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Armenia: Gambling Taxing The Poor

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  • Armenia: Gambling Taxing The Poor

    ARMENIA: GAMBLING TAXING THE POOR

    EurasiaNet.org
    June 5 2014

    June 5, 2014 - 2:08pm, by Marianna Grigoryan

    Thirty-eight-year-old Anush Nazarian still remembers the night several
    years ago that a neighbor, distraught over her husband's gambling
    losses, jumped to her death from her 10th-floor apartment.

    "The whole neighborhood was shocked. None of us ever thought that
    one day gambling may come so close to us," recollected Nazarian,
    who lives in a large suburb of the Armenian capital, Yerevan.

    During the Soviet era, casinos or gaming parlors did not exist in
    Armenia: gamblers had to roll the dice on the sly. Today, gambling
    opportunities are everywhere in this poverty-stricken South-Caucasus
    state; and addiction to games of chance is wreaking financial havoc
    among many families.

    Ten casinos and 100 gaming parlors now exist in Yerevan's outskirts One
    of the biggest, Shangri-La, even provides customers with the business
    cards of psychologists who can assist problem-gamblers. "The number
    of gamblers has increased 10 times during the past five years,"
    estimated Samvel Khudoian, a professor of psychology at Armenian
    State Pedagogical University with extensive clinical and research
    experience in this area. "The reasons vary from stressful [personal]
    situations to disappointed expectations."

    A lack of adequate-paying jobs is one of the largest sources of
    disillusionment for many Armenians. Officially, unemployment stands
    at 17.3 percent , but independent estimates are much higher. Over a
    third of the country's population of just over 3 million people lives
    in poverty, according to government statistics. Average monthly wages
    amount to only about 113,163 drams, or $273.53. Many Armenians feel
    compelled to head abroad as labor migrants, in order to support their
    loved ones.

    Against this backdrop, Yerevan's brightly illuminated casinos
    exert a powerful attraction, creating the illusion of a respite
    from everyday concerns. Ads hint that savvy gamblers can attain a
    luxurious lifestyle straight out of Hollywood. "People go to casinos
    and gaming parlors because they fancy they will have luck and get
    rich," Khudoian commented. A similar phenomenon exists in Armenia's
    economically hard-pressed northern neighbor, Georgia.

    Now, two Armenian MPs are trying to address the social consequences
    of problem gambling by developing legislation that would restrict
    access to casinos. A set of proposed amendments to Armenia's gambling
    law would ban people under the age of 21 from entering a casino and
    allow for court orders to ban individuals whose gambling can be shown
    to cause financial hardship to their families. A third measure would
    allow casinos to deny entrance to individuals at the gamblers' own
    request. Restrictions could last from six months to three years, and
    would apply to all casinos in Armenia. The amendments are expected to
    be submitted to parliament's Economic Affairs Committee for discussion
    during the National Assembly's June 9-12 session.

    Independent MP Edmon Marukian, one of the amendments' sponsors,
    says appeals for help from numerous families afflicted by gambling
    addictions prompted him, along with opposition MP Alexander Arzumanian,
    to push for changes. Marukian called the problem "very urgent."

    Media accounts often attribute reported suicides -- up by 3.8 percent
    in 2013 to 768 cases, according to official statistics -- to gambling
    losses. No studies have been done to substantiate such claims.

    The potential impact of the new gambling-related legislation is not
    straightforward, given that gaming has become a significant source of
    revenue for the government. In 2013, Armenia's state budget received
    "7-8 billion drams" ($16.9 - $19.3 million) in tax revenues and
    license fees from gambling establishments. Even while deploring
    gambling addictions, few politicians are likely to want to see that
    revenue stream dry up.

    The representative of one casino, however, expressed approval of
    the proposed changes. "In many countries, visiting a casino is
    entertainment, while in Armenia, and perhaps the whole Caucasus, it
    is linked with passion [for a better life] and gambling [to earn a
    living]," said the individual, who requested anonymity. "People will
    be more protected if there is relevant legislation."

    Looking to problem-gamblers to cut themselves off from casinos might
    also appear a risky bet. Here, though, the powerful pressure Armenian
    families can exert on relatives is expected to have an effect.

    Aharon Adibekian, a sociologist, contends that restrictions on entering
    casinos will just prompt gamblers to go elsewhere to gamble - turning
    the perennial outdoor games of backgammon into money-based events,
    for instance, or relying on the state-run lottery. "Every third
    person in Armenia is poor, and people want to buy a lottery ticket
    and become rich immediately," he elaborated. "It is not by chance
    that many lottery games emerged when we had bad living conditions
    [in the 1990s]."

    MP Marukian said the result of self-exclusion restrictions for casinos
    in "progressive countries" such as Singapore and the US "has always
    been positive."

    Psychologist Khudoian agrees. "It will work in Armenia as well,"
    he said.

    In response, Adibekian drily recalled an Armenian proverb: "Don't
    play heads or tails with destiny. You'll lose either way."

    http://www.eurasianet.org/node/68444


    From: Baghdasarian
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