans think the lottery
is their only chance at winning big sums of money. Why don't we take that appetite for gambling, for a product like this, and attach it to a savings vehicle that
offers some positive return? It's a win-win situation. That win-win situation and the
chance to make it happen in the U.S. has generated a lot of enthusiasm among economists like Carney
and Peter Tufano. He's the man who's been researching what are called prize-linked
savings, or PLS, all over the world. I started in the U.K. because they have a product called
premium bonds, which has been around for about 50 years, a little bit more, and where the government
offers a savings product to investors, which at first glance would look almost perverse. Give us your money and we promise you no interest. But that's not quite
how the program works because it's give us your money, you can take your money out at any time,
and each month we're going to take basically the interest pool and we're going to lottery it off
so that one lucky person will become a millionaire. And literally every month,
someone in Britain gets a knock on their door from Mr. Million or Millionaire who tells them that they've won the million pound
prize. There are, I believe, over 100,000 other people in the UK who find that they've learned
smaller prizes. This was an intriguing concept. And so the research that I'd done tried to
understand, was this more like gambling or savings? Bottom line, it's both. Then this travel took me to
South Africa where I met Robert Kipe, and he was creating a product called Mama, the million a
month account. And I think in a word or in a phrase, he described the entire economics and
in some sense, the value proposition for savers quite simply, everything to gain, nothing to lose.
It's a savings account where you can take your money out when you'd like.
You always have access to your principal and it will never go down in value. You may come out with
a little bit of interest or you may come out with a little bit of a payment. You may come out with a
remarkably large payment, but you can only go up and you can never go down.
And then in respect to the extensive work on behavioral economics and behavioral
finance, the logic of this product is quite obvious. People have what's called loss aversion.
They much prefer to protect against losses than to worry about gains. They tend to misestimate
small probabilities. But when you put it all together in very plain English, people would
rather have a small chance at a life-changing payout than an almost certainty of a pittance.
So I can be guaranteed in this interest rate environment to put my money away and maybe be able to buy a coffee with the amount of interest that might come off a $100 account. whereas I'm willing to say I'll give up that interest, but there's some possibility, remote as it might be,
that I might be able to have a life-changing payout, an amount that would allow me to buy a car or a house or even more.
So this preference for highly skewed payoffs or the kind of payoffs that would normally be present in gambling or lottery products,
when combined with savings, turned out to be tremendously effective around the world. But it was completely
absent for legal reasons in the United States. So what are those legal reasons? As Tufano
discovered, state law typically prohibits something like a prize-linked savings account
because it's a lottery.
And according to state laws, the only legal lottery is a lottery that's run by the state itself.
Nice monopoly if you can get it, right?
You can hardly blame states for keeping lotteries to themselves.
They generate billions in revenues.
And so while most states might like to help their citizens save more money,
they may not be willing to pit their
own lotteries against ones that might be run by, say, a bank. But as Tufano discovered,
in the state of Michigan, there was a loophole. In 2009, he got a group of credit unions to pilot
the idea. Here's Dave Adams, CEO of the Michigan Credit Union League.
You know, banking can actually be pretty boring. It's not like we go to social events
and talk about how much we're saving
and talk about a great new feature
on our new checking account.
It's banking services are pretty mundane.
So what people want and need is a fun way to save.
And in Michigan, we've come up with
what we think will accomplish that.
It's a program called Save to Win.
And what it is,
is it's using a lottery concept so that if someone saves for every $25 they put into one of these one-year certificates of deposit, they're going to get a chance at cash prizes. And the cash prizes
are given out every month by participating credit unions, ranging from $50 to $500. And then there's a grand prize
at the end of the year, an opportunity to win a $100,000 grand prize. So Save to Win gives people
what they need, which is they need to save more while giving them what they want, which is a fun
way to do it, a game of chance that makes it interesting to save. Something that you will want to talk
about at a party. Say, hey, I want 100 grand. Exactly. Yeah. Exactly. So you're making savings
sexy by introducing a lottery element. I think so. I think, I don't know if it's, so far as to
say that it's sexy, but it's certainly far better than talking about the 0.5% that I'm getting on
my savings account at the bank. So now you're getting
a competitive interest rate. You're doing what you know you need to do, which is to be more
responsible in the way that you save and plan for the future. But gee, you're getting a chance at
some of these cash prizes, including a chance at $100,000 cash prize. And the odds of winning
are much better than what you would see if you were buying lotto
tickets. Even with the sputtering 2009 economy and low interest rates, a handful of credit unions
in Michigan opened 15,000 new savings accounts. We spoke with the first big winner of the Save
to Win program, 87-year-old Billy June Smith.
So you put $75 of your own money into a credit union savings account.
Right.
And as a result, you were entered into a lottery for which you won $100,000.
Right.
Well, that sounds like a pretty good deal to me.
What do you think?
Well, it is.
It has helped me a lot.
Now tell me what you've done with the money, Billy.
Well, I've had to replace the furnace just a month ago, and I've put my money aside for the taxes.
And I do have another savings that I don't touch for just so long.
And I can add to it then.
When Save to Win surveyed some of its customers, they learned that more than 60% of them had either played the lottery or gambled in the previous six months.
55%, meanwhile, had had no savings plan.
Save to Win was beating its goals and reaching the customers it was supposed to reach.
It makes you wonder, what would happen if a program like this took over an entire country?
Well, my name is Robert Cape.
I worked at First National Bank for 11 years years where I headed up the investment product house, which was a business unit that really focused on retail deposits, both consumer and corporate deposits.
And our focus was trying to look at ways of growing the funding base of the bank. First National Bank, or FNB, is in South Africa.
In 2005, it started what would turn out to be
a phenomenally successful prize-linked savings program.
It was born out of South Africa's financial problems
as the country struggled to put the apartheid era behind it.
Millions and millions of black South Africans
did not use banks for anything. Robert
Cape wanted to find a way to get some of them in the door. Now, in South Africa, because so
much of the population is unbanked, so much of the savings are literally sitting under mattresses. Now, this has got a double effect.
The one that it does really do badly at is it removes that funding
from the mainstream banking environment.
So it can't be harnessed to lend out and fund economic growth
because retail funding tends to come in from consumers
and then get lent out to businesses who can then create jobs.
So that was the one problem.
And the second problem was really that these people with the money under their bank accounts
were excluded from the banking system.
And by being excluded from the banking system, you miss out on so many benefits
which really help with people's individual development.
For example, developing credit records, being less exposed to having your money stolen or lost on the way home.
But Cape's bank had a problem.
Interest rates at the time weren't keeping up with inflation,
so putting your money in a plain old savings account might actually erode its value.
Cape's job was to make it worthwhile for customers to deposit new money.
So instead of simply offering an account with a scrawny interest rate, he'd offer an account with practically no interest rate at all, but it came with the chance for a really big payday.
So what we did, we literally pooled all of these little 0.25% of interest.
And then what we did, we paid out that interest in lump sums to a few people. So we paid out
150 people a month in lump sum prizes. So the first prize would be a million rand, which is a
enormous amount of money in South Africa. And then there were three prizes of 100 a million rand, which is an enormous amount of money in South Africa.
And then there were three prizes of 100,000 rand, and then we went down to 20,000 rand and a few prizes of 1,000 rand.
So really what we did, we just collected the little bits of interest that would be paid on all these little accounts and then paid it out randomly to a few select lucky winners.
So let's say I live in South Africa.
I take the money I'm earning and put it under my mattress or maybe buy some high-risk equities.
You're offering me the security of a bank account and the excitement of a chance to
win a million rand, right?
What do you call this idea?
We called it the million-a-month account.
Mama.
And Mama became the trivial name for it. And you're the man who gave birth to Mama.
Yes. How successful was Mama? Hugely. Probably too successful for its own good.
Mama attracted a million new customers to Cape's bank. Other banks in South Africa took note and complained to regulators.
And then came the South African state lottery.
Well, we engaged with them before we launched.
We wrote to them and asked them their opinion on the product.
They wrote us a letter back saying that they didn't think it was a lottery.
They thought it fell into a promotional competition, part of the legislation,
and that suggested that we just comply with the requirements of the promotional competition.
And we launched, and then nothing was heard from them for six or so months. And then they
contacted us to say, actually, they don't like what we're doing, and they think that it's a lottery
now. So when you were starting out and there was very little money in your, actually, they don't like what we're doing, and they think that it's a lottery now.
So when you were starting out and there was very little money in your coffers, they thought it wasn't a lottery.
But then after it got going for a while, and you had how much, a couple hundred million dollars?
About $200 million by the time we closed down.
But more importantly, it was over a million customers that we had brought in.
And the National Lottery Board changed its mind then.
It thought, oh, that thing that we said a little while ago was not a lottery now looks a lot like a lottery.
Yes.
And what did they do then?
They then took us to court.
Well, we first engaged with them and tried to discuss it. But it was very clear that they were in no position or not wanting
to even try to discuss what the issues were. And so they took us to court to have us closed down.
Hugh Malamdewitz is the man who took Mama to court. He's a lawyer who represented the South
African National Lottery. Malamdewitz argued that First National Bank's MAMA program infringed upon the state
lottery's right to be the only game in town. The case went all the way up to South Africa's
Supreme Court of Appeals, and Malamduitz won every time. Hugh, you must be very good.
I can't answer that, sir. Now, when MAMA was created, about 70% of low-income South Africans were said to be unbanked.
The government was eager to cut this number.
Mama made it easy to get people in the bank.
All they had to do was deposit a minimum of 100 rand or about $15 into a 32-day call account or what we'd call a certificate of deposit.
So, Hugh, what's wrong with that? Well, I suppose it is an inducement to bank,
but for the period in which your money is deposited in the bank, you do not receive
any interest. South Africa has a relatively high interest rate. Part of the motivation around the
account was it was touted as being a no-cost account, which was correct, but also there was no interest earned.
And South Africa, on a 32-day call account, your interest rate is fairly substantial.
So for the days when you weren't earning any interest whilst it was sitting in the bank account and the bank
was earning substantial sums. I think the idea was that it was driven towards the unbanked and
hence the minimum amount of 100 rand. But realistically, substantial amounts were being
deposited into accounts with the chance of effecting the million rand return.
Now, how successful was the savings plan run by FNB in actually drawing in money from
either the previously unbanked or citizens at large? How much money did they take in?
In what period of time?
Well, there was substantial money taken in, not necessarily from the unbanked. My understanding
is that substantial funds came from their regular customers
and really the customers who had sufficient means that they had the essentially free money sitting around
that they could afford to put aside for the 32 days without effecting any return or any real return.
So my understanding is that the funds were deposited not predominantly by the unbanked,
but really predominantly by the banked, and then the, I would imagine, predominantly by the more wealthy customers.
The return that the bank made was fairly substantial.
Milamdowicz's argument seems a bit at odds with itself.
He says the bank took advantage of people by failing to give them a high interest rate,
but also that most people who bought into Mama weren't the unbanked, that they were
wealthier customers who had, as he puts it, free money sitting around.
Well, if they want to play the bank's lottery instead of the national lottery, why shouldn't
they be free to choose?
But Malamdowicz was doing his job, protecting the interests of his client, the national lottery.
And it worked. Mama was shut down.
Robert Cape, the man who created Mama at First National Bank, stands by its success. He says the excitement of the lottery payout got people in the door so fast that the
cost of acquiring a new bank customer fell from $300 to $5. But that was Mama's goal in the first
place, to expand banking. Cape says 20% of Mama accounts were opened by people who were previously
unbanked. Sure, it wasn't the majority, but Mama reached that level in just the first three years,
and it took in $200 million in deposits. After Mama was shut down by the national lottery,
Robert Cape was invited to Washington, D.C. to talk to federal banking officials
about the program's success. Coming up next, when you play a state lottery, the state likes to keep quite a bit.
Yeah. Oh, yeah. It's a it's a lot of money they take off.
And has the U.S. Treasury Department thought about breaking up the state lottery monopoly?
One of the things that I've learned in my role at Treasury is that picking fights that one doesn't have to pick is not the wisest course of action. Thank you. He finally got his way this past election day when Texans passed a state constitutional amendment allowing credit unions and other financial institutions to offer prize-linked savings accounts.
Now, why did such a relatively simple idea require something as drastic as a constitutional amendment? the state of Texas, the state basically had a monopoly on lotteries. And because this was
considered a lottery, it could not go forward without an amendment to the state constitution.
It's hard for anyone but the government to run a lottery when the government thinks the only
lottery should be run by the government itself. And that has been the biggest obstacle to bringing PLS plans to the United States.
The biggest lottery in this country is run by New York State, which today generates more than
$9 billion in annual sales. But in order to get there, New York, like most states that have a
lottery, had to rewrite its existing laws that prohibited any kind of gambling. Here's former New York State Lottery Director Gordon Medenica.
New York first began in 1967, and it was the second state after New Hampshire to come in.
What was the original impetus? Was it a budget shortfall, essentially?
Did the state feel, we need money, we can void this ban on gambling in the state and come up with a way to do it? I think it was both a desire to raise money and also I think it was a recognition that
playing was going on anyway.
And it was an attempt to tax and regulate an activity that they knew was very common
among citizens.
And, you know, whether you go back to the, you know to the numbers games that existed in urban areas and quite
frankly still exist or those kinds of activities and even sports betting today, which of course
technically is illegal but we all know is a huge business. And I think there was a recognition
on the part of lawmakers that much like prohibition, better to tax and regulate than to, you know,
ostensibly call something illegal and pretend it doesn't go on.
State governments do more than tax and regulate their lotteries. They take a generous cut for
themselves. In gambling circles, the commission taken by whoever operates the game is known as
the rake. With state lotteries, the rake can be as high as 60%. That means that as little as 40%
of the money taken in from ticket sales ends up in the pool that pays the winnings. The rest of
the money usually goes to education. It's an extra tax for schools, but paid only by people who play
the lottery. And it goes to cover overhead, marketing, and sales commissions. Compare the lotteries rake to the slot machines in a casino.
They pay out more than 90%.
Yeah, oh yeah, it's a lot of money they take off.
That, again, is the economist Melissa Carney.
States ostensibly run the lottery, you know, at least initially it was,
well, let's provide an alternative legal lottery product or numbers product, right, to the illegal groups.
It'll be transparent.
It won't be corrupt.
But then they declare themselves monopolies and they take a big cut, which is we can think that's a really high price, right?
Consumers are paying a very high price to buy this type of product.
They can't get it from anywhere else legally. And and then they they have the lottery commissions What's, for instance, the socioeconomic breakdown?
Okay, so this surprises a lot of people,
but people throughout the socioeconomic distribution play the state lotteries.
And so it's roughly 50% to 60% of men, roughly 50% to 60% of women,
roughly 50% to 60% of people across the education spectrum, so people with high school dropouts, high school degree, college graduates.
And when you look at the absolute dollars reported spending, it's not that different across the income distribution. So sort of lower income households spend about as much in dollar
terms as higher income households. The flip side of that, of course, is that it winds up being a
larger share of lower income households' total
spending. So states have a monopoly on lotteries and the people who can least afford to play the
lottery, the people who in the survey that Peter Tufano conducted can't raise the $2,000 when their
furnace dies, they buy just as many tickets as people who make a lot more money. The lottery's
rake is so big that you can reasonably expect to win only about 50 cents
for every dollar you pay in. And that's why Peter Tufano and his colleagues are backing prize-linked
savings in the U.S. And yet, for now, it's illegal. I think the reason that this product exists
elsewhere and not here is because of the, I don't want to say accidents of history, but the path that
history has taken in America over a long period of time. I'm not a banking expert, nor am I a lawyer,
but it's been explained to me that the prohibitions on banks engaging in lottery activities goes back
to the 1930s, when for whatever reason, the activities that some banks pursued
made regulators very nervous about them having anything to do with the lottery,
which is why you can't walk into a bank and buy a lottery ticket.
And so that may have been a really smart legislation back then,
and it may still be smart legislation now,
but it seemed to have, in this instance, thrown out not only lotteries but also savings programs that have chance elements to it.
So that's half of the equation.
The other half of the equation is that as a public finance matter, American states and localities have relied on lotteries as a way to close public finance deficits. There are other ways to close
those deficits, and unfortunately, they're going to be quite large, I suppose, looking in the future.
But when public entities were given the right to use this vehicle to raise funds, other parties
were prohibited from using this same vehicle, and therefore there are prohibitions against private parties running lotteries in virtually every state.
So the combination of laws to try to protect, I suppose, the safety and soundness of banks and laws to permit states and local governments to have kind of preferential access to this form of funding has led to the situation where I think this product,
which no one ever meant to outlaw, has become outlawed.
It makes sense that a state-run lottery might see a prize-linked savings plan as a natural rival.
But the New York State Lottery, for a little while at least,
actually considered teaming up with Peter Tufano on a PLS plan.
Gordon Medenica again.
We called it a no-lose lottery ticket.
And basically what the concept is
is that you buy a ticket
and it would be an expensive ticket,
let's say $100,
but you can never lose the base of it.
And then we pool those funds,
invest them just like a mutual fund
or anything else like that.
And then the investment gains
become the prize pools. And then
every month or so, instead of earning almost 0% on savings account, there's a lottery and different
account holders win prizes just like you would with a lottery game. So we went through a lot of
this research and we presented to the FDIC. And this was an FDIC committee on trying to encourage a higher savings rate among low-income people and also to embrace what they refer to as the unbanked and to get low-income people to use banking facilities and financial services better. Madenica says he couldn't make the math work out for the New York State lottery,
but for the Florida lottery, it's not about the math. It's about the law. I asked Leo DiBenigno,
the former Florida lottery secretary, what he thought about a prize-linked savings plan.
From a purely lottery perspective, I think the Florida lottery is the only entity in Florida
that can operate a lottery game. So if what you described is legally a lottery game,
then I've got to say that it probably sounds illegal under current Florida law.
States protect their lotteries because the lottery is bringing lots of money for the states.
Some money goes to education and other worthy seeming causes.
But even
Di Benigno admits that's not what motivates people to play.
I think people, Floridians in general, are players. They like the idea that the money
they spend on the lottery, that a portion of it, and in this case, a significant portion,
does go to fund education.
But I'm the first to say that they don't play the lottery by and large to help fund
education in Florida.
People play the lottery to win.
They like the prizes.
They like the excitement.
They like the fun, the possibility of winning sometimes $10, $20, $50 and sometimes many
multi-multi-millions of dollars.
I think the funding to education is ancillary.
It's an extra bonus that the public views the lottery as a different and unique and
fun way to be able to fund at least some of the things that our education system needs.
The lottery has famously been called a tax on the stupid.
You get terrible odds and the state rakes off a huge amount, converting your hard-earned cash into an additional school's tax.
Now, you can understand why a state lottery commissioner like Leo DiBenigno of Florida likes things just the way they are.
But what about the other government officials who work on things like consumer protection?
What about someone like the former assistant secretary
for financial institutions at the Treasury Department?
His name is Michael Barr.
I asked Barr if he ever played the lottery.
I haven't really played the lottery. I think probably if I went back over my 45 years,
I may have bought a scratch ticket or two in my 20s.
Now, why do you not play the lottery?
It's a fool's errand. As you undoubtedly know, there are a handful of people who will make some
money out of the lottery. But most people most of the time will lose money. It's not a great way of
spending one's scarce resources. I don't know if you're aware of the program that's been happening
up in Michigan with the eight credit unions where a prize-linked savings program is actually
underway. Are you familiar at all with
that called the Save to Win program? I have not actually studied that.
So the folks who are trying to make this happen come up against a very simple reality,
which is that it's typically illegal, that a private institution like a bank or a credit
union is not allowed to run a lottery
according to state law, that state law typically forbids gambling. And in order to allow a state,
let's say, to run a lottery itself, there's a loophole that must be written. And those
loopholes have been written. Most states do have their own lotteries. But for someone else to come
in and do it, it would be illegal. If you looked at the landscape and thought,
in my role in Treasury here, I would like to encourage people to save more. I'd like to make
it worthwhile for them to save more. And I'd like to remove barriers that prevent them from
participating in projects that let them save more. Would you be in favor of sponsoring or trying to
get rolling some
legislation that would allow for a widespread deployment of prize-linked savings? Do you think
that's something that Treasury should get its momentum behind? One of the things that I've
learned in my role at Treasury is that picking fights that one doesn't have to pick is not the
wisest course of action unless it's something that's absolutely essential to take on.
And I wouldn't have put that in the category of high priorities
to wage into a discussion of state gaming law.
Because you don't, but let me,
but if your job is to help American families save more
and be better financial stewards generally.
And we know that tens of billions of dollars are being spent on lottery tickets every year,
which you call the fool's game.
And one alternative is to offer bank savings accounts
whereby a customer can put in $100, enter a lottery,
maybe win, probably not, but maybe,
and keep the $100, why isn't that something that's worth considering even in a politically
fractious environment when the potential benefit, getting people to save more, seems to be much
larger than the potential downside of
angering some state lottery commissioners, let's say. Steve, I think there are lots of different
ways of encouraging greater savings among all American families. And I think we should continue
to innovate and to try new approaches. I think that the question that you posed is potentially
one aspect of one way to do that. I don't think we
yet know enough from the research to say it's the kind of thing that we think needs to happen on a
wide scale in order to be effective. And I think that we have a number of potential strategies
to help meet the needs of American families to save that we haven't really fully explored and that
maybe raise a somewhat lower set of issues and barriers.
All right, so the prize-linked savings idea may not be universally beloved, but
up in Michigan, they like it fine. And in fact, since 2009, when Michigan became the first state to allow PLS accounts,
more than 20 states have followed suit, with Texas, as we've been hearing today, being just
the latest. Now, maybe you think this is a terrible idea. Maybe you think people ought to
save money on their own. But you know what? We don't. People respond to incentives. And for a lot of us, the incentive or fourth grader. You want me to do what?
To bust my butt in school for 10 more years and then go to college just to get some job I probably won't like?
Or think about crime and punishment.
If you look at the data, it turns out that the death penalty does not work as a crime deterrent.
Why? Because as it's currently practiced, with the punishment
waiting so far out in the future through a maze of delays and appeals, the incentive
simply isn't strong enough to stop me from pulling the trigger right now. Sometimes you
need stronger incentives. Or maybe some good smoke and mirrors. That's kind of what a prize-linked savings plan
could offer. In a country where it's easy to borrow your way to bankruptcy, where you can buy
lottery tickets anytime you buy a loaf of bread, PLS is like a big neon billboard that turns a
boring old savings account into an exaggeration of itself. Stick some money in here, it says,
and you just might hit a big payday.
And even if you don't,
well, your money still belongs to you.
I'll buy that for a dollar.
Wouldn't you?
Freakonomics Radio is produced by WNYC Studios
and Dubner Productions.
This episode was produced by Beret Lam, whose lucky lottery number is 8.
Our staff also includes Allison Hockenberry, Merritt Jacob, Greg Rosalski, Stephanie Tam, Eliza Lambert, Emma Morgenstern, Harry Huggins, and Brian Gutierrez.
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